Cool@Hoole

Easter Music by Harald Rohlig

This week we will feature pipe organ music by Dr. Harald Röhlig in honor of Easter weekend. World renowned organist, Harald Röhlig is a composer and pipe organ designer. His career as a musician began in Germany during the 1930s. Harald is a German immigrant and experienced a lot of childhood memories living under the Hitler regime.

Harald’s father, Johannes Röhlig, was a United Methodist minister in northwest Germany who was imprisoned for preaching a sermon on obeying God before man. Harald was soon forced into joining the Hitler Youth and eventually into the German army while his father suffered in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.

In 1953, Harald and his newly wedded wife, Ingeborg Lieverz, moved to America where he accepted a position as the minister of music and organist for First United Methodist Church in Linden, Alabama. Two years later, Harald joined the faculty of Huntington College in Montgomery, Alabama.

Today, Harald continues to compose, give private organ lessons and serve as organist and choirmaster at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Montgomery.

Below are audio clips of performances by Dr. Harald Röhlig from The University of Alabama Libraries Digital Collections. NOTE: After clicking audio links, close your browser window to return to this page.

*** Quicktime is required to listen to our audio files and can be downloaded for free here. ***

Christ is Risen by Johann Sebastian Bach

Orgelbüchlein. Christ ist erstanden - Christ is Risen

Christ We Praise Thee by J. S. Bach

Christ We Praise Thee by J. S. Bach

Christ lay in death's dark prison by Johann Sebastian Bach

Prelude by J. S. Bach

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As ‘A’ Day Approaches

Some places they play football, at Alabama we live it…

As time draws nearer to the ‘A’ Day game, we will take a look back at Alabama football.  Here are some pictures from the University Photo Collection illustrating decades of Alabama football excellence.  Roll Tide!!!

                         

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March Basketball Fever

This week our post highlights photos from the Educational Media Photo Collection. This collection contains images of basketball games and other events from the University of Alabama between 1963 – 1966. All men’s basketball games were held in Foster Auditorium until 1968 with the opening of Memorial Coliseum.

Men's Basketball game

Men's Basketball game against Kentucky at Foster Auditorium

University of Alabama basketball player with ball

University of Alabama vs. LSU

Fans at Men's Basketball game

Spectators at a University of Alabama basketball game

 

 

 

Tri-State Tornado

This week we take a look at one of the worst tornadoes in Alabama history.  This tornado outbreak, known as the Tri-State tornado killed over 250 Alabamians, injured more that 1500 others, and caused damages estimated at over $5 million.  Here are some photos from the Roland Harper Collection which display the devastation left by the tornado.

Doodles

Earlier this week we featured one of our newly online collections, the John Horry Dent Papers. In this collection you can find something kind of fun we sometimes come across in Special Collections… doodles! I have included images of some of these doodles below. We don’t know if these were drawn by Mr. Dent himself or by his children, but whoever it was had some real doodling talent!

Newly Online: John Horry Dent Papers

The John Horry Dent Papers contain three ledgers (a plantation book, a farm journal, and letter copybook) and a folder of miscellaneous letters written by John Horry Dent of Eufaula, Brabour County, Alabama, and Cave Springs, Floyd County, Georgia, dating from January 1849 to November 1891. Dent moved from South Carolina to Eufaula in 1836. He purchased 360 acres of land on Cowikee Creek, paying $15 an acre, and named his plantation “Good Hope.” Dent amassed a large fortune but lost most of it following the Civil War. He sold his properties in Barbour County in 1866 and moved to Cave Springs, Georgia. Dent kept detailed records about his crops and properties until very late in his life. The plantation book records expenditures and incomes from his estate from January 1840 through December 1842, as well as expositional writings, such as letters to his overseer. The farm journal gives crop and weather information along with short anecdotes about events at home in Cave Springs, Georgia. The copybook mainly deals with the workings of his properties in Alabama and Georgia from 1863 to 1875. The miscellaneous letters, written by Dent between 1852 and 1891, are mainly to family members.

1867 Alabama Constitutional Convention

This week we are looking at an item in our digital collection that highlights African-American history, in honor of Black History Month.

This item is a speech by Elisha Wolsey Peck, chairman of the Alabama Constitutional Convention of 1867. The speech discusses the right for African-Americans to vote. The new Alabama state constitution included this right and was ratified in 1868, however, on the state and local levels intimidation by the Klan impeded African-American voting. African-Americans would continue to struggle for this right over the next decade.

Below these images you will find a transcription of the speech.

Gentlemen of the Convention

The work is done. the People of the State of Alabama have declared, through you their representation, that all men are created equal. They have made it a part of the fundamental laws of the state that liberty and equality shall exist here from generation to generation.

To my […] fellow citizens in this convention, let me say to you, go home to your wives and your children, your friends and your neighbors, and say, rejoice and sing, for your liberty and equality is now founded upon a rock, it is a part of the Constitution of the State, and all free men who shall hereafter exercise the great privilege, the right to vote, will have, first to swear, he will never attempt to deprive you of these, your chartered rights, nor will he encourage any one else in doing so.

And to all the loyal, union men, who during long years of persecution and oppression when you had no security for life or property, when you had to flee and hide yourselves among the woods and in the mountains for safety, let me say to you, the constitution we have formed, if ratified by the People, will, in my judgement, if duly executed and observed, give you, hereafter, security and protection in the enjoyment of all the privileges so dear to every free man, and secure you against any harm or injury, for your bold and patriotic adhearence to the Government of the United States when treason was rife and in the ascendant – you are protected by the highest obligation known to human laws.

If this will not give you protection and secure you from persecution and injury no governement but a government founded on force can do it. But it will do it, the great body of the People, are essentially honest, and have a convention for the solemnities of an oath, a Christian fear at violating it.

Again I say, the work, as far as we are concerned, is done and now, let us go home and show our work to the People, and ask their satisfaction of it. If we do this and do it correctly, it will be accomplished and the state will ever be restored to that high position which it enjoyed in the Union before it was destroyed by traitorous hands. The hands of her own children

In conclusion, gentlemen, accept my sincere thanks for the gentleness and kindness I have […] at your hands, as your presiding officer. Let me assure you individually of my earnest prayers for your prosperous journey home and for the final success of our great work. God grant it may accomplish the most sanguine wishes of its friends and restore the State of Alabama to peace and prosperity.

My heart with gratitude and good will to each one of you.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Celebrate this Valentine’s Day with some love songs from our Wade Hall Sheet Music Collection!

XML is like…

For people who are looking at XML data for the first time it can be confusing to find a reference point that allows them to understand the role that values and tags can play in the structuring of their data. Recently I have used this image that highlights the placement of a common value across five different representations of the data. The learner may be familiar with one of the other common ways to structure information presented in the example. This in turn could help to provide a necessary conceptual inroad to comprehension.  May be helpful for new students learning important concepts in a digitization, or metadata processing workflow.

Highlights location of common value in five different data structures

Autherine Lucy

Last week, the beginning of Black History month coincided with an important date in the history of the University of Alabama. On February 3, 1956, Autherine Lucy of Birmingham became the first African-American to enroll at the University of Alabama, as a graduate student in Library Science. Lucy’s time at the college was cut short after just 3 days, when a hostile mob assembled to prevent her from attending classes. That evening, The University suspended Lucy on the grounds that it could not provide her with a safe environment. Following a law suit to have the suspension overturned, the University expelled Lucy permanently.

The University finally overturned Lucy’s expulsion in 1980, and in 1992 she earned a Masters Degree in Elementary Education from UA. Lucy is now honored on UA’s campus with her portrait in the student center with the inscription “Her initiative and courage won the right for stuudents of all races to attend the university,” as well as the Autherine Lucy Clock Tower in the Malone-Hood Plaza outside of Foster Auditorium.

Below are the front pages of the university newspaper, the Crimson White, from February 7, 1956, and February 14, 1956. Click on the images to find the entire issues, where you can read about Lucy’s first day of classes and the violent mob that led to her suspension.