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Volunteer

Volunteer Opportunities

Share your talents with the National Museum of African American History and Culture. There are a limited number of Behind-the-Scenes Office Volunteer and Program Volunteer positions available for residents of the Washington/Metropolitan area.

The Museum

Until the museum is built, a fast-paced office has been established in S.W., Washington D.C. Inaugural exhibitions and programs are taking place at other venues in the Washington DC/Metropolitan Area and across the nation.

Volunteer Positions

Office Volunteers
  • Conduct mailings
  • Answer phones
  • Label & file
  • Hand-deliver documents
  • Maintain databases
  • Draft correspondence
  • Conduct supervised research
  • Greet guests

Office Volunteers work on weekdays between 10:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. There are no evening or weekend positions available.

Program Volunteers
  • Assist in the creation of activities
  • Prepare craft materials
  • Assist with logistics
  • Fold printed programs
  • Set up & take down
  • Assist visitors with activities

Program Volunteers work limited hours during the week and/or at programs on evenings and weekends.

Volunteer Criteria

We are seeking bright, friendly, energetic and discreet individuals of all ages and backgrounds. Knowledge of museum work in not required, but a willingness to learn and to pitch in where required is.

Benefits

Volunteers enjoy:
  • 20% discount at all Smithsonian Shops
  • A free or discounted course offered by The Smithsonian Associates
  • 10% discount at the National Gallery of Art and Kennedy Center Shops
  • Your name listed in the annual Volunteer edition of the in-house paper, The Torch
  • Not reimbursed travel expenses directly related to days of service to the Smithsonian Institution are tax deductible (round trip cost of public transportation or use of private vehicle—allowable mileage rate)

Application Procedure

Please complete the attached Volunteer Application (pdf) and return it via e-mail or mail, to the address on the form. If there is a position available, arrangements for an interview will be made.

Background Investigation

A tentative offer of a volunteer appointment is conditional, subject to your successful completion of a pre-appointment background investigation for a non-critical sensitive position.

Did you know?

Frederick Douglass spoke with such dignity of bearing and brilliance as an orator that some questioned whether he had ever been a slave. Douglass wrote three autobiographies, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass (1845), My Bondage, My Freedom (1855) and The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass (1881). After an extensive lecture tour in Britain, where supporters raised the funds to purchase his freedom, Douglass returned to the United States in 1847 and expanded his antislavery activism by launching the North Star newspaper.