New Things

It may seem something of an oxymoron to have something new in the Archives and Special Collections.  Our collections are mostly “new to us” rather than brand new but we also work to find new ways to let people know about and get them engaged with our materials.

New Projects

Ardrey Diary page

Ardrey diary page ready for transcription

Our newest venture is the Community Space portion of our website.  If you’d like to do more than just browse, now you can help transcribe 19th century documents.  If you have a great memory, you can help us describe photographs. If you have stories about the town or the college, you can send them in.  If you have photographs, you can send us scans.

It’s fairly easy for archives to get administrative records, to document the governance end of an institution or town. It’s harder to get the personal stories, the aspect of history that humanizes events and shows how one event can have more than one perspective.

KA's playing Ping-Pong photo

KAs 1960 – that’s all we know – are you in this photo?

We know that some classes are having great fun with Facebook pages, gathering stories before reunions and we’d like to capture those stories and photos within the Davidson digital archives to be sure that they will be around and available many years from now.

So dust off those memories — your first visit to campus, a dorm prank, a favorite professor, being a part of Town Day, cleaning up after Hurricane Hugo — what have you got to share??

New to Us

Recent donations include an 1840 letter written by William Dalrymple Johnson, class of 1942 to Samuel Kerr, class of 1843.  The letter describes the Johnson’s hopes of attending  Princeton and a lengthy list of courses offered there. We don’t know much about Samuel Kerr but Johnson did transfer to Princeton and also earned an MA there.  He returned to South Carolina to farm and be active in government.

1840 letter from William D. Johnson

1840 letter from William D. Johnson

 

A more modern form of student communication came in from Turner House.  Along with photographs of house events, they donated some of their t-shirts. A bit non-traditional but clothing does tell us about student life and changes in social interactions.  After all, in 1960, who would have ever imagined this image with a Davidson party?

Turner t-shirt

T-shirts capture the graphics of student life

Postcards Views of Davidson and North Carolina

A recent email sharing a Davidson postcard reminded me that this would be a good time to highlight our online postcard collection and also share a few postcards hidden in our manuscript collections.  The only problem is just picking out a few. After looking through our collections and in light of our new exhibit for the postcards in the Nash Collection, the easiest choice was to go with North & South Carolina scenes.

We have almost 200 postcards of the college and town (and a few outlying places) in our online Postcard Collection. The oldest dates from 1898 and shows the front campus with the original Chambers building in the background.

1898 postcard of Davidson College campus

1898 postcard of Davidson College campus

2003 postcard of campus buildings

2003 postcard of campus buildings

The most recent date from 2003 and are of the Knobloch Campus Center and a montage of campus buildings.

2003 Knobloch Campus Center postcard

Knobloch Campus Center postcard

The oldest town postcard dates from around 1907 and shows Main Street looking south from the edge of the campus.

 

c1907 postcard of Davidson, NC

c1907 postcard of Davidson, NC

Included in the online collection are a few images from alumni travels to China and Egypt and a set of cards from Chicago found in an 1912 yearbook. To see those, you’ll need to search the database.

The images below are from scrapbooks from two members of the class of 1926, Benjamin Ratchford (Manuscript collection DC024)  and David G. Wilson (Manuscript collection DC0245s).

Benjamin Ulysses Ratchford, a native of Gastonia, North Carolina, was a class valedictorian in high school. He was an economics major at Davidson College. He received his M.A. in economics from Duke University in 1927 and in 1932 earned the first Ph.D. awarded by Duke in economics. He remained on the faculty at Duke until 1960, and spent time in Europe after World War II, studying and reporting on the economy. He received the Medal of Freedom, given by the War Department to civilians who performed meritorious service in the war, for his work in Berlin. Ratchford left Duke University in 1960 to head the research department at the Federal Reserve Bank in Richmond, until his retirement in 1967.

David Gibson Wilson came to Davidson College from Atlanta, Georgia. As a student at Davidson College, Wilson was chairman of the Junior Speaking Committee. He was vice-president of the Senior class, president of the Glee club, and adjutant of the R.O.T.C. Battalion. He also was a member of the Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity and was elected to Omicron Delta Kappa.

Both men kept scrapbooks as students and included several pages of postcards. Most were never mailed but kept as souvenirs of their travels. Beaches and mountains, especially around Montreat, were popular in the 1920 as they are now, but the views are a bit different.  Researchers and postcard enthusiasts are welcome to visit Archives & Special Collections to see all the postcards in the scrapbooks.

Postcard from Ratchford scrapbook of Forsyth County Club golf course, c 1926

Postcard from Ratchford scrapbook of Forsyth County Club golf course, c 1926

Pack Square, Asheville, NC, c 1926, Ratchford collectionLady Street in Columbia, SC by night, Ratchford collection

Pack Square, Asheville, NC, c 1926, Ratchford collectionLady Street in Columbia, SC by night, Ratchford collection

 

Fun at Folly Beach from Wilson collection, Folly Beach postcard

Fun at Folly Beach from Wilson collection

Folly Beach homes from the Wilson collection, Homes at Folly Beach postcard

Folly Beach homes from the Wilson collection

A view of Montreat, NC from the Wilson collectionBlue Ridge retreat center by Moonlight from Wilson collection, Central Park Montreat, NC postcard

A view of Montreat, NC from the Wilson collectionBlue Ridge retreat center by Moonlight from Wilson collection

New Digital Exhibit – John Frederick Nash’s World War I Postcards

One of our ongoing projects in Archives and Special Collections is to digitize more materials from our collection, to make these artifacts more widely accessible, as well as to preserve them. (See our article in Columns: Newsletter of the E.H. Little Library on our digitization efforts.)

Archives and Special Collections has just continued this ongoing effort by building a new digital exhibit presenting World War I postcards collected in France by John Frederick Nash ’11. This new exhibit includes a digital collection of all twenty postcards in a booklet that Nash came to own while abroad in France, La Guerre Européenne 1914-1915: Aprés le Passage Des Allemands – Les Ruines (The European War 1914-1915: The Ruins after the Passage of the Germans), which illustrates the devastation of France and Belgium in the early months of the Great War.


John Frederick NashJohn Frederick Nash graduated from Davidson College in 1911. He also attended the North Carolina Medical College and studied in New York. He began practicing medicine in St. Paul, North Carolina in 1916. From April 1918, during World War I, he served active duty in Medical Corps first at Camp Greenleaf in Chicamauga Park, Georgia, and subsequently at Camp Upton in New York before being transfered to Camp Souge, France where he served after the end of the war in November 1918 until 1919 as a lieutenant in Evacuation Ambulance Company 80. After his return to Camp Upton in February 1919, Nash was relieved of active duty on March 13, 1919.

 

Extra! Extra! Read All About the Summer Newspaper Project

One of the summer goals for Archives was getting our collection of local small newspapers online. Many of the papers were produced by high school students, some as school papers but others as town papers. They offer special glimpses of town life through the articles and advertisements.

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Digital Stocking Stuffers

As we come up on the college’s holiday break, the Around the D Crew would like to wish all our readers happy holidays. The college will be closed from December 24 to January 3.  To keep you entertained, we’re offering a selection of new digital projects and blogs to explore.

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Digital Wanderings

It’s been awhile since we’ve featured interesting digital collections. This time we’ll go international and even into space – come along for some browsing fun.

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Digital Wanderings

No April Fool’s here – there are 2 Around the D entries for today.

We’re having great fun finding topics and sharing our digital collections and now we’d like to share some fun examples from other colleges. This time we’re featuring projects at Presbyterian College and East Carolina University.

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