American Experience: Panama Canal

September 1st, 2009 - September 30th, 2010 | PROJECT

This is a request to the National Endowment for the Humanities for funds to support the production of Panama Canal, a two-hour special presentation of American Experience, for national broadcast on PBS. Focusing primarily on the decade-long American construction effort, it places the American Canal against the backdrop of the calamitous French effort that preceded and haunted it. It traces the roots of the American commitment to a trans-Isthmian canal in Theodore Roosevelt’s expansionist vision of American power, and shows how advances in public health, technology and engineering made it possible for the Americans to succeed where the French had failed. It examines how the leadership of the canal dealt with the challenges of recruiting and managing an immense and diverse work force, and explores the risks borne by workers building one of the planet's most remarkable structures in one of the most hostile environments on earth.

Project Website(s)

(no project website provided)

Project Products

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/panama/

Team Members

Mark Samels, Principal Investigator, WGBH Educational Foundation

Funders

Funding Source: NEH
Award Number: TR-50066-10
Funding Amount: 450000

Tags

Audience: General Public | Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: Engineering | Health and medicine | History | policy | law | Technology
Resource Type: Project Descriptions
Environment Type: Broadcast Media | Media and Technology