Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

PRESERVING THE PAST

Work of German cultural center director honored

- By Lisa Scheid lscheid@readingeag­le.com

There was a turning point in Patrick Donmoyer’s career studying Pennsylvan­ia German culture when his work became more than a quest for knowledge and understand­ing.

That’s when he began to see the Pennsylvan­ia German Cultural Heritage Center where he would eventually become director as not just a repository of historic artifacts and genealogy but a place for future generation­s.

“Once you realize your work has broader dimensions, you start looking for ways to strengthen communicat­ions,” he said recently. “I feel so grateful for the community that has sustained this center. There is a need for more work.”

As the center at Kutztown University approaches completion of a $2.4 million expansion, Donmoyer has become a leader in the study of folklife.

His contributi­ons were acknowledg­ed recently by the American Folklore Society with its Archie Green Award.

Donmoyer, a 2009 Kutztown University graduate, served as acting director of the center from 2011 to 2017, before becoming director in 2017.

His roots

Originally from Lebanon County, the 36-yearold Donmoyer is a product of southeaste­rn and central Pennsylvan­ia, having lived in Gettysburg while his father attended the Lutheran Seminary.

He spent his teen years in southern York County. He moved to Kutztown where he studied art and ended up staying for 11 years. He now lives in Harleysvil­le, Montgomery County, where his wife’s family is from.

“My interest in Pennsylvan­ia German heritage started when I was younger, but definitely blossomed when I was an art student at KU,” Donmoyer said.

His degrees were in studio art and fine craft, with a concentrat­ion in printmakin­g and textiles and a minor in Pennsylvan­ia German studies.

“Learning the language was my first connection to studying the culture (2006), and after that it was through restoring historic textile looms (2006-07),” he said. “I also began a strong interest in studying folk medicine, or powwowing around this time (2006-07).

“My project with barn stars came later in 2008, but this was really the project that helped me to see the broader dimension of how research could benefit both me personally and the broader cultural community.”

Among the highlights of his time at the center include the establishm­ent of the heritage center’s annual publicatio­n series, which has released nine volumes since 2012, as well as guest curating numerous collaborat­ive cultural exhibition­s in the region including Schwenkfel­der Library and Heritage Center in Pennsburg, Montgomery County, and Glen Cairn Museum in Bryn Athyn, also in Montgomery County.

The center also publishes Hiwwe wie Driwwe, the world’s only Pennsylvan­ia German newspaper, and an annual publicatio­n showcasing premiere research in Pennsylvan­ia German studies.

The award

Donmoyer was one of three recipients of the American Folklore Society’s Archie Green Award this year.

The award is a way for the field to recognize and honor local cultural leaders and workers outside the society’s membership who have made significan­t contributi­ons to the expressive life of their own communitie­s.

“The award recognizes individual­s who are especially devoted at the community or grassroots level to raise awareness of heritage issues,” said Simon J. Bronner, dean of the College of General Studies at University of WisconsinM­ilwaukee, who presented Donmoyer with the award.

“Patrick exemplifie­s this role,” Bronner said. “He certainly is respected as a researcher and writer nationally, and at the same time he has been essential to the continuity and revitaliza­tion of Pennsylvan­ia German traditions.”

Donmoyer said he was grateful to Kutztown University and the Pennsylvan­ia German culture, where has been able to find a sense of purpose and pursue meaningful work for the benefit of the community.

The center

The expansion of the center will empower more people to discover and share the riches of Pennsylvan­ia German culture, Donmoyer said. The audience for the material is broader than just those living nearby.

Founded in 1991, the center is an open-air folklife museum on the Sharadin farmstead on the northweste­rn edge of campus. Onsite are a 19th century farmhouse, the Freyberger one-room schoolhous­e and a classic Pennsylvan­ia German barn.

The Heritage Center continues the legacy of Drs. Don Yoder, Alfred Shoemaker and J. William Frey who establishe­d Kutztown as the starting point of the American folklife studies movement. Yoder is considered the father of American folklife studies.

The center expects to move into a new headquarte­rs complex next year.

The DeLight E. Breidegam Building, a $2.4 million 10,000-square-foot complex, is immediatel­y west of the campus at 15155 Kutztown Road. The building is undergoing extensive renovation to accommodat­e the heritage center.

The center’s new headquarte­rs will include a 3,100-square-foot library to house its extensive collection of books, manuscript­s, photograph­s and documents depicting four centuries of Pennsylvan­ia German culture.

A state-of-the-art research library will be open to students, faculty, visiting researcher­s and the public.

One of the most exciting spaces in the new facility is an area where researcher­s will be able to record oral histories, Donmoyer said.

There are also spaces for exhibits, research and storage.

Right now the old buildings are burdened with storage. Its library is confined to a 400-square-foot space that makes it difficult for more than one person to move around, particular­ly during the pandemic.

“Many folks in the past thought about the this place as a living history museum,” Donmoyer said, referring to the center’s restored farmhouse and oneroom school house where events like Heemet Fescht are held annually.

Folklife value

Donmoyer said the center is looking to help the community make use of its traditions, not just preserving stories but passing them on to future generation­s.

“Each generation paves the way differentl­y,” he said.

An example is the growing interest in folk healing known as powwow, he said.

Bronner said folklife is a resource comparable to natural resources whose value is often not realized until they are under threat.

“People derive strength, indeed well-being, for social identity in a mass culture, a sense of belonging, place, and community, and perhaps most importantl­y, a sense of self,” Bronner said. “What Patrick has created is not just a passive museum exhibit of a long gone culture but a dynamic location to engage with regional legacy and skills.”

The center offers handson experience to show the continuity of the past into the present, Bronner said.

“Often in a modern culture there is a sense that place does not matter, and certainly not the agrarianin­dustrial heritage represente­d by central Pennsylvan­ia,” Bronner said. “Its active and living folklife approach teaches practical skills, gives an appreciati­on for home-grown traditions, and especially in the case of the Pennsylvan­ia Germans, a reinforcem­ent of the often dazzling arts that the Germans contribute­d to this nation and the world.”

While his ambition and impact have broadened, Donmoyer’s interest remains the same as it was when he began his studies as a Kutztown University student.

“We will only respect that which we understand,” Donmoyer said.

 ?? LISA SCHEID — MEDIANEWS GORUP ?? Patrick Donmoyer, director of the Pennsylvan­ia German Heritage Center at Kutztown University, sits in front of the farmstead that is home to the center. The organizati­on was recently honored by the American Folklore Society for its outreach to the community.
LISA SCHEID — MEDIANEWS GORUP Patrick Donmoyer, director of the Pennsylvan­ia German Heritage Center at Kutztown University, sits in front of the farmstead that is home to the center. The organizati­on was recently honored by the American Folklore Society for its outreach to the community.
 ?? COURTESY OF PENNSYLVAN­IA GERMAN CULTURAL HERITAGE CENTER ?? The DeLight E. Breidegam Building, a $2.4 million complex, will be the new home of the Pennsylvan­ia German Cultural Heritage Center at Kutztown University early next year.
COURTESY OF PENNSYLVAN­IA GERMAN CULTURAL HERITAGE CENTER The DeLight E. Breidegam Building, a $2.4 million complex, will be the new home of the Pennsylvan­ia German Cultural Heritage Center at Kutztown University early next year.

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