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Category Archives: Preservation
Call for Speakers for the 2017 Big Talk From Small Libraries online conference
The Call for Speakers for Big Talk From Small Libraries 2017 is now open! This free one-day online conference is aimed at librarians from small libraries; the smaller the better. Small libraries of all types – public, academic, school, museum, special, etc. – are encouraged to submit a proposal.
Do you offer a service or program at your small library that other librarians might like to hear about? Have you implemented a new (or old) technology, hosted an event, partnered with others in your community, or just done something really cool? The Big Talk From Small Libraries online conference gives you the opportunity to share what you’ve done, while learning what your colleagues in other small libraries are doing. Here are some possible topics to get you thinking:
- Unique Libraries
- Special Collections
- New buildings
- Fundraising
- Improved Workflows
- Staff Development
- Advocacy Efforts
- Community Partnerships
- That great thing you’re doing at your library!
For Big Talk From Small Libraries 2017, we’re looking for seven 50-minute presentations 7and five 10-minute “lightning round” presentations.
Big Talk From Small Libraries 2017 will be held on Friday, February 24, 2017 between 8:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (CT) via the GoToWebinar online meeting service. Speakers will be able to present their programs from their own desktops. The schedule will accommodate speakers’ time-zones.
If you are interested in presenting, please submit your proposal by Friday, January 13, 2017. Speakers from libraries serving fewer than 10,000 people will be preferred, but presentations from libraries with larger service populations will be considered.
Thanks for the Memory
With my retirement near, I decided to devote my last Nebraska Memories blog posting to reminiscing about some of the visits I made to organizations that are participating in Nebraska Memories. In 2008 I visited the Bess Streeter Aldrich House & Museum with Devra Dragos and Lori Sailors. We toured the home that Bess and her family lived in, and saw memorabilia and documents related to her writing. I remember seeing her writing desk, typewriter, the original typed manuscript of A Lantern in Her Hand, and the Mutton Tallow Lantern that Bess’s mother and her family carried with them on their journey to Iowa were on display. Lori and Devra returned later to take photographs.
Also in 2008, Lori and I visited Wanda Marget at Fairmont Public Library, who gave us a great tour of the Fillmore County Museum, located in a building donated by the Ashby family. One room featured a restoration of Dr. Ashby’s medical clinic, including the appendix of one of his patients preserved in a jar! Another room featured many photographs and documents related to the Fairmont Army Airfield during World War II. In 1944 Lt. Colonel Paul Tibbets came to the Airfield and picked several crews and their support personnel for a secret mission – the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The crews were taken from the Airfield in the middle of the night for training. The Fillmore County Historical Society also owns the old drug store building, complete with the original soda fountain. Lori returned to scan the items now in the Fairmont Public Library — Fillmore County Historical Society collection.
The Durham Museum in Omaha is a fascinating place. The restored train station housing the museum is spectacular. I remember the stunning interior with a beautifully tiled floor, a functioning soda fountain, and an entire restored railroad car in the lower level. It is a popular event venue – several years later I attended a wedding there. The Museum owns a large photograph collection. Devra and I visited the Museum in late 2008. The Museum scanned and contributed images from the William Wentworth photography studio collection to Nebraska Memories. This 1939 photograph of a Car jumping flatbed trucks is a great example of the commercial work Wentworth did for business clients.
In 2009 Lori and I visited Lincoln Public Schools to see their collection of historical photographs. Lori returned later to scan some of them. We were delighted to add the images to Nebraska Memories, and later very thankful that we could provide them with copies of their images after the LPS building was mostly destroyed by fire on May 30, 2011. I find this photograph of Students at Hayward School rather poignant. At the top are the words “The growing Citizens Better schools, Better Citizens”. The three boys and one of the girls are barefoot. Were they too poor to have shoes? Were they recent immigrants?
Another collection featuring photographs of children is from the Nebraska Children’s Home Society in Omaha. The Society became a particpant after Lori and I visited in 2010. Lori scanned photographs, brochures and newsletters that the Society used to raise funds for care of the children and to ecourage adoptions. The children in this photograph of an Easter Egg Hunt on the grounds of the Home look like they are having a great time.
Another 2010 visit was to the Union College, Ella Johnson Crandall Memorial Library with Devra, to see photographs in the College archives. The collection consists primarily of photographs of students and buildings on the College campus. There are also some photographs of the College View neighborhood, including this one of the Lincoln Traction Company streetcar on College Avenue. Evidently streetcars occasionally got a little too close for comfort. In 1910, a streetcar ran off the track and pushed the College View bandstand at the corner of 48th and Prescott Streets off its foundation!
The last site visit I made was to the Rising City Library with Devra in 2013. Library board members showed us photographs of businesses on Main Street, the depot, church, post office, a major fire, and portraits including this one of founders Samuel W. Rising and Polly Rising . They generously allowed us to bring the photographs, some of which were framed and on display in the library, back to the Library Commission for scanning. Lori was able to scan the framed photographs without removing them from their frames.
Visiting museums, libraries and archives has been a wonderful way to find out more about Nebraska’s history. It’s been great fun. As Bob Hope and Shirley Ross sang in 1938, Thanks for the Memory !
Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx for more information, or contact Devra Dragos, Technology & Access Services Director.
Posted in General, Nebraska Memories, Preservation
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A Balloon School in Nebraska?
While I was in Rochester, New York this past Christmas visiting my husband’s family, my father-in-law showed me some letters from a World War I 2nd Lieutenant from Spencerport, NY, who had a Nebraska connection. Based on the letters and some further research, I found out that this young man was stationed at Fort Omaha, Nebraska for Balloon School.
Fort Omaha (the Nebraska Memories picture to the left), located at 5730 North 30th Street, in Omaha, Nebraska, was opened in 1868 as an Indian War-era United States Army supply depot for various forts along the Platte River. This is also where Ponca Chief Standing Bear and 29 fellow Ponca were held prior to the landmark 1879 trial of Standing Bear v. Crook. Judge Elmer Dundy determined that American Indians were persons within the meaning of the law and that the Ponca were illegally detained after leaving Indian Territory in January 1879. The Nebraska Memories picture of the fort to the right, was taken about that same time period.
Fort Omaha today is primarily occupied by Metropolitan Community College, but continues to house Navy, Marine and Army Reserve units. The fort is located in the present-day Miller Park neighborhood of North Omaha. The Fort Omaha Historic District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The district includes the 1879 General Crook House Museum, as well as the 1879 Quartermaster’s office, 1878 commissary, 1884 guardhouse, 1883 ordnance magazine and 1887 mule stables.
In 1907 the Army built a large steel hangar at Fort Omaha for use in experiments with dirigibles, a program that was abandoned in 1909. This program and its successor, the military use of hot air balloons for reconnaissance missions, were part of the American Expeditionary Forces. A balloon house was built in 1908, and in 1909 the first balloon flight took place. Here is a picture from Nebraska Memories of the Balloon House at Fort Omaha, taken sometime between 1908 and 1910:
Shortly after the United States entered World War I, 800 men enlisted in the Aviation Section, U.S. Signal Corp, one of whom was William Spencer Barker, from Spencerport, NY. They were immediately sent to the Balloon School at Fort Omaha for training. More than 16,000 airmen went through the Balloon Schools at Fort Omaha and other locations around the U.S., between 1908 and the close of the program in 1919.
Balloonists were trained in map reading and charting troop movements. This information was communicated through an extensive switchboard system to artillery troops on the ground. The balloons were “captive” stationary balloons, utilized tail fins for stabilization, and had cables to tether the balloon to the ground.
In 1917, 2nd Lieutenant Baker was part of the 5th Squadron, Balloon Division, and did see military action with balloon squadrons in France from 1918-1919.
Visit Nebraska Memories to search for or browse through many more historical images of digitized from photographs, negatives, postcards, maps, lantern slides, books and other materials.
Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx for more information, or contact Beth Goble, Historical Services Librarian, or Devra Dragos, Technology & Access Services Director.
Team to lead NEH-funded project to digitize Cather letters
Last year, the private musings of Willa Cather were made available to the masses for the first time in a book co-edited by UNL’s Andrew Jewell.
About 550 of the famous author’s letters were published in “The Selected Letters of Willa Cather.” Scholars and fans greeted the book with excitement, but the volume contained only a fraction of the more than 3,000 pieces of correspondence that Jewell and co-editor Janis Stout had uncovered from various archives and collections around the world.
Thanks to a three-year, $271,980 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, many more will be digitized and put online by the end of the decade.
A new digital scholarly edition titled “The Complete Letters of Willa Cather” will be published online as part of the Willa Cather Archive, a venture of UNL’s Center for Digital Research in the Humanities. The digital edition of Cather letters is expected to launch in January 2018, when the letters are scheduled to enter the public domain.
Read the full article @ UNL Today.
Posted in Books & Reading, Preservation, Technology
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Storage ideas for your older books
Connecting to Collections Webinar: Caring for Books
Thursday, July 17, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. (Eastern). This 60-minute webinar will cover the basic storage and handling concerns for any institution holding books, whether special collections, circulating, or strictly reference. The appropriate storage furniture, considerations for storage areas, and the do’s and don’ts of storage will all be covered. As always, you do not need to be a registered member of the Online Community to participate in this webinar. Simply click on the green “Access Meeting Room” button on the right-hand side of the home page. Once there, enter your name and location and click enter. You will be redirected to the webinar. If you’re having difficulty, please take a look at our technical check page. An archive of the event will be posted to the Online Community following the live event.
What: Caring for Books (A webinar and live chat event.)
When: Thursday, July 17, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. (Eastern) Where: The C2C Meeting Room Featured Speaker: Donia Conn, Preservation Consultant for Cultural Heritage Collections and adjunct faculty for the Simmons College Graduate School of Library and Information Science Featured Resources:
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Posted in Books & Reading, Library Management, Preservation
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