
Location: Manteo, NC, USA,None,None
Start/End Dates: May 25, 2026 – August 10, 2026 (11 weeks)
Compensation: $688 per week
Medical Insurance: Not provided
Application Due: March 1st, 2026
The Latino Heritage Internship Program seeks to engage young professionals in natural resource careers. Applicants must meet the following additional requirements:
Note: A personal vehicle is required for this position.
The Historical and Interpretive Writing Intern’s primary duty is to research and synthesize content for the Fort Raleigh website, focused on the Algonquian people, their history, and their interactions with English and Spanish settlers. This includes writing for the park website, park social media, and the NPS App. Through research and writing, the intern will provide the public with new interpretive themes. The content will also serve as the foundation for a new audio tour, replacing the current outdated tour that lacks the breadth of the park’s interpretive themes.
The intern will develop a public program focused on the history and culture of the Algonquian people, a topic that has rarely been presented at Fort Raleigh. They will research, engage with, and learn about the Algonquian people to create a unique audience-centered interpretation and build skills in public speaking and presentation. The intern will work with Native American–led organizations to connect Fort Raleigh’s interpretive content with broader Indigenous histories of the Outer Banks.
The intern will have opportunities to shadow park staff and community partners to learn more about National Park Service operations and collaborative storytelling. They will attend community events and visit local cultural sites, including the Frisco Native American Museum, to strengthen their interpretive work and understanding of the community.
Responsibilities
Qualifications
Learning Goals
Interns will have the opportunity to:
About the Site
Fort Raleigh National Historic Site is located just above sea level on Roanoke Island, on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. The nearest grocery store is three miles away, along with restaurants, shops, entertainment, and a thriving small downtown community.
Work will take place both indoors and outdoors. Summer days can be very hot, humid, and buggy (mosquitoes and biting flies). Hurricane season runs from June through November. If an evacuation is ordered, park facilities will close, and all residents in park housing must pack their belongings and evacuate.
Interns in this program will receive 480 hours toward Public Land Corps (PLC) Hiring Authority. See below for more information.
Public Land Corps Non-Competitive Hiring Authority (PLC)
The Public Land Corps Non-Competitive Hiring Authority is a special hiring authority available to qualifying interns. The intern must be between the ages of 18 and 30 years old, inclusive, or a veteran up to age 35 and complete 640 hours of work on an appropriate conservation project to be eligible for this hiring authority. Upon successful completion of the PLC project(s), the intern is eligible for two years to be hired non-competitively into a federal seasonal, term, or permanent position. The applicant must apply to a PLC-eligible position advertised on USAJobs.gov and selected off a non-competitive certificate of eligibility. For more information, see DOI Personnel Bulletins 11-02 , 12-13, and 17-03.
EEO Statement
Environment for the Americas provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employmentand prohibits discrimination and harassment of any type without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, national origin, disability status, genetics, protected veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or any other characteristic protected by federal, state or local laws.This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, hiring, placement, promotion, termination, layoff, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation and training.

Environment for the Americas works to connect people to birds and nature through education, outreach, and research. Our keystone conservation education program is World Migratory Bird Day, a global celebration of migratory birds that celebrates the phenomenon of migration and serves as a call to action for migratory bird conservation. We also host unique experiences for young professionals to work side-by-side with partners at the National Park Service, US Forest Service, US Fish and Wildlife Service, and Bureau of Land Management.
As part of our commitment to education and training, we povide bird conservation education materials in English and Spanish on our Everything Birds shop (environmentamericas.org/shop). You will also find a number of fun gift-themed items, conservation tools, and sustainable products. Your purchase supports our programs!