City of Savannah, Georgia, Research Library and Municipal Archives recipient of a Recordings at Risk grant

We would like to congratulate the City of Savannah Research Library & Municipal Archives (RLMA), who, partnering with the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC), has just received a grant for $13, 111 to reformat at-risk, rare audio recordings (34 open -reel tapes; estimated 43 hours; dating 1955-1978, undated) from the W. W. Law Collection.

From the announcement at https://www.clir.org/recordings-at-risk/awards:

Westley Wallace “W. W.” Law (1923-2002) was a prominent civil rights leader, local historian, historic preservationist and community leader in Savannah, Georgia.  As president of the Savannah Branch NAACP from 1950-1976, his collection includes a variety of material related to the civil rights movement, not only in Savannah but throughout the United States.  The audio included in this project include speeches by NAACP leaders, civil rights events, recordings of regional musicians, and local history programs.  They will be valuable to researchers from a broad array of disciplines, including local and national scholars of American, social or music history, local community members, biographers, and students, among others.

The Recordings at Risk grant program is a national regranting program administered by CLIR to support the preservation of rare and unique audio and audiovisual content of high scholarly value. Generously funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the program will award a total of $2.3 million between January 2017 and September 2018.

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New Collections from the Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center

Photogravures booklet 19, A wedding scene. A Christian wedding scene at Garraway, Liberia conducted by the missionaries. Anna E. Hall Collection, Photographs, Robert W. Woodruff Library
Photogravures booklet 19, A wedding scene. A Christian wedding scene at Garraway, Liberia conducted by the missionaries. Anna E. Hall Collection, Photographs, Robert W. Woodruff Library

Our partners at the Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center have recently shared several new collections that have been digitized as part of a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) grant to provide access to archival African American religion collections.

Jessica Leming, Project Archivist at the Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center highlights several of the resources that were part of fourteen collections represented in the NEH grant project.

She describes several of the collections: “A few of the larger collections include the J. Howard Dell collection (Church of God in Christ [COGIC] church leader and pioneer in mass media ministries), Isaac R. Clark (longtime scholar and professor of homiletics at the Interdenominational Theological Center), and the C. Eric Lincoln lecture series collection (leading scholar on the black church and black religion, as well as being one of the first to author scholarly texts on black Muslims in the United States). These collections hold national significance as they document African American religion across denominations, and religious institutions–many of which were responsible for the founding of private historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs). These institutions served many purposes, including sites for education, socialization, community and nation building, employment, and expressions of spirituality, integral to many facets of the African American experience.”

Leming recommends viewing the photographs in the Anna E. Hall collection. Anna E. Hall was an African American missionary and deaconess in the Methodist church. She notes: “These photographs really paint a picture of what it would be like to live and work in Liberia in the early 20th century. Also in this collection is a journal from an earlier missionary that documents some challenging living conditions, and what life would have been like for the native people as well as the visiting missionaries.” The items can also be accessed in the AUC’s Digital Commons: http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/hallimg/. She also suggests viewing the Society for the Study of Black Religion collection, which includes discussions from this scholarly society dedicated to the study and production of knowledge about the broad diaspora of Black religion, and  feature prominent speakers such as Pauli Murray, Boykin Sanders, and Cornel West. These videos are also available at: http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/ssbr/.

Still from The Generic Structure of Afro-American Theology and Response by Cornel West and Book Review by Cornel West and Charles Long. Society for the Study of Black Religion Collection, Robert W. Woodruff Library
Still from The Generic Structure of Afro-American Theology and Response by Cornel West and Book Review by Cornel West and Charles Long. Society for the Study of Black Religion Collection, Robert W. Woodruff Library

Leming is pleased with the enthusiastic response to the digitization of the materials from these collections, and their availability to researchers: “Researchers interested in African American religious studies, church history, and African American theology, philosophy, and education have sought these materials. Previous to the AUC Woodruff Library receiving this NEH grant, the audiovisual collection had very limited access due to lack of playback equipment and age of the materials. We are excited that because of the grant, we have been able to digitize almost 1,000 reel-to-reel and video formats, and we are currently working on scanning the over 2,200 photographs that are within these collections…Since we’ve started launching the digital collections via AUC’s Digital Commons, we have seen 1,540 page hits and 1,021 downloads to date. We are excited to be uploading more content every month as we process the materials.”

We hope that you take the time to view these new collections, and spend some time with the digital collections available from the Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center at http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/Institutions/auu.html.

 

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