Dalton DiCamillo Documents Stress of Coronavirus on Wilton’s Class of 2020 with Wilton Historical Society

Wilton Senior’s Special Interest Project Part of Historical Society’s “History Now: Covid-19” Collecting Initiative

In early March 2020, Wilton High School student Dalton DiCamillo was looking forward to doing his spring senior internship project at the Wilton Historical Society. He was planning to investigate the history of some objects in the collection, but Covid-19 arrived, and the internship program was cancelled. However, Dalton had an idea about something else he wanted to do instead as a special interest project. “Now that we are all in the midst of a global pandemic, I thought it would be interesting to switch my concentration from past events to the current situation, and use the interest project as a platform to document and share the impact of coronavirus on the Wilton community, most specifically the graduating class of 2020” he said. The result is "History Now": The Impact of Covid-19 on Wilton's Class of 2020”, a five-minute documentary video.    

Working with members of the Wilton Historical Society’s Education Committee – Kim Mellin, Co-Director; Katherine Karlik, Museum Educator; Nick Foster, Curator; and trustees Virginia Gunther and Dottie Jankowski, and Rebecca Lin, Dalton shaped and refined the project. He explained “I spent the majority of the project reaching out to the class of 2020, through a survey, where students could share their personal experiences with me and give permission to include their stories into the project, cataloguing the impact of coronavirus on the class of 2020, ultimately preserving their unique perspectives during this time”. He contacted every member of the Senior class by email, asking them to fill in a survey and to submit something that expressed their response to the pandemic. With a window of about a week to reply, the survey had a high return rate of 14%. Students provided artwork, photographs, and literary responses, as well as comments and insights about their life during these stressful times.

The documentary has four sections which reflect the student’s responses to the survey: school closing; the realization that life was changing and how tech played a role; the way graduation was handled; and a focus on the future (“what will you tell your grandchildren about this time?”). See the video on the website of the Wilton Historical Society, in the “ History Now: COVID-19 Collecting” section.

The Wilton Historical Society’s initiative History Now: COVID-19, is a three-part project. Part one is a survey available on the website, where anyone can respond to questions about your personal experience, as a way of recording stories and commentary about this historic event. Part two is COVID-19 Collecting. Here, the Historical Society is asking the public to donate objects related to the pandemic to become a part of the museum’s permanent collection. Part three consists of capturing the response of Wilton public school students to the situation. Along with the documentary created by Wilton High School student Dalton DiCamillo, K-8 students have been asked to provide artwork reflecting their experiences.

The Wilton Historical Society, 224 Danbury Road, Wilton CT 0897 www.wiltonhistorical.org

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Submitted by Wilton, CT

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