b'Annual Report 2018/19Top:Mike Thomin speaks to a group during a new program in the UWF Historic Trusts Museum Plaza Rose Garden Storytelling Circle.Bottom:Mike Thomin and former FPAN post-doctoral researcher Dr. Sorna Khakzad following a National Heritage Area meeting at the Walton County Heritage Museum.ernments, county governments, non-profits, historical societies, museums, National Park Service representatives, the Division of Historical Resources staff, FEMA, state parks, and many others. The public meetings alone required the team to travel approximately 2,758 miles, speak collectively for 22 hours, and meet with over 500 people representing hundreds of entities within the region. At the time of this report, this work has resulted in securing 95 letters of support from local, state, and federal stakeholders within the boundary of the proposed NHA. After completing the study in late 2019, Sorna and Mike will submit the feasibility study for review by the National Park Service. Vanishing Sail Film ScreeningDARC collaborated with UWF Historic Trust, the UWF Depart-ment of History, UWF Department of Anthropology, and the UWF Askew Institute of Multidisciplinary Studies to host a film screening of the documentary Vanishing Sail: The Story of a Caribbean Tradi-tion. The film tells the story of the last West Indian wooden sailboat builder family on the island of Car-riacou over three years. Following the film screening, a multidisci-plinary panel of UWF scholars discussed different themes the film covered, from maritime land-scapes to traditional culture. 17'