Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Another archive blog



The Davidson College Archives has launched a new blog – “Around the D” Whereas "The Square" has discussed library services in the Carolina Room, the Davidson Archivist, Jan Blodgett, uses the blog to pass on historical infomation about the college from sources in the Archive. Her approach makes for enjoyable reading. For example, some students at the turn of the twentieth century grew to resent the campus bell that summoned them to class and prayers, dubbing it one of the "Campus Monsters". This blog would do well to follow the Davidson example. Look for stories from Charlotte and Mecklenburg county's past in future posts.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

On Monday January 19 the Charlotte Symphony culminated a week-long series of programs drawing on the African American musical tradition with a program called "Daybreak of Freedom" that honored the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The Carolina Room provided scans of newspaper headlines and photographs to Wonderworld Film and Video to make the Symphony's Martin Luther King Day tribute a multi-media experience.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

The Big Read



This winter the library is sponsoring The Big Read. It's a program funded by the National Endowment of the Arts to encourage reading. A community organizes to read and discuss a particular book, in Charlotte's case, To Kill a Mockingbird, the 1960 novel by Alabama native Harper Lee.

The Carolina Room supports this program with an exhibit of photographs in Gallery L, the Main Library's exhibit space. Librarian Shelia Bumgarner is the exhibit organizer. She has selected quotations from the book, which is set in the 1930s, and paired them with photographs of Charlotte from that period. To accompany the photograph at the head of this post, she chose the following passage from Chapter 1:

Our mother died when I was two, so I never felt her absence. She was a Graham from Montgomery; Atticus met her when he was first elected to the state legislature. Jem was the product of their first year of marriage; four years later I was born, and two years later our mother died from a sudden heart attack. They said it ran in her family.

The exhibit also includes stills from the equally renowned 1962 movie. (Thanks to Marsha Gaspari of Charlotte for the use of the stills.)