Denise D. Meringolo’s Museums, Monuments, and National Parks: Toward a New Genealogy of Public History seeks to tell the history of public history as a field of history. Using oral histories of early public historians and federal documents surrounding the National Park Service and the Smithsonian Museums, Meringolo argues that the history of public history remains interlinked with the expansion of federal authority following the American Civil War. Arguing that practices of public history lacked authority because of gendered associations with women’s organizations. Chapters discussing the development of the National Park Service, Meringolo convincingly contends that federal demand for historians to work within National Parks provided the field of public history that it lacked from academia. The concluding chapters focus on the creation of public history programs in American universities beginning in the 1970s, in response to growing concerns over the scarcity of jobs within academia. While a top-down history of public history, Museums, Monuments, and National Park presents an insightful timeline for the development of public history’s origins in nineteenth century women’s societies to a field with programs in universities across the United States.