Special Collections Blog Archive
New Accessions, 12/1/2010-12/30/2010
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Here are the new accessions for 12/1/2010 through 12/30/2010, a little longer than normal due to the holiday rush:
The Challenge of Designing Exhibits
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Do you ever stop to ogle the contents of the numerous display cases spread throughout Swem Library? Me neither. Or, at least, I didn't. Now, every so often when I'm hunting for a book on the third floor, I venture over to the small flat case outside the Brown Board Room, just to check that everything is how I left it.
New Accessions, 11/8/2010-11/12/2010
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Here are the new collections accessioned by the Special Collections Research Center from 11/8/2010 to 11/12/2010:
I am a self-proclaimed craft nerd
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I freely admit: I am a self-proclaimed craft nerd. In kindergarten, I was the kid who truly enjoyed gluing sticks into haphazardly-formed structures and insisted that every painting my little fingers lovingly created be prominently displayed on the family refrigerator. This creative passion has continued into adulthood as I thoughtfully knit gifts for friends and family and scrapbook every vacation taken.
My time in Special Collections
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Throughout the past month, as a part of my graduate apprenticeship I have been working with the Johnson-Nance Family Papers, a manuscript collection from the early twentieth century at Special Collections Research Center, Swem Library, at William & Mary.
From Copy Machines to Tobacco Farmers
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How often have you stopped to think about the wonder that is the copy machine? If you were like me, not often at all—as students, interns, and young professionals most of us probably spent more time being warmed by the light of the copy machine than we would like to think about.
New Accessions, 11/1/2010-11/5/2010
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Here are the new collections accessioned by the Special Collections Research Center from 11/1/2010/11/5/2010:
Colonial Echo Digital Archive Bookmark
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You are sure to have heard us mention a time or two just recently that William & Mary yearbook, the Colonial Echo, for the years 1899-1995 was recently digitized. A bookmark was created for the official launch of the Colonial Echo Digital Archive during Homecoming 2010.
Newly Digital, 10/25/2010-10/29/2010
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This post contains links to content that has been newly digitized and is now available to view online.
New Accessions, 10/25/2010-10/29/2010
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These new materials were accessioned during the week of 10/25/2010 through 10/29/2010 and are now available to the public.
Scrapbook project
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Often when I tell people that I'm working on making a database of all the scrapbooks in the Special Collections Research Center, I get a reaction something like, "Oh, that's nice," a reaction with subtext that seems to say "oh-that's-nice-but-not-something-actually-significant-like-Thomas-Jefferson's-letters." And while the correspondence of our illustrious college alumnus certainly holds the utmost import
Colonial Echo Digital Archive Launched
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The Earl Gregg Swem Library is pleased to announce the launch of the Colonial Echo digital archive. All volumes from 1899-1995 have been digitized in full color from cover to cover and are now available to the public. The Colonial Echo has been the student yearbook of William & Mary since 1899.
October is American Archives Month
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Identifying authorship of anything is always a long and arduous process, but it is made increasingly difficult when the author is not a famous member of the community. Norfolk, Virginia, was a bustling town at the start of the twentieth century and had an African American population thirsty for rights and acceptance. One such person was the author of the 1902 diary.
Desperately Seeking W&M Publications
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The Special Collections Research Center in Swem Library is in search of issues of William & Mary newspapers and magazines to complete our collection. Can you help us? We may not be precisely desperate, but the title of a Monroe Project submitted to the W&M Digital Archive yesterday has movies of the 1980s on the brain.
Cataloging Blueprints
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What is "cataloging" you ask? It's more fun than it sounds. It starts with boxes of rolled, often worn and tattered blueprints from the somewhat mysterious archives. One-by-one, I unroll and unfurl the pages and start to assess the situation. I will walk you through the steps of cataloging a single document as an example of the questions I ask myself and the methods I use:
You never know what you may find
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I came to the Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) in the Fall, excited yet a little nervous about beginning my Graduate Assistantship. I had heard wonderful things from other graduate students about their time as Graduate Assistants in the SCRC, and so I was enthused about beginning my assistantship here.
I am not an archivist
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I am not an archivist. Old and fragile documents have scared me for as long as I can remember. Not in a masked murderer kind of way, of course, but in the sense that at any moment while handling archival material, one can accidentally drop a priceless artifact or tear a centuries-old newspaper. That's pressure I'd normally like to avoid when possible. On top of that unnerving, but not necessarily crippling fear, there are the allergies.
Fall 2009 Semester in Review
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Greetings from Swem Library at William & Mary! My name is Michael Lusby and I am currently an intern in the Special Collections Research Center (SCRC). My internship began in the fall of 2009, which was also my first semester in the Master's program for American History at William & Mary.
Diary of a Graduate Student Apprentice
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Hello, world. My name is Kaitlyn Gardy and I am the SCRC's Apprentice in Computing Humanities for 2009-2010. Although I've only worked at the SCRC since the beginning of the fall semester, I have completed two really exciting projects that highlight exhibits and items available in Special Collections. Here's an update on what I've done so far.