A National Treasure Once in the Hands of a Mainer
FLAG
Bangor Daily News
Maite Jullian
Boston University Washington News Service
Nov. 21, 2008
WASHINGTON – When the light of dawn broke on September 14, 1814, Francis Scott Key was able to see the American flag flying over Baltimore’s Fort McHenry. He then knew that the British bombardment of the fort had failed.
The poem he wrote to celebrate America’s triumph in that battle became the lyrics of the national anthem and made the Star-Spangled Banner an icon in American history.
Almost 200 years later, the early light of dawn has been replaced by soft blue lights and the 30-foot by 34-foot Star-Spangled Banner lies behind glass doors at a ten-degree angle, in a brand new and dramatic display at the National Museum of American History, which reopened Nov. 21 after going through a two-year renovation.
It took seven years to restore the most famous flag in American history and ensure its survival. And at the center of the project was Bangor native Marilyn Zoidis. As senior curator of the project, Zoidis realized from the beginning what a huge challenge they faced.
“The first time I actually got to examine the flag, my stomach fell to my feet,” she said. “I thought ‘what have I got myself into?’ I turned to the chief conservator and asked her if the flag could be saved. She said she thought we could do it, that it was the plan. Over the next seven years, we implemented that plan.”
The extent of the work needed on the flag, which was originally 30 feet by 42 feet and was acquired by the Smithsonian in 1907, became evident only after it was taken down from the main hall of the museum in 1998. The original plan was to remove the linen backing and put it back on display.
“Much of the flag had been lost over time because of the light, use and being on display,” Zoidis said.
Zoidis was hired from a pool of national applicants in 1999 to lead the restoration. She worked on the project until 2006, when it was completed, sharing with the Smithsonian her expertise in telling stories through artifacts.
“She has a special gift in using an exhibition to tell compelling history,” said Kent Whitworth, executive director of the Kentucky Historical Society, where Zoidis now works. “I never met anybody better at that. She brings intellect and energy, tenacity to these projects. It was a great day when she arrived here.”
For the flag’s restoration, a new lab with a glass wall so visitors could see the work progressing was built within the American history museum, one of the Smithsonian Institution’s museums which is located on the national mall here.
The $18 million project started in 1999 went through four stages: removal of the linen support, detailed examination of condition and construction of the flag, cleaning treatment, and long-term preservation plan.
When Zoidis, 59, talks about the Star-Spangled Banner, her excitement over its historical signficance is evident.
“I always felt a tremendous sense of responsibility to get it right, to ensure the long term safety of the flag and that stories told about it tell a complex history of America,” she said. “It is a very complicated symbol which reflects a complex history of American society.”
As the curator, she was “the content expert supposed to know everything there was to know about the Banner and flags in general,” Julia Forbes, the former senior educator on the project, said.
“The flag is a metaphor for the nation in many ways,” Zoidis explains. “We can go through wars, an economic downturn, riots or strikes but we can emerge as a nation with resilience and hope. The flag represents that.”
In recognition of her accomplishment, the Washington D.C.-based Maine State Society is presenting her with its annual Big “M” Award on December 13, which rewards Mainers for their professional achievements or contributions to their state.
“This is very, very nice,” she said. “I am deeply touched that they would think of me, that they would give it to me. It is from my home state that I love so dearly,” said Zoidis.
Zoidis is now the assistant director of the Kentucky Historical Society. She could have stayed at the Smithsonian and written a book, but the museum was closing for renovation and she was looking for her next challenge, driven by a will to move forward and experiment, qualities reflected in her professional choices.
Zoidis was born in Bangor. Her grandfather moved there from Albania in 1904. Her father and his two brothers opened the restaurant Pilots Grill in 1940, a “community institution of sorts,” she said, but which closed in 2002.
She graduated from Bangor High School in 1967 and got her undergraduate degree from the University of Maine in 1971. After teaching at James F. Doughty School, named Fifth Street Junior High at that time, and then at Bangor High School, she got a master’s degree in education in 1978.
“Then a job opened up at the Bangor Historical Society,” she said. “I was able to concentrate on the stuff I love: the artifacts and documents.”
Presenting and sharing history with the public through exhibitions has always been her first passion.
“It’s an important obligation to preserve the history of a community and to share it. It is a way to reach people who don’t think they are going to like history,” she said. “The idea of finding something that people will like to see in a hundred years, conserve it and capture its meaning is something incredibly exciting for me.”
She was the executive director of the Bangor Historical Society from 1983 to 1987 and then went to Freeport, where she held the same position at that city’s historical society for two years.
In 1992, she got a master’s in American history from Carnegie Mellon University and became the director for research and collections at the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania in Pittsburgh for one year.
Interested in social and cultural history, she started a doctorate program in American history at Carnegie Mellon but the offer to work on the flag derailed that plan and she never completed her dissertation.
While on a fellowship at the Smithsonian to complete the last chapter of her dissertation, she heard that the museum was looking for a curator for the Star-Spangled Banner Project. She was “stunned” to learn she was one of the five finalists and ultimately she was selected for the job.
Abigail Ewing, the former curator at Bangor Historical Society who worked with Zoidis for a year, was not surprised when she learned Zoidis had landed a job at the Smithsonian.
“She left here [Bangor], went to Freeport and went to graduate work. She was getting into more challenging positions and bigger projects,” she said.
For the people who worked with her, Zoidis is a passionate historian who brings with her intellectual stimulation and energy.
“She was very open and giving with her research,” said Suzanne Thomassen-Krauss, the chief conservator of the project. “She was always enthusiastic about finding questions to my answers. We could discuss and share. It made our jobs easier.”
“I really loved working wither her,” Forbes said. “She is so smart and very passionate for her work.”
Whitworth still sounds amazed that Zoidis agreed to work at the Kentucky Historical Society.
“Kent was looking for someone who could help in the next stage of developing and I was looking for the next challenge,” Zoidis said.
Withworth said she has surpassed his expectations in the two years she has been working there.
“She has been a great adviser in terms of exhibition, administration, development and marketing,” he said. “She has infused this place with a lot of intellectual energy. We went through a real transition with her. We are just very fortunate, thanks to Maine for sharing Marilyn Zoidis with Kentucky.”
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