ROVIN' AND RAVIN' WITH MIKE

Copyright (C) 2001 by Michael Segers, All rights reserved

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Our Online Grandma's Attic

  

     This week, my customary rave has turned into ecstatic trance because I have discovered just about the most fascinating site I've ever found on the Internet.  And since the American Memory Historical Collections is part of the program of the Library of Congress, it's a great example of out tax dollars being put to very good use.  Honestly, just click on that link, and don't waste your time with the rest of this article.  This site speaks (at times literally) for itself.

More formally known as the National Digital Library Program, American Memory is a collection of collections of digitized (that is, Internet-accessible) photographs, manuscripts, books, maps, sound recordings, and motion pictures.  This public/private program cooperates with a variety of other programs and libraries to open up a virtual grandma's attic for us on the Internet—without the dust and cobwebs.

Only a very small percentage of Library of Congress holdings are included, but everything in the American Memory collections earns its place on the basis of its value to students, teachers, and researchers.  Many new items and new collections are being added, so this is certainly a site to bookmark and come back to.  Often.

American Memory almost leaves me speechless—and that is not a very common condition for me.  The best way to communicate its scope is just to give you a list of its main topics: Agriculture, Art and Architecture, Business and Economics, Education, Geography, History, Languages and Literature, Performing Arts, Philosophy and Religion, Political Science and Law, Recreation and Sports, Social Sciences, Technology and Applied Sciences.  These topics are represented by written materials, such as books and other printed texts, manuscripts, and sheet music; maps, photos, and prints; sound recordings and motion pictures. 

The site involves a number of special collections, a number that is still growing.  These ten collections should give you a good idea of things you can read, look at, and listen to all in one venue:  

Baseball Cards (1887-1914)

Broadsides and Printed Ephemera (ca. 1600-2000)

Civil War Photographs

Coca-Cola Advertising Films (1951-1999)

Dance Manuals (1490-1920)

Edison Film and Sound Recordings

Historic American Sheet Music

Map Collections (1544-1999)

Mr. Lincoln’s Virtual Library

Personal Narratives from the Southern U.S.

Another way of dealing with this material is to enter something in the search engine and see what you get.  To give you some idea of the scope of this site, the search engine’s default is a maximum of 500 items.  Let's go back a hundred years, to 1901.  It was a year in which another president was inaugurated, William McKinley (for the second time).  It was also the year in which he was assassinated.  You can find his inaugural address as well as a film of the inauguration.  You can also see photos and read news stories and proclamations associated with his death.

But, if you enter the year 1901 in the search engine, you can also read "An Old Timer's Dictionary" (personal narratives) and see photos of "Graves moved from Shumate's Branch," "Tlingit totem pole" in Ketchikan, Alaska, and "Nez Perce Chief Joseph poses in blanket outdoors."  Sheet music includes "Raz ma taz," “Mighty Lak a Rose,” and “The Voo-doo Man.”  On more serious matters, you can read reports from the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. 

Of course, your entry of 1901 may be misleading, because you will also have the chance to read the ninety-eight stanzas of Eliot, a Poem by William Ellery Channing, who died in 1901.  You'll also be able to view a later photo of a "trailer camp for defense workers of the Vultee Aircraft Plant. Nashville, Tennessee," because its photographer, Peter Sekaer, was born in 1901.

Some of the items in these collections are protected by copyright, but as far as I can tell, all of them are available for fair use by students and teachers, and I can imagine that students and teachers could find quite a lot of use for this site.  A teacher could compile materials from this site into a unique multi-media e-book for students.

After spending hours roving through the American Memory Historical Collections site, it gets my very wildest rave: if you didn't have anything else on the Internet, except that site (and, of course, out own little free-net so that you could access it), it would certainly be worth your time and money to get a computer.

While we are on the subject of American history, have you checked your pockets lately?  The Mint's series of state quarters has entered its second year, with the New York quarter. Of course, February rolls around with a lot of historical echoes, and every February is officially Black History Month.

No matter how you may feel about the previous resident of the White House or the current one, our country's predictably swift and efficient change of leaders once again is a marvel and a model for democracies around the world.  It is certainly a good time to pause and savor the best of our American Memory.  Keep your feet dry and, if your heart is running low on noble thoughts or even a few good laughs, the American Memory Historical Collections site can give you a quick pick up.

    

Rovin' Through U.S. History 

Rovin' & Ravin' with Mike

 

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