As
the fellowship is winding down, I’ve been thinking about where this path will
lead. Eight years ago I had no idea that I would become as entrenched in this
vocation as I have. My journey began as a digital archives assistant at the Special Collections
Research Center
at Morris Library, Southern Illinois University in Carbondale . Other than wanting to rid myself
as Assistant Manager at the Daily Egyptian, the student ran newspaper at SIUC,
I’m not sure what energy directed me to apply for the assistantship at the SCRC
but I’m glad I did. Since being on the archival vocational path, I have made some
fruitful decisions that have landed me exactly at the right place, during the
right time and with the right people. There have been challenges along the
journey but none that I regret facing and overcoming.
Over
the last weeks, I have been arranging and describing the Wyatt Photograph collection
for their permanent home in the Harsh Research Collection stacks. I almost feel
like I don’t want to let them go. These pictures, in all of their forms, from
slides to Polaroids, black and whites to color, 3x5 to 11x17, which document
the full human experience, have become a part of my life. With their
assistance, I have showcased the legacy
of a powerhouse of a human being, gained reassurance when my confidence was
shaken and developed stronger skills as a multimedia archivist.
I
have also processed a small collection of papers that once belonged to a Chicago
native and self-made multimillionaire Mr. Dempsey Jerome Travis better known as
Dempsey Travis. It’s funny. When I was a kid, it seemed like his books were
everywhere. Travis was a real estate tycoon and genius, author, civil rights
activist and philanthropist. He spoke on radio programs about the importance of
owning property, taking optimum care of personal property, land and one
another. He was a man of the people who wanted the best for his people. There
are multiple Dempsey Travis archival collections at various repositories in
Chicago. Most archivists would rather not have split collections but we all
know that things happen. If Dempsey were alive, he might give a big grin and
say there’s enough of “him” to go around. The collection that I have processed
focuses primarily on his manuscripts, which gives a glimpse into his unique writing
practices. There is also correspondence, organizational files, photographs, memorabilia,
etc. Travis wrote almost thirty books on African American history and culture
including an autobiography entitled I
Refuse to Learn to Fail. His life was truly a testament to the title.
Being
an archivist is great. I’m allowed to snoop through other people’s things, then
share the juicy findings I uncover with others by attributing order or
intellectual control to what was once a random wad of processed trees in a
guide, or finding aid, which leads other people through their things.
I
joke about being stashed away down in the dungeon (the processing unit) but
truth be told that’s where all the magic happens. There are only a few days
left before this fellowship ends. I will miss walking through the doors of the Woodson
Regional Library, which then lead me through the doors of the Harsh Research
Collection where some of the greatest African American archival collections
live. I feel accomplished knowing that I have contributed to the Harsh Research
Center. After all, that is what this fellowship was all about.
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