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| Web Site Review | The Journal of American History, 90.4 | The History Cooperative
90.4  
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March, 2004
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Web Site Review



Monticello: The Home of Thomas Jefferson <http://www.monticello.org>. Created and maintained by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Reviewed July 2003.

When Jefferson scholars play parlor games, they ask each other which Thomas Jefferson would have used, Windows or Mac? Mac, they usually reply, without hesitation. How appropriate, then, that the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, the organization that owns and operates Monticello, would maintain an attractive, user-friendly Web site. The primary audience for the Monticello site is the vast public that is interested in the nation's most famous founding father. The site easily guides visitors to the information that most of them, one expects, seek: a brief biography and time-line; a sympathetic, multipage excursion through "A Day in the Life of Thomas Jefferson" that functions as a virtual tour of Monticello; and educational resources for teachers and students. (Students are invited to write or e-mail—by a convenient link—"Mr. Jefferson," and a member of the education staff, writing as Jefferson, will reply.) The site makes good use of available technology, offering, for example, virtual reality panoramas of all the public rooms in the house (including the "Indian hall," which has been re-created to commemorate the Lewis and Clark journey) and lectures, some by academic historians, in streaming media. Although scholars may not find these sections of the site particularly useful for their research, they effectively serve the purposes for which they were designed. . . .

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