Cool@Hoole

Be Thankful for the Right to Vote

“A non-voter is not a half a citizen.”
Interview with H. D. Coke, 1984

Like Coke, many of the elderly African Americans interviewed for the Working Lives Oral History Project remember the struggle to register to vote during the first half of the 20th century. Click on the links below to listen to the audio version of these interviews and read along with their transcripts.

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Thelma Walton remembers having to go with a white person, to vouch for her and read all the documents involved. She says, “They had to do all the writin’ for us… Only one thing we had to do, practially, is make an X.” Even if she couldn’t read, she wanted to cast her vote.

James Armstrong, a veteran, recalls trying to register during the late 1940s. He was turned down half a dozen times before he succeeded.

Polling officials asked Armstrong unnecessary and often unrelated questions, from where he lived and who his senator was to how many steps there were from city hall to the post office. He remembers some of his friends being asked even more ridiculous things, like the number of windows in the courthouse, seeds in a watermelon, or even bubbles in a bar of soap!

Armstrong’s teacher had taught him about voting and motivated him to do it. He says, “It’s somethin’ that you’re determined to do. You just kept goin’. I felt like, you spend four years in the army…overseas and exposin’ your life for this country, then you come home, try to do the best you can to make yourself a full citizen.”

Like Armstrong, C. S. Johnson was asked to name his senators as well as to recite the constitution. Beginning in 1950, he made repeated trips to attempt to register, once facing the question, How many gallons of water are in the Alabama River? He didn’t have much trouble once his foreman sent him. Like Walton, it appears as though having a white person vouch for you was sometimes the only way to make progress.

The Reverend C. C. Welch tried for the better part of a decade to register to vote, finally “passing” in 1936. Once, he failed simply because he couldn’t remember the name of the Speaker of the House. When asked why he thinks they finally passed him, he laughs and says, “You want the truth? I think they took pity on me. … I worried ’em so long I think they got tired of worryin’ with me.” He cites the NAACP as their “best friend” in helping get people registered.

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The right to vote wasn’t something any of these men and women took for granted. They were willing to endure so much they shouldn’t have had to, just to be able to register. If you’re registered, make sure to take time to vote tomorrow!

Happy Halloween!

Do you have spooky party plans this week? Check out the costumes on these students, from the late 1940s/early 1950s.

students at a costume party, posing

students a costume party, dancing

students at a costume party, posing

These images (like those of the homecoming float in the previous post) are from the George Nichols Photographic Collection. If you’re going to be partying like they are this Halloween, I hope you have at least as much fun. But be safe!

How to build a Homecoming float

Homecoming 2012 is now in full swing, with the theme Timeless Traditions. In preparation for the parade on Saturday, many folks around campus are putting the finishing touches on their floats. Our fraternities are old hands at this, as we can see from the pictures below, from the late 1940s. (Click on any of the images below to view them in better detail in Acumen.)

It helps to have a good infrastructure.

homecoming float(Anybody know where they’ve set up shop here? Looks like somewhere in the vicinity of Manly or Clark…)

homecoming floatIt’s good to have plenty of help…

homecoming float…even if they’re sometimes less than helpful.

homecoming floatDo you think this float impressed their girlfriends?

homecoming floatThe collection these images come from, George Nichols photographs, consists of one hundred and thirteen black and white photographs of Nichols as a student at the University of Alabama and the Theta Chi fraternity member in the late 1940s.

Digitization Technologist position open!

Digital Services at the University of Alabama is hiring a new Digitization Technologist! For more information, or to apply, please go to http://staffjobs.ua.edu and search in the Working Title field.

The Digitization Technologist will analyze technical problems and devise solutions, as well as seek out methods for new and better functionality. Research into improved methods of delivery and preservation support is expected.

The Digitization Technologist position requires an individual who is self-motivated, curious, and eager to learn and explore. The successful applicant will have a good base of understanding of a variety of technologies related to digitization and digital libraries, and will be capable of quickly processing and integrating new technical information and developments. This position requires strong analytical problem-solving capabilities and technical expertise. Command-line scripting capabilities are expected.

The Digitization Technologist will be involved in developing software support for digitization, preservation and delivery work flows. Additionally, this position will be responsible for capture, quality control, optimization, gathering of administrative, technical, structural, and descriptive metadata, and tracking, archiving and storage of resulting digital objects.

Interested in joining our team? Apply today!
Closing date: November 6, 2012.

Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Service Men’s Center Scrapbook

Did you know that Tuscaloosa was home to a major WWII hospital? The Service Men’s Center catered to the wounded soldiers there, in addition to holding activities for soldiers at their facility (which is now the University Club). This massive scrapbook contains photographs, newspaper clippings, Army publications, and personal correspondence, including cards and letters. Click the picture below to view the scrapbook:

Tuscaloosa Service Men's Center

A note in the online finding aid tells the story:

“The Tuscaloosa Junior Chamber of Commerce established the Service Men’s Center, a facility for entertaining military personal stationed in the area, in January 1943. Mrs. Elizabeth Morley was its hostess. The Center was originally intended to host young American, British, and French men who were in the Army Specialized Training Program at the University of Alabama, pilots training at the Van De Graff Airport, and Air Corps cadets training at the University of Alabama. Over one hundred carefully chosen ladies between the ages of eighteen and thirty served as hostesses to these young, healthy men.

Tuscaloosa Service Men's Center

Soon, however, the healthy men left Tuscaloosa and were replaced by wounded soldiers at the Northington General Hospital in Tuscaloosa. Northington was constructed in 1943 and during the war became the world’s largest burn hospital, specializing in plastic surgery. The hostesses not only entertained soldiers at the Service Men’s Center, they also visited soldiers at Northington, where the auditorium served as a dance hall.

Tuscaloosa Service Men's Center

The hostesses offered therapy though kindness to scarred soldiers and helped them re-enter the public world. The service center provided a safe environment for service men to spend time with young ladies from Tuscaloosa and the University of Alabama and to enjoy games, sports, dinners, dances, plays, and other activities.”

Tuscaloosa Service Men's Center

The Veterans Memorial Park adjacent to University Mall was built on the site of the old Northington General chapel.

Acumen 3.0 is here!

Recently, we unveiled the newest version of our search tool, Acumen 3.0! Its new indexer (among other improvements) helps put more data at your fingertips faster.

See more info on the results page
The easiest way to get you more info — beyond the familiar title + thumbnail setup — without cluttering up the display is to show the item’s Genre(s), Subject(s), and Descriptions. Not everything, after all, can be in a title.

Subjects
For example, the genre for Letter from Elizabeth Hudson, Clarks Hill, Indiana, to Friend Mike, March 9, 1916 is pretty obvious, but the title can’t tell us what that letter is about. Scanning the subjects, you can see that it discusses love and marriage but also motion pictures. (In this case, it was D. W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation — before anyone knew it would be a classic.)

Descriptions
The description field is invaluable for learning more specific things about an item, especially a photograph. You can see that a particular image of Cattle and cowboys is depicting Wyoming — Crowheart, Wyoming to be exact.

Search by user-generated tags and transcripts
Until recently, the data generated by our user tagging initiative and transcription software was simply extra info that displayed with the item. Now, user tags and transcriptions are indexed along with the item, so that when you do a search, Acumen looks for them the same way it does any of the item’s other attributes.

Transcriptions
There are several undated letters sent between Charles and Mamie Manly for example. With a fellow patron’s transcription in the display, you can easily tell which letter is about a sickness spreading through the household and which discusses the effect of the war on their farm.

Tags
For images, this means you can know that the photo titled Paul (Bear) Bryant didn’t capture just any old moment he stepped up to a microphone — it was taken at a pep rally!

Let us know what you think of the new Acumen results page and item display!

Day of Digital Archives: Finding Balance

Did you know today is the second annual Day of Digital Archives? It’s about celebration but also education: Just what is it we actually do here at Digital Services?

What I like about being a Digitization Technologist is that it’s never boring. There’s always something new on the horizon…or already falling into your lap! A lot of the time, it’s software, but yesterday it was the confluence of archival materials and hardware, namely, a set of old galley proofs and our shiny new Canon lens.

Continue reading

The Million Dollar Band hits its centennial

This year marks 100 years for UA’s Million Dollar Band!

Here they are featured in the 1969 Corolla yearbook:

million dollar band, 1969

1957:
million dollar band, corolla, 1957

1959:
million dollar band, corolla, 1957

1965:
million dollar band, corolla, 1965

Posing in front of Gorgas Library in 1966:

million dollar band, 1966

Small Photo Collections: Horgan Industrial photos, Birmingham, 1889

The John Horgan, Jr. photo album contains 23 images of industrial sites around Birmingham. Taken in 1889, these images are a good example of early photography, but they can also provide a helpful context for other collections in Acumen. For instance, the DeBardeleben Company is often mentioned in the Working Lives oral histories, and the image below of the Woodward Iron Company site helps add to the company history as represented in the Woodward Family papers.

industrial site in 1889

industrial site in 1889

industrial site in 1889

industrial site in 1889

industrial site in 1889

Fall break with Small Photo Collections: Wade Hall

Donor Wade Hall is that rare kind of collector who sees the value in seemingly normal, everyday documents and photos, things that aren’t connected to a big historical figure or moment but nevertheless make up the fabric of history. The many small photograph collections assembled from Hall’s donations give us a fantastic window into the everyday life of people from the late 19th to mid 20th centuries.

Most of these photographs are of families and friends, of milestones at home and trips away from home. Since it’s fall break, here are some vacation photos that will hopefully remind you of the sunny summer and travel time we’ve just said farewell to.

Maybe you wish you were at the boardwalk…

vacation photo

…or even Niagara Falls!

vacation photo

These folks enjoy fishing from their big boat…

vacation photo

…but these guys seem to have caught more fish from their canoes:

vacation photo

Obviously, bathing costumes have changed a lot over the years:

vacation photo

But aren’t you glad to know you’re not the first to cut someone’s head off when framing a picture?

vacation photo

Wherever you are this Mid-Semester Study Break, we hope you’re with friends.

vacation photo