Mid-20th-century history about Smyrna, Georgia comes alive with its 1953 scrapbook now available online in the Digital Library of Georgia

Selected by statewide cultural heritage stakeholders and funded by the DLG’s competitive digitization grant program, this collection is the Smyrna Public Library’s latest collaboration with the DLG and is available here: 1953 Smyrna scrapbook.

The collection is a 1953 scrapbook created by the Better Home Town Committee of Smyrna, Georgia, for entry into the Georgia Power Better Home Town Contest.

Mary Moore, librarian at the Smyrna Public Library, describes the importance of this content and why digital access to it is so important:

“This scrapbook is a unique snapshot of Smyrna in 1953. It captures an overview of the city with regard to government, economy, religion, housing, recreation, and youth at a time when Smyrna was still segregated but growing. The book contains rare documentation on Davenport Town and Rose Garden Hills, the two neighborhoods that were predominantly inhabited by African Americans. 1953 was a pivotal time in Smyrna; the city was in the midst of the largest period of rapid growth since the Lockheed Corporation had taken over the old Bell Bomber plant and brought unprecedented economic growth to the area that would spur population growth. Because the scrapbook has not aged well (it was made in 1953 and not with long-term materials in mind), it cannot survive frequent handling. Digitization of the materials now offers the only chance for the public to view all the articles and photos within.”

[View the entire collection online]

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About the Smyrna Public Library

Smyrna Public Library is the oldest city-operated library in the state of Georgia. It is fully funded by and serves the city’s residents. The library celebrated the 150th anniversary of its incorporation in 2022. For more information, visit the Smyrna Public Library here.

Selected images from the collection: 

 

Image courtesy of Smyrna Public Library

Title: Scrapbook, Georgia Power Better Home Town Contest Entry, Smyrna, Georgia, 1953.

https://dlg.usg.edu/record/satp_ss1953_sbhtc (page 2)

Description: Page 2 of the 1953 scrapbook created by the Better Home Town Committee of Smyrna, Georgia, for entry into the Georgia Power Better Home Town Contest.

 

Image courtesy of Smyrna Public Library

Title: Scrapbook, Georgia Power Better Home Town Contest Entry, Smyrna, Georgia, 1953.

https://dlg.usg.edu/record/satp_ss1953_sbhtc (page 50)

Description: Page 50 of the 1953 scrapbook created by the Better Home Town Committee of Smyrna, Georgia, for entry into the Georgia Power Better Home Town Contest.

 

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Reconstruction-Era Methodist Episcopal Church conference journals now available freely online in the Digital Library of Georgia

ATHENS, Ga., June 8, 2023 Selected by statewide cultural heritage stakeholders and funded by the DLG’s competitive digitization grant program, this collection is the Pitts Theology Library’s first collaboration with the DLG and is available here: Georgia Conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church Collection.

The collection is comprised of bound conference journals dating from 1867 to 1939, produced by the Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC), a Northern church that established missions in Georgia during the Reconstruction Era, working closely with the Freedman’s Aid Society to find schools and colleges for the formerly enslaved while integrating the then-separate Black and white churches into the same conference. MEC churches were established in both rural and urban areas throughout the state.

The conference journals contain the minutes, reports, and statistics of the Methodist Episcopal Church and its individual congregations throughout the state of Georgia. They present value for researchers interested in the history of religion and race in Georgia, genealogical records of the clergy, the disparity between Black and white congregations, and other statistical data. The materials are useful for genealogists, scholars of Methodism, and historians of Georgia during the Reconstruction Era as well as the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.

Thomas Elliott, Jr., D.Min., associate professor in the practice of practical theology and Methodist studies and the director of Contextual Education II, Teaching Parish, and Internships Candler School of Theology, Emory University, defines the importance of digital access to this content:

“This particular subset of Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC) journals, 1867-1925, documents an important period in Georgia Methodism spanning from the Reconstruction Era to the period preceding the unification of the MEC with two other Methodist denominations. As a lifelong Methodist and Elder in the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church, these journals significantly contribute to my own denomination’s history despite the relatively small size of the MEC Georgia conferences. These materials are essential tools for researching Methodist history, and having them more accessible to my students and the wider public further helps preserve the Methodist tradition. I know I speak for my “Methodist at Candler” colleagues in saying that interaction with these types of primary sources is a significant part of the educational experience in Methodist Studies at Candler.”

[View the entire collection online]

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About the Pitts Theology Library

Pitts Theology Library, one of Emory University’s six instructional libraries, holds a distinguished collection of theological materials and is one of the premier theological libraries in North America. Supporting the students and faculty of Candler School of Theology at Emory University and researchers from around the world, Pitts is home to superb collections in theology and cognate disciplines, housed in a new state-of-the-art facility and served by a highly trained professional staff. For more information, visit pitts.emory.edu.

Image courtesy of Pitts Theology Library
Title: Minutes of the Seventh Session of the Georgia Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church held at Atlanta, Ga., beginning October 15th, 1873

https://dlg.usg.edu/record/emt_gcmec_8354

Description: The minutes of the 7th Georgia Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church held in Atlanta, Georgia, on October 15-21, 1873.

Image courtesy of Pitts Theology Library

Title: Journal of the Sessions of the Georgia Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church from the Reorganization, as the Georgia Mission Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Atlanta [on] October 10, 1867, by Bishop Davis W. Clark

https://dlg.usg.edu/record/emt_gcmec_8390

Description: The journal of the Georgia Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church from its reorganization as the Georgia Mission Conference in 1867 through the split of the Georgia and Savannah Conferences in 1897.

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