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Olongapo
City, Zambales – On April 11,
Ellie De Castro concluded the Finding Nellie Project at Nellie E. Brown
Elementary School (NEBES) by revealing the true identity of her father’s
elementary school namesake, Nellie E. Brown. Her audience consisted of NEBES’
current students and faculty, former and retired teachers and principals,
alumni, Olongapo Historical Society members, local government representatives
and Department of Education representatives.
The reveal comes after 646 days of
research alongside 5 National Geographic Explorers and De Castro’s own family
and friends. The day was called the Olongapo Heritage Fair, where a program
filled with messages from the community and an interactive exhibit for both
students and alumni were organized by the Finding Nellie Team with support from
Olongapo City Vice Mayor Jong Cortez and West Bajac-Bajac Barangay Captain
Billy Capistrano.
“Sa
hinaba-haba ng adventure, ay nahanap na din si Nellie”
Nellie E. Brown turned out to be a
kindergarten teacher from Bangor, Maine. She did not establish NEBES nor was
she a former teacher there – as many NEBES alumni and Olongapo citizens first
thought her to be. Instead, one of her students, Roger Brown Nickerson, grew up
to be a Captain on the US Navy and was eventually stationed in Subic Bay as a
Commander from 1952 to 1953. He established NEBES in 1953 and named it after
his favorite teacher, Nellie E. Brown. She passed away on February 26, 1954, a
year after the school was built.
De Castro was able to find the answer
after corresponding with the US National Archives and Records Administration,
which led her to go on Ancestry.com and look up everything she has since found
out about Nellie E. Brown from different stakeholders and sources. It seemed
like a simple resolution after almost 2 years of research, but in her speech
revealing Brown, De Castro shared that “the story of Finding Nellie isn't just
about Nellie E. Brown and Commander Nickerson. In Finding Nellie, we also got
to find the people who have built and made this community in Olongapo what it
is."
To celebrate Finding Nellie
with the local community, the day’s festivities awarded groups of students who
took part in their own mini research projects after drawing inspiration from De
Castro’s project with her fellow researchers and explorers. Winning research
projects included topics on local food culture and solid waste management.
De Castro dedicates Finding Nellie to
her father, NEBES alumnus Dr. Leo De Castro of the University of the
Philippines. Although Nellie has been found, her team will continue to release
material about their adventure and encourage students from different schools to
keep being curious about their own heritage and identities. A public version of
the exhibit and a screening of a documentary on Finding Nellie will be held later in the year at a community
center in Olongapo and in Manila.
Finding Nellie: The Project
What Ellie thought
would be a quick Google search turned out to be an adventure that has lasted
more than two years. Finding Nellie is a project that has made a team of
archaeologists, educators, and storytellers scour through offline and online
archives in the Philippines and abroad; inquire with libraries, cemeteries,
historians, and even active and retired U.S. military personnel; get in touch
with local and national politicians; and
message anyone who might remotely be related to a Nellie Brown on social media,
via telephone, and even by knocking on their doors. On Instagram, the team
shares every step of this journey through its colorful and interactive Field
Notes.
With the help of the
National Geographic Society, Finding Nellie has allowed Ellie and her teammates
to connect and reconnect with friends and family; foster an appreciation for
community roots; and bring world history lessons a little closer to home –
especially to the current students of Nellie E. Brown.
Ellie De Castro
Ellie is a Filipina archaeologist whose work focuses on
finding avenues to connect heritage and youth. She led the Handi Project from
2015-2020, where she organized field trips to bring students from the Ifugao
indigenous group to their world-renowned heritage sites, which they previously
didn’t have access to. For the Dewil Valley Museum in El Nido, Palawan, she
produced educational materials, artwork, and activities for the youth of the
valley to engage them with the archaeological sites in their neighborhood.
These projects focused on creating opportunities to connect with heritage
resources in communities. Ellie seeks to enable participants of her projects to
appreciate their homes in a new light and see the wonders of the world in their
immediate surroundings.
She has a Bachelor
of Science degree in Basic Medical Sciences degree from the University of the
Philippines-Manila and a Master of Science degree in Archaeology from the
University of the Philippines-Diliman
Peg Keiner
Peg
is an educator in the USA with 17 years of experience, including 4 years as an
elementary technology coach and 8 years leading an inquiry-based International
Baccalaureate school as the Director of Innovation. She is an Apple
Distinguished Educator, Google Earth Education Expert, a 2018 National
Geographic Certified Educator, and United Nations Association-Chicago Global
Goal Ambassador. As a 2017 Grosvenor
Teacher Fellow, she created immersive 360 content to transport students to
Antarctica through inquiry science lessons. As a 2019 Nat Geo Education Fellow,
she led the development of a week-long student workshop for GeoChallenge
Participants and created the #31daysofcitizenscience video series to amplify
the use of citizen science tools.
She
holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Elementary Education and a Master's degree
in Instructional Technology and Design from Northern Illinois University.
Rachel Hansen
Rachel is an educator in the USA with
13 years of teaching experience, including 4 years of co-teaching experience
with an English teacher, and 2 years spent working on an interdisciplinary team
in a project-based program. She has much experience using participatory design
and inquiry-based learning in her classroom. In 2021, Rachel was awarded the AP
Human Geography Distinguished Teaching Award from the National Council for
Geographic Education.
Rachel has endorsements in American
History, World History, US Government, and Geography, with a B.A. from The
University of Iowa in History. She is finishing her M.A. in Geography at the
University of Northern Iowa, where her research focuses on tracking student
learning progressions as they engage in map-making to tell stories of their
communities.
Pau
Villanueva
Pau Villanueva
(he/they) is a Filipino photographer whose works are an exploration of the
human condition - the discovery of self, of others, and the empathy through
which we cross them. He is a National Geographic Explorer documenting land
conflict and gender experiences in non-moro indigenous communities in Mindanao,
and cultural heritage through historical geo-inquiry at Olongapo City. He is a
mentee at the 2021 Women Photograph Mentorship Class and 2019 Angkor Photo
Festival Workshop.
Pau teaches
photography and advocates for empowerment and inclusivity through visual
storytelling. He is a workshop mentor for indigenous communities in South
Central Mindanao, the 2023 Angkor Photo Festival for Cambodian storytellers,
and at the National Geographic Photo Camp guiding transnational Pasifika youth
throughout the image-making process. Pau is an alumni of the Visual Journalism
program at the Asian Center for Journalism in Ateneo de Manila University, and
holds a BFA degree in Visual Communication at the University of the Philippines
- Diliman.
Alexandra
Lenore Ashworth
Alexandra aka Dzana is a
Filipinx-American, Jewish, Mad, queer artist whose work spans video, poetry,
and writing about kinship, belonging, and identity. They make art with Black
and brown activists at home and in diaspora, radical Jewish, queer, and
disabled communities, and abolitionist adopted, fostered, and trafficked
people. Dzana was a 2022 Fulbright-National Geographic Storytelling Fellow, and
she has produced for PBS, Art21, the MET, MOMA, and Brooklyn Museum, inter
alia. They studied Spanish, magical realism, and screenwriting at Sarah
Lawrence College.
Dzana is Associate Producer on
documentaries FIRE THROUGH DRY GRASS (USA, 2023) and WHAT THE PIER GAVE US
(forthcoming). Their upcoming short film, ON THE DAY I WAS BORN, is an
experimental reflection on homecoming and adoption. They are working alongside
cinematographer Christian Babista to bring the Finding Nellie adventure to the
big screen to inspire students and explorers of all ages!
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