Do you want to learn more about Hopkins history? Hopkins Retrospective has helped with the creation of online and physical exhibits that explore different aspects of the history of our university.
These exhibits—all of which have been developed by students, archivists, curators, and historians—have uncovered aspects of our university’s history and highlighted the experiences of our community members. They combine historic photographs, documents, and interviews to make this history accessible.
Hybrid Exhibitions
A Sense of Place: Hidden Stories on the Homewood Campus
In 2014, students from the Hopkins Program in Museums and Society explored the history of the Homewood campus alongside experts in heritage studies. In a hands-on, exploratory course, they developed “A Sense of Place,” a series of ten interpretive signs that highlight locations around campus and explain their significance in Hopkins and Baltimore history. The signs, produced through a partnership with environmental design students at the Maryland Institute College of Art, were installed in September 2014.
Online Exhibitions
Hopkins and the Great War
Before, during, and after America’s entry into the conflict, World War I challenged Hopkins intellectuals’ ideas about the international world order, the problem of war, and the role of the university and hospital in wartime. This exploration of World War I at Hopkins draws together materials that demonstrate the war’s impact on those who lived and worked on the Homewood and East Baltimore campuses.
Jews at Hopkins: A Digital History
This student-curated project exhibits different aspects of Jewish life across the University’s history. It gives a sense of what it meant for different students to be Jewish on campus, and how their identity affected other Jewish students and the University at large.
Activist Campus: Johns Hopkins University in the Age of Protest
This student-curated exhibition tells the story of how Johns Hopkins University, in the midst of a dire financial crisis and located in a Baltimore resistant to certain changes, sought to navigate through the late 1960/early 1970s era of rising social consciousness and student unrest.
Defining Letters: The Correspondence of Daniel Coit Gilman
This exhibit highlights select items from the complete series of founding JHU president Daniel Coit Gilman’s digitized correspondence available from the Sheridan Libraries of Johns Hopkins University. Gilman’s correspondents include prominent educators, scientists, politicians, and literary figures.
The History of Student Life at JHU
This student-curated project explores the history of Johns Hopkins through the lens of the undergraduate student experience, tracing the development of an institution through a population that spends only four years on campus but has an extraordinary influence on the university.