UConn alums who have misplaced their copy of the yearbook now have the capability of reliving their college years online. In collaboration with the Nutmeg staff and the Division of Student Affairs, the UConn Libraries announces the availability of the 1915-1989 electronic Nutmeg. Anyone can access individual issues of the Nutmeg from the Archives & Special Collections website at: http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/collections/nutmeg/index.htm
Author Archives: Jean Nelson
2009 Billie M. Levy Travel Grant recipient to speak
Ms. Rueda’s talk is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Terri J. Goldich, curator for the Northeast Children’s Literature Collection at 860.486.3646 or terri.goldich@uconn.edu.
D Day
Tomorrow marks the 65th anniversary of D Day, the Allied Invasion of Normandy and we will use the opportunity to talk about the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP) at UConn. Based out of the School of Engineering, the U.S. Army’s ASTP program was implemented in early 1944 due to the impending invasion. The goal of the program was to increase the number of army trained engineers across the country. More than 1,500 soilders were stationed at UConn. The Kodachrome exhibit on display has several images of the training these soilders received while on campus. For more information about the ASTP, please see their website at http://www.astpww2.org/
A little about football
According to Carl Brandt, the post World War II era was a great time for UConn’s football program. Many of these “mature males” played teams that seemed to be made up of “kids” just out of High School. The score below is an indication of one such game. Mr. Brandt recalls another score of something like 105 to 0, but doesn’t have an official photo of it.
And it was a time when women played football also, as you can see in this rare color photograph from the collection.
Milk, it does the body good
The University of Connecticut’s history is rooted in the traditions of agriculture. This was still a prevalent field in the 1940’s and 1950’s. In our latest tribute to alumni weekend this June 5th & 6th, we are sharing two of the many wonderful photos taken by Jerauld Manter that show how enjoyable a glass of fresh milk can truly be.
Kodachrome Exhibit
The second of our two exhibits focuses on the history of UConn through Kodachrome Film. The innovation of Kodachrome in 1935 gave photographers the ability to capture the world around us in living color.
It is likely that Jerauld Manter, faculty member and unofficial college photographer, took the color photographs in this exhibit in and around the University of Connecticut between 1939 and 1959. The prints on display were made from his original Kodachrome 35mm color slides and reflect the remarkable stability of this film over time.
Manter’s photogarphs capture a period of significant growth in UConn’s history, beginning with its establishment as the multi-campus University of Connecticut in 1939. The next two decades saw the development of the Hartford, Stamford, Torrington and Waterbury regional campuses and the Schools of Law, Nursing and Social Work. The student body expanded by 300% after World War II, growing from 1,265 in 1939 to 9,761 in 1959.
History in images, continued….
As we promised, we will continue to highlight some of the great images on display in the Dodd Center from the Carl Brandt Collection.
Carl Brandt joined the Aviation Club as photographer and took numerous photos for use in the school newspaper. His pilots were usually World War ll vets who had flown bomber or fighter aircraft over Germany.
“Several of us would rent aircraft early on a Sunday mornings — and then fly for about half an hour to another airport that had a restaurant. After a good breakfast, we would fly back to the original airport. ”
Today is all about the past
Next weekend is UConn’s Alumni Weekend and we are celebrating with two very special exhibits that we will highlight all next week right here on our blog.
Photographs from university activities and events are a significant portion of our collections, as is true with many archives in higher education institutions. They are incredibly important in documenting life on campus. But all too often the images are a result of staff photographers employed to take official pictures. We often see a different idea of what was important when students are taking the images.
The exhibit “Something Important Happened Today: Student Photography on Campus” is a special exhibit for us, as it is from the photograph collection of Carl Brandt, Class of 1949. While on campus in the late 1940s — a period of remarkable change on the Storrs campus — Brandt took thousands of photographs and this exhibit presents a selection of Dr. Brandt’s images, complemented by his memories.
Principals, Politics & Leadership: Speaking out in Washington
Did you miss the Chris Shays lecture last month on staying true to yourself and your constitutents while in Washington? It was a great lecture and you can view it on CT-N by clicking on the image below.
American Montessori Society Collection
Summer vacation for school children around the country will soon be upon us, a time when we look forward to the excitement that summer brings. It is also a good time to reflect on the importance of our educational instutions, and today we will do that with a brief look at the Montessori school system.
The Dodd Center holds the records of the American Montessori Society, which was founded in 1960 and since that time has succeeded in reviving the Montessori method in the United States and gaining recognition for it as a valid educational system. The society has become the foremost resource in America for Montessori education and teacher training. Check out more information at http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/findaids/ams/MSS20060230.html
Lest we forget.
An excerpt from Connecticut Campus, May 9, 1945.
So in this moment of triumph in Europe, when human nature practically compells us to feel that the worst is over and apathy is now in order, let us stop and consider. If ever America and the world needed moral, physical, and financial support – it is now. Now is the time to dig in the hardest for there is a long torturous road ahead.
It is so easy to delude ourselves into feeling anything we could do would make no perceptible difference, but if anything we can do even helps shorten the war by one second and save one boy’s life – it should not have been in vain.
James Marshall Fellowship Grant
On Monday, May 4, 2009, at 2:30pm Ms. Thea Guidone will present the results of her research in the Northeast Children’s Literature Collection housed at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center. A recipient of the James Marshall Fellowship, Ms. Guidone is a children’s writer who lives in Hamden. At the University of Connecticut, she studied Children’s Literature with Francelia Butler, and Creative Writing with Matthew Proser, Elaine Scarry and Feenie Ziner. She earned her master’s degree at Yale University. An active member of the Society for Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, Ms. Guidone won Connecticut’s 2006 Tassy Walden Award for New Voices in Children’s Literature and is the author of Drum City (Tricycle Press, May 2010). She is at work on a middle grade novel set in New Haven in 1925.
Ms. Guidone will discuss subtext in schoolbooks and novels for girls, circa 1920’s, that informed and reinforced attitudes about wealth, privilege and class. The presentation will take place in the Dodd Research Center’s conference room 162 and is free and open to the public.