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IDL staff pick: Close Hall, The University of Iowa, 1900s

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Close Hall, The University of Iowa, 1900s
Creator: unknown
Collection: Iowa City Town and Campus Scenes

My staff pick is Close Hall which served as the YMCA/YWCA in the early part of the last century. From John C. Gerber’s A Pictorial History of The University of Iowa (University of Iowa Press, 2005):

When Close Hall was dedicated in 1890, so many people came to admire it that the floors sagged alarmingly, and the building was instantly condemned.  After repairs, it reopened and became home to the YM-YWCA. On January 16, 1896 Close Hall was the site of the first basketball game between two college teams of five men on a side.  Iowa lost to the University of Chicago, 15-12.  After 1924 Close Hall served the Journalism Department, the University printing service, and the Daily Iowan.  On New Year’s Day 1940 the building caught fire… [p. 70]

Aerial photographs from the 1960s, also available in this digital collection, show what was left of the building; only one floor remained at the time. It was finally demolished between 1968 and 1970; Biology Building West now stands on its former site.

–Bobby Duncan
Library Assistant, Digital Library Services

IDL staff pick: Hattie Jacobs’ postcard collection, 1908-1910

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Hattie Jacobs’ postcard collection, 1908-1910
Creator: unknown
Collection: Noble Photographs Digital Collection

I am fond of old postcards because I like to read other people’s mail. A few from the Noble Photograph Collection grabbed me, all addressed to Miss Hattie Jacobs.

The back reads, “Hattie, do you indulge in such dreams? I’m surprised if you do. Ah, piffle. Billie”

On the back: “Dear H. Everybody is O.K. Mrs. Butler from across the street died last night. Too bad, is not it? Goodbye W.S.”
I am left wondering for whom W.S.’s heart is afire.

Why is he standing on a chair? If he wants to get next to her, why doesn’t he sit next to her?

Judging by her mail, Miss Hattie Jacobs must have been a lot of fun.

–Joanna Lee
Digital Library Fellow, Schoool of Library and Information Science

IDL staff pick: Children’s wonder book, 1905

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Children’s wonder book
Creator: Steinwender-Stoffregen Coffee Co.
Collection: Szathmary Recipe Pamphlets Digital Collection

 

This is a page from the “Children’s Wonder Book”, a 1905 advertising pamphlet for Yale Coffee containing puzzles and games for children. Despite the incongruity of a coffee advertisement aimed at children (or perhaps because of it), I like this object because of the creativity and simplicity of the various activities. In an age of video games and Toys ‘R Us, it’s a nice reminder that good old fashioned entertainment can be had with a lemon and some matchsticks.  

–Jane Monson
Digital Library Fellow, School of Library and Information Science

IDL staff pick: James Van Allen with rockoon, 1950s

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: James Van Allen on deck at an arctic rockoon expedition, 1950s
Creator: Joseph Kasper
Collection: Research Collections Images

Prof. James Van Allen adjusting equipment about to be sent aloft during an arctic expedition to launch research “rockoons,” precursors to rockets, at the very beginning of the Space Age. The subject matter is of interest to me, but I also like the fact that this image is from a slide taken by a graduate student on the expedition — it has the feel of a snapshot rather than a more “official” photograph, bringing us closer to the historic moment we are witnessing.

–Greg Prickman
Assistant Head, Special Collections & University Archives

IDL staff pick: Supersisters trading cards, 1979

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Supersisters trading cards, 1979
Creator: Supersisters
Collection: Iowa Women’s Archives Founders Digital Collection

In 1978, Lois Rich was asked by her 8-year-old daughter, a baseball card collector, why there weren’t any pictures of girls on the cards. By the following year, Rich had sought out and received grant funding from educational organizations to create the Supersisters trading card set, featuring 72 feminist heroines. With subjects ranging from puppeteer Shari Lewis to politician (and future IWA co-founder) Mary Louise Smith, the cards have been dismissed by some modern-day pundits as a “noble but misguided” project (“It’s sort of hard to imagine kids getting excited about them — ‘Hey, I’ll trade you two Bella Abzugs for a mint Shirley Chisolm!'”). However, I find them a fascinating artifact documenting the areas in which women were — and weren’t — making progress during the second wave of feminism.

–Sarah Dorpinghaus
Digitization Specialist, Digital Library Services

IDL staff pick: Threshing at an Iowa farm, 1910s

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Threshing at the Graham farm, Davis City, Iowa, 1910s
Creator: unknown
Collection: Noble Photographs Digital Collection

One of my favorite images from the digital collections is this image of threshing. I was fortunate to have a great-grandfather still living in south central Iowa and great-aunts and -uncles who wanted to carry on the farming tradition when I was a child in the 1980s. Great-grandpa still had a steam engine for threshing. The entire family came to the land one day when I was 6 years old and we used that old dated machine to thresh. It was extremely hot, there was hay flying everywhere in the air, and I remember moving a blanket across the south part of the field where there were small trees along the fence so I could remain in the sparse shade. The absolute best part of the day was the picnic lunch where everyone took a break and sat down to eat. What an incredible memory to build for the children and grandchildren and great grandchildren of how the work was done long ago in Iowa. I’ll never forget it!

–Sara Baird
Library Assistant, Central Technical Services

IDL staff pick: Mary Louise Smith listening to anti-ERA speech, Iowa, 1980

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Rosa Cunningham and Mary Louise Smith listening to anti-ERA speech at state GOP convention, Iowa, June 1980
Creator: unknown
Collection: Iowa Women’s Archives Founders Digital Collection

These two women are listening to an anti-ERA (Equal Rights Amendment) speech, and I like how their almost identical bodily demeanor—scowls, clenched jaws, crossed arms—tell us everything about what they think of this speech.  No words are necessary; the picture says it all.

–Jeanne Bryson
Library Assistant, Central Technical Services

IDL staff pick: Louise Noun photographs, 1898-2002

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Mary Louise Smith and Louise Noun, Iowa, mid-1990s
Creator: unknown
Collection: Iowa Women’s Archives Founders Digital Collection

 

I like this one as it shows the IWA founders and that they are good friends too.

–Sharen McVey
Library Assistant, Central Technical Services

Continue reading “IDL staff pick: Louise Noun photographs, 1898-2002”

IDL staff pick: UI campus plan, 1930

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: Campus plan of The University of Iowa, 1930
Creator: University of Iowa
Collection: University of Iowa Campus Maps Digital Collection

A 1930 vision of our institution, titled “Campus Plan of the State University of Iowa,” was inspired, in part, by the Olmsted Brothers’ 1905 report commissioned by then-president George MacLean. (Olmsted Brothers. The report of Olmsted brothers, landscape architects of Brookline, Massachusetts : outlining plans for the future arrangement of the grounds and buildings of the State University of Iowa. [Iowa City] : Published by the University, 1905.)

The plan presents a sweeping and idealized view of the campus that includes a proposed library designed along the lines of the Pentacrest buildings. Another 20 years would pass before the present-day brick structure appeared.

Every time I look at this image, I think of the ambitions and aspirations of that time, which are related so well in Tim Onosko’s 1979 book, “Wasn’t the Future Wonderful? A View of Trends and Technology from the 1930s.”

–David McCartney
University Archivist, Special Collections Dept.

IDL staff pick: “Wearin’ pants…” editorial cartoon, 1972

As the Iowa Digital Library approaches the 100,000-item mark, we’re celebrating this milestonetemp by highlighting some of our favorite items from the collections.

Title: “Wearin’ pants and boots and smokin’ pipes and runnin’ for President!”
Creator: Frank Miller
Collection: Iowa Women’s Archives Founders Digital Collection

I love this image, and talk about timely. Before Barack and Hillary there was Shirley Chisholm. In 1972, Chisholm ran for President of the United States under perhaps the best campaign slogan of all times, “Unbought and Unbossed.” She had already blazed ground in 1968, becoming the first African American woman elected to Congress. Cartoonist Frank Miller signed this artwork, “To Louise Noun [co-founder of the Iowa Women’s Archives at University of Iowa] who I would vote for if she ran for congress, maybe.”

–Nicole Saylor
Head, Digital Library Services