About Laura Smith

Archivist

Happy Thanksgiving, from all of us in Archives & Special Collections

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!  We here in Archives & Special Collections wish you all a safe and happy holiday.

Here is a page from The Constructive Triangle, a publication of the American Montessori Society, on how to create Thanksgiving theme placemats and paper plate turkeys.  Enjoy!

Page from Constructive Triangle on how to make Thanksgiving placemats and paper plate turkeysAnd, please note that the University of Connecticut is closing today at 12:30p.m. for the snow storm.  Our reading room is closing at that time as well.  Stay safe, everyone!

 

Another photograph of Steve Thornton getting arrested

Steve Thornton has spent his career advocating for fair wages, fair practices and fair treatment for all.  Sometimes all that advocating has gotten him arrested!  Here is yet another photograph of Steve getting arrested at a protest, this one at the Waterbury, Connecticut, Brass Mill mall during a Local 1199 protest to save Waterbury Hospital in  2013:

Stephen Thornton being led into a police van at the Waterbury, Connecticut, Brass Mill mall during a Local 1199 protest to save Waterbury Hospital, 2013

Stephen Thornton being led into a police van at the Waterbury, Connecticut, Brass Mill mall during a Local 1199 protest to save Waterbury Hospital, 2013

Steve is one of our featured speakers at a panel discussion, Social Justice & Community Organizing: How to Make a Career by Serving Connecticut, tomorrow at 3:30p.m. in Konover Auditorium at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center.  Steve will be joined by Louise Simmons (UConn professor of Community Organizations) and Val Ramos (Director of Strategic Alliances for Everyday Democracy).

Social Justice program on Thursday, November 13, 3:30p.m.

We can’t wait for Thursday’s program on “Social Justice & Community Organizing: How to Make a Career by Serving Connecticut,” with Steve Thornton, Louise Simmons, and our recently added panelist Valeriano Ramos.

Valeriano Ramos

Val Ramos is the Director of Strategic alliances and Equity Officer for Everyday Democracy, an East Hartford-based non-profit dedicated to helping communities talk and work together to create communities that work for everyone.

The program is at 3:30 in Konover Auditorium, with a reception following, and sponsored by Archives & Special Collections, the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, and UConn’s Careers for the Common Good.

We hope to see you there!

Social Justice Panel discussion on November 13, 3:30p.m.

Stephen Thornton at a Ladies Garment Workers Strike, 1992

Join us for a program exploring social activism, service leadership, and community organizing with a panel discussion including Stephen Thornton and Louise Simmons, who have served as community organizers and labor activists.

The discussion begins at 3:30 on November 13 in Konover Auditorium at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, with a reception to follow.

Sponsored by Archives & Special Collections of the UConn Libraries, the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, and UConn’s Community Outreach.

Click here for more information.

#AskAnArchivist Day is on Thursday, October 30!

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We here in Archives & Special Collections are participating in #AskAnArchivist Day on Thursday!  Do you have questions to ask us?  Is there anything about working in an archives that you were always curious about?  Do you want to know more about our collections or services?

#AskAnArchivist is open to everyone—all you need is a Twitter account! To participate, just tweet a question and include the hashtag #AskAnArchivist in your tweet. Your question will be seen instantly by archivists around the country who are standing by to respond directly to you.

Or, you can tweet us directly at our Twitter feed at https://twitter.com/UConnArchives

So don’t be shy!  Ask away!  We’re standing by!

Our new exhibit — Hard Work: Connecticut’s Laborers in the Industrial Age

Farrel Company workers, undated

 

This exhibit shows scenes of Connecticut’s workers doing Hard Work. Capital H, Capital W.  The kind of work where you surely need the brains but if you ain’t got the brawn it’s not gonna happen.  And we’ve got plenty of photographs in our business collections showing the men and women in the state in various depictions of work where some of the main job requirements are muscle and sweat.  I’m sure tears were there somewhere but the photographs don’t really show that.

In the late 19th and early 20th century — a time period in America known for big industry — Connecticut was one of the major players, producing brass, iron, steel, tools, textiles and more for the state, the country, and the world.  These products didn’t just happen.  It took a workforce of thousands, many of them new immigrants who flocked to Connecticut for these types of jobs, to produce, to make, to build, and to work.

The exhibit is currently up in the Dodd Research Center Gallery until the end of the year.  I’ll show photographs from the exhibit periodically through the next three months but if you can stop by (the building is open Mondays through Fridays, 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.) you’ll see them all in one fell swoop.

Are trains faster today than they were 100 years ago?

New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad timetable, September 1914

Was train travel from New Haven, Connecticut, to New York City faster 100 years ago than it is today?  Here are two pages from the public timetable of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad from September 1914:

New Haven, Connecticut, to New York stops on the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, September 2014

New Haven, Connecticut, to New York stops on the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, September 2014If someone took the “Banker’s Express” from New Haven at 8:00a.m. he (and in that day and age it was always a “he”) would get to New York City at 9:44a.m.

How does that compare to today?