Search for a command to run...
This article explores the Joseph Schneider Haus, a National Historic Site and living history museum located in Kitchener, Ontario. The museum interprets the daily life of Pennsylvania-German Mennonite settlers in the mid-19th century through immersive displays, historical artifacts, and live interpretation. Built in 1816 by Joseph Schneider, an early Mennonite settler from Pennsylvania, the Haus stands as one of the oldest surviving buildings in the region and offers a lens into the migration history and cultural identity of the Pennsylvania- German Mennonites of the Grand River region. Drawing on community- informed museum tours, interviews with staff, and archival sources, this case study investigates how the museum preserves and communicates this heritage. Special attention is given to its educational programming, rotating exhibitions, community partnerships, and use of technology to engage modern audiences. The museum’s archival practices are also examined, along with its evolving interpretive strategies, in order to better convey how the museum represents this cultural group and its community memory. While the Schneider Haus remains grounded in its mission to authentically portray 19th-century Mennonite life, it also has been responding to challenges such as expanding its historical narrative and encouraging repeat visitation. This article argues that the Joseph Schneider Haus is not only a valuable site for local memory and migration history, but that it is also an adaptive institution that balances tradition with technology-integrated engagement methods in the context of public history and community engagement.
Published in: The iJournal Student Journal of the Faculty of Information
Volume 10, Issue 3