(Another great tune from my collections processing playlist)
Monday,
November 19th:
Reference Librarian, Deborah Wright mentioned
developing a Wikipedia page for Avery Research Center and asked me to follow up
with Public Historian, Dr. Robert T. Chase about the idea. Subsequently, I began researching how to set up
a Wikipedia account and shared some of my notes with Dr. Chase when I met with
him. After speaking with Processing
Archivist, Georgette Mayo and Manager of Archival Services, Aaron Spelbring in
weeks prior about how to correspond with donors regarding materials outside the
scope of a collection, I drafted letter to the donor of the W. Melvin Brown,
Jr. Papers to let them know that the collection has been processed and to inquire
as to whether they wanted materials that were weeded out of the collection to be
returned to them. In addition, I started preparing box labels for the Hollinger
boxes containing the W. Melvin Brown, Jr. Papers, printed a label for the
collections’ finding aid folder and uploaded images taken by Education Outreach
Coordinator, Shelia Harrell-Roye of the field trip to Drayton Hall.
Tuesday, November 20th:
Tuesday, November 20th:
I started thinking about a contingency plan for the
Story Corps’ National Day of Listening post on Avery’s Facebook page after Ms.
Mayo alerted me to the fact that we did not have a release for the foodways interviews
we wanted to feature. I also spoke with
Mr. Spelbring and Ms. Wright about a post I prepared the night before for
Avery’s News, Events and Activities blog, regarding National Day of
Listening. I had planned to post an
edited version of a letter Dr. Chase had sent out via e-mail regarding Story
Corps interviews conducted with Avery’s participation; however, Ms. Wright said
that I didn’t need to worry about that because Dr. Chase was preparing an
article about the Story Corp interviews to include in the upcoming issue of the
Avery Messenger.
By the afternoon, I had completed my printing of box
labels for the W. Melvin Brown, Jr. Papers and spoken with Ms. Mayo about
developing a Wikipedia page for Avery. She
provided me with some informational material to use in the task. I also did my first
posting on Avery’s Facebook page about the center joining Lowcountry Africana
as a sponsor of Story Corps’ National Day of Listening.
Wednesday,
November 21st:
I completed encoding the finding aid for the Edwina
Harleston Whitlock Papers in EAD using NoteTab and acorresponded
with College of Charleston Multimedia Consultant/
Online
Video Producer, Michael Heagerty, about video editing
software I’ve used on different audiovisual and media related projects.
Thursday,
November 22nd and
Friday, November 23rd:
On Thursday, I started
my interview evaluation for veteran civil rights attorney; activist and
educator Julius L. Chambers, and continued working on my
responses for the IMLS Quarterly Survey. Chambers became the first intern of the
new NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund (LDF) in 1963 and subsequently,
opened his own practice in Charlotte, North Carolina in June 1964. Together
with lawyers of the LDF, Chambers helped shape civil rights law by winning
benchmark United States Supreme Court rulings, such as the famous decision of Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education. The decision led to federally mandated
busing, which helped integrate public schools across the country.
On Friday morning, I did a second post on Avery’s
Facebook page for Story Corps’ National Day of Listening, featuring an
interview from Mary Moultrie.
I found her interview on the Lowcountry Digital Library after Ms. Mayo
told me that we did not have clearance on the interviews I was planning to use. Moultrie was among the leaders of the 113-day
Charleston hospital strike in March of 1969. In her interview, she speaks about the
working conditions and employee relationships at the Medical University of
South Carolina before and after the strike, and details the racial tensions
that led up to it.
Keep up your excellent work. Have you seen the new Abraham Lincoln movie? I have been doing civil war researc on my own. I neverknew about the 113 day Chrleston hospital strike. I will google to find more information.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I was just talking to someone the other day about Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation, and they asked me the same thing. No, I haven't seen the film yet, but I'm a huge fan of Speilberg and Daniel Day-Lewis. Also, here's an article from Charleston's "Post and Courier" about Mary Moultrie and the hospital strike: http://www.postandcourier.com/article/20081123/PC1602/311239916
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