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01/24/2008Elementary Students Anticipate Visit from British Redcoat and French Fur Trader![]() “We make history come alive,” said Mackinac State Historic Parks program presenter, Jim Evans. “It’s a different way of teaching students than just using a textbook.” Evans, who plays the “pesky” British Redcoat during presentations, is also the lead interpreter at Colonial Michilimackinac in “Historic Mackinac on Tour,” the hour-long program by Mackinac State Historic Parks, introduces students from across “During this age, the kids are wide-eyed and full of wonder,” said program presenter Dennis Havlena. “The kids are thinking they’ll get a history lecture, but we come in with a trunk full of fiddles, furs, bagpipes, clothing to dress up in, flint and steel to light fires, and we expose them to one thing after another. You can’t find a wandering eye among them.” Havlena, who plays the French Voyageur during presentations, created the program in 1989, and has over 28 years of experience with the parks, including many years as the lead interpreter at The musical time bridge between songs is also demonstrated during the program on a historic musical instrument commonly called the jaw harp. Havlena begins by playing a song from the mid-1700s called “The Rose Tree”. By the mid-1800s, the song had sped up and was known as “ “It’s the same song as ‘The Rose Tree,’” Havlena commented. “It’s the same melody. I present the musical time bridge to make the connection between past and present. I relate something they know well to something they don’t recognize, and that connection is made.” “Historic Mackinac on Tour” is part of a larger Mackinac State Historic Parks education outreach program series, which also includes the nature program “Water, Woods and Wildlife.” Mackinac State Historic Parks’ education outreach programs have reached over 159,000 Mackinac State Historic Parks, a family of living history museums and parks in northern |