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Sarah Coffin ’10

Sarah Coffin '10

Major: History
Job Title: Curator – Boston Red Sox

鈥淚t was a bit of a leap of faith as a New Englander to come to Ohio,鈥 Sarah Coffin says, 鈥渂ut it was the best decision I鈥檝e made in my young life. I wouldn鈥檛 be where I am now without Wooster.鈥

Where she is now is at the intersection of two passions, for history and baseball. As the curator for the Boston Red Sox, Coffin spends her days immersed in the artifacts, photos, and ephemera of one of the game鈥檚 most storied franchises. At any given time, about 500 of those artifacts are on display at Fenway, but there are thousands more carefully catalogued and stored off-site. 鈥淧robably the best part is just seeing how people react to the displays that you create,鈥 she said in a recent on MLB.com. 鈥淚 know that I鈥檓 helping bring this history to life for generations that maybe weren鈥檛 here to see Ted Williams and Johnny Pesky and Bobby Doerr.鈥

For a life-long Red Sox fan who grew up 30 miles north of Boston, it鈥檚 hard to imagine a better gig.

Coffin鈥檚 love of history began as a child. Her mother worked at a small history museum and, she says, 鈥淚 did all the programs: Victorian, colonial, Civil War, you name it.鈥 She was drawn to Wooster because of the strength of the history department, and because she knew she would be doing 鈥渞eal, concrete, research-based learning.鈥

The summer after her first year at Wooster, Coffin spent eight weeks on campus, working with one of her professors and the Wayne County Historical Society to develop a local history exhibit for the public library in downtown Wooster. 聽The following summer, she had a job at a history museum back home in Massachusetts. By the time senior year began, she was well prepared to embark on an ambitious research project for her I.S., working one-on-one with her faculty mentor. The result was Fear, Riots and Rebellions: The Civil War Draft Riots in New York, N.Y. and Holmes County, Ohio, an 80-page thesis plus a 25-piece public history exhibit.

The day she turned in her senior project, Coffin had a phone interview (thanks to a lead from the history department) that landed her a post-graduation summer internship at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y. She found out later that the internship was typically reserved for a graduate student, 鈥渂ut they told me that I had already done graduate-level work.鈥

Coffin says that the president of the Hall of Fame was 鈥渧ery accessible to the interns鈥 and when she mentioned one day that she was interested in moving back home at the end of the summer, and wondered if the Red Sox might be hiring, he said he would make some calls. At first the answer was no, but a few weeks later she got an informational interview.

Coffin brought along her I.S., as well as the exhibit catalog she had created for her senior project. What she didn鈥檛 know was that just two days earlier, the person interviewing her had gotten the go-ahead to hire someone new, an archival assistant to help get ready for the big Fenway anniversary. 鈥淲e got to the end of the interview and he said, 鈥楽o, any chance you鈥檇 want to work here?鈥欌

The rest is鈥ell, you know.

Coffin says the research experience she gained at Wooster is absolutely essential in her work, and not just in the obvious ways. 鈥淓very day I get questions 鈥 from do we think this would be a good exhibit topic to how do we update our collection storage 鈥 and I don鈥檛 know the answers. But if you know where to find the answers and how to go about it, that鈥檚 what you need, and Wooster taught me that.鈥

While working for the Red Sox, Coffin has earned her master鈥檚 degree in museum studies at Harvard through their Extension School. Long term, she says she would like to work in leadership at a smaller museum.

鈥淚 want to help small museums stay on their feet. There鈥檚 so much rich history out there, so many historic resources that have challenges with funding, with outreach鈥. I will be satisfied knowing I am really helping preserve a piece of history and helping the community appreciate it.鈥

But all that is in the future. Right now, Coffin says, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 foresee myself leaving Fenway anytime soon.鈥

Posted in Alumni on September 19, 2018.


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Related Areas of Study

Museum Studies

The Museum Studies minor requires six courses, with one required course and the remaining to be selected from experiential and theory courses. Alongside MUST […]

Minor

Museum & Archival Studies

Explore the diverse traditions of collection, curation, research, display, and preservation and plan your career聽

Pathway

History

Critically examine events and societies of the past and learn to tell the stories future generations need to know

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