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  • Recent Women's History Acquisitions in Special Collections

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    In honor of Women's History Month, Swem Library Special Collections would like to highlight two of its most recent acquisitions related to women's history. The Rowena Goddard Diary is a travel diary kept by Rowena while traveling with her mother in Germany during the spring and summer of 1889.

  • Shirley Temple in Williamsburg

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    We lost an icon with the death of Shirley Temple Black on February 10, 2014. As a child actor, she captured the hearts of millions of Americans. Later in life, she served as the U.S. Ambassador to Ghana and Czechoslovakia, and Chief of Protocol of the United States.

  • Newton Day Recap

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    1In a follow up to last week's post about Special Collections' Principia, here are some pictures of the Newton Day tree planting ceremony and our display of rare science books in the Physics Library.

  • Newton's Principia

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    William & Mary will soon be home of one of history's most famous trees. Well, at least a very close relative. This Saturday, February 22, William & Mary will accept the first of three apple trees grafted from a descendant of the purported apple tree that inspired Isaac Newton's theory of gravitation. The gift comes to us from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which is connected to William & Mary is through its founder and W&M alumnus, William Barton Rogers.

  • 19th Century Women's Diaries

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    Special Collections has recently purchased sixteen women's diaries, totaling about 4,800 pages, written in Connecticut and Oregon. Most of the factual information below is taken from the dealer's description. Twelve of the diaries, dating 1886 to 1945, belonged to Rosanna M. Munger, daughter of Theodore Thornton Munger, a Congregationalist minister and an advocate of Horace Bushnell's "New Theology."

  • College Airport

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    The College Airport was located on Airport Rd which runs perpendicular to Richmond Rd and Mooretown Rd. (click on image for larger view) At the time of construction in the early 1930s, it was suggested that the airport be named "Benjamin Ewell Field" after the former College president who owned a farm nearby. It was only used for a few years in the early 1930's to teach flying to students.

  • Making Sense of Chaos

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    Tasked with processing the Rosina Bowers Papers series of the Hamilton Family Papers, I opened two boxes of photographs and papers as one would expect to find them in someone's home, rather than what you would expect in the stacks of an archive. I had two initial reactions to the yet unprocessed collection.

  • A Year In Review

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    In this letter, James DeLancey, acting Governor Of New York, writes to William Kempe, the royally commissioned provincial Attorney General of New York, concerning a potential mutiny by sailors on the Hudson River in 1759 during the Seven Years War. More material related to the Seven Years War can be found in Special Collections' Armed Conflicts research guide.

  • Out with the old, in with the new

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    If you are a frequent visitor to our blog, you may notice that things look a little different around here. We have updated our look from the design we initially opened for business with in August 2009.

  • X Marks the Swem Spot

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    This is a 1949 aerial photo of campus long before any of the "new campus" buildings. The "X" marks the spot where Swem Library would be built in 1964.

  • A clandestine edition of Galileo's Dialogue concerning the two chief world systems, Ptolemaic and Copernican, 1710

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    Earlier this semester we displayed a selection of Special Collections' early modern science books for a group of students and faculty. Among the exhibited volumes was a copy of the second Italian edition of Galileo Galilei's Dialogo or Dialogue concerning the two chief world systems, Ptolemaic and Copernican, published in 1710.

  • Swem's Visiting Librarian takes on Chapin-Horowitz Dog Book Collection backlog

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    Special Collections and Content Services is thrilled to welcome Xiaoyan Song to the library as Swem's Visiting Librarian.

  • Assassination News Breaks into Everyday Life

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    The United States changed on November 22. The president's promise was lost and the coverage of the event by television affected all who watched with immediacy and intimacy. The American people experienced the tragedy together

  • Written Memories of Three Generations of Women (1915-1966)

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    The Caley Family Papers in Swem Library's Special Collections consist of letters and diaries spanning almost seventy years and three generations of Caley female descendants. From the 1940s through the 1960s , all three generations of women lived, with no male presence, under one roof or within close distance of one another in Sierra Madre, California.

  • Pieces of a Past Life

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    A popular means of documenting personal interests and life events, the practice of scrapbooking dates back centuries. In contrast to the modern practice of pasting family photographs and vacation mementos onto brightly colored paper, early scrapbooks were often compilations of newspaper clippings, artwork, hand-copied quotes, and letters. In addition to being aesthetically interesting, old scrapbooks provide unique insight on the lives of their creators.

  • Colonel Joshua Fry Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Colonists visits Swem Library

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    The Special Collections Research Center was pleased to host a meeting of the Colonel Joshua Fry Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Colonists (NSDAC) on September 16, 2013.

  • Pennyroyal Caxton Bible donated to Swem Library

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    Thanks to the generosity of Bruce and Suzie Kovner, Swem Library has received a copy of the Pennyroyal Caxton Bible. This version of the King James Bible was created by Barry Moser, the noted printmaker and book illustrator, who spent three years designing and setting the type and carving the engravings.

  • Outreach to students

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    Like many special collections at universities across the country, the Special Collections Research Center at Swem Library is dedicated to supporting the research mission of the College, but just as important is its role in enhancing the College's commitment to excellence in undergraduate teaching.

  • Blog Backlogs

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    In the world of archives, the topic of backlogs always comes up: Do you have one? How big is it? What are your plans to attack it?

  • Posters: Not Just For Teenagers Anymore

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    Before starting work at the Special Collections Research Center, I assumed archives were repositories of serious things relating to very serious matters.  There are most certainly serious documents which serve very important purposes, but there are just so many more things housed in the archives here.