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Art as Document and Documents for Art: A Gallery Talk with
co-curators Ashley Callahan and Dale Couch
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: November 22, 1pm
- Where: Martha and Eugene Odum Gallery of Decorative Arts, Georgia
Museum of Art, UGA Campus
- Description: Ashley Callahan, Curator of Decorative Arts at the
Georgia Museum of Art, and Dale Couch, Senior Archivist and Historical
Research Advisor at the Georgia Archives, first will discuss their
collaborative effort in organizing this exhibition, highlighting the
complementary resources available through their two institutions. Then they
will share their findings about selected objects in the exhibition,
including a large, Neoclassical silver pitcher presented to Reverence Samuel
K. Talmage in Augusta in 1836, a silver cup engraved for an Atlanta
jeweler's son upon the occasion of his second birthday, and a julep cup and
ewer retailed in Georgia after the Civil War by a jeweler who left the state
under questionable circumstances.
- Cost: Free and open to the public
- For more information: Call (706) 542-4662 or visit: http://www.uga.edu/gamuseum/
Athens Area Archives Week Events
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: September-November 2005
- Where: Athens, Georgia
- Description: These programs are sponsored by the University
of Georgia Libraries and the Athens-Clarke County Library as part of the
celebration of Georgia Archives Week in the Athens area. See the
descriptions of the events at: http://www.libs.uga.edu/archivesweek
- Cost: Most are free and open to the public
- For more information: Contact Greta Reisel Browning,
Processing & Oral History Archivist, Richard B. Russell Library for
Political Research and Studies, University of Georgia, Athens, GA
30602-1641; email: gbrownin@uga.edu;
Tel: (706) 542-0618; Fax: (706) 542-4144; Web: www.libs.uga.edu/russell
Atlanta University Center, Archives and Special Collections
Department celebrates 80th Anniversary
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 2005
- Where: Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 111
James P. Brawley Drive SW, Atlanta, GA 30314
- Description: 2005 marks the 80th anniversary of the archives
collection at the Woodruff Library. Atlanta University began collecting
Black history in the 1870s and formally referred to the materials as the
"Negro Collection" in 1925. Transferred to Robert W. Woodruff
Library of the Atlanta University Center (AUC) in 1982 when the libraries
from the AUC schools merged; the Negro Collection is the foundation for the
Library's Archives & Special Collection department. The first major
manuscript acquisition for the Negro Collection was received in 1932 with
the gift of papers of Thomas Clarkson, a noted English abolitionist of the
eighteenth century. In 1935 the letters of American abolitionist John Brown
were acquired. Growth in the collection gained momentum with the
establishment of the Harold Jackman Collection of Contemporary Negro Life in
1942 and purchase of the personal library of bibliophile Henry P. Slaughter
in 1946. A small exhibit highlighting
interesting items from the department are on display in the Library on the
main level. The Georgia Archives Week poster is included in the exhibit with
a statement about the purpose of the week. In addition, the poster is
on display in the window of the department's reading room for visitors to
see.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Karen L. Jefferson Head,
Archives & Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library of the
Atlanta University Center, 111 James P. Brawley Drive SW, Atlanta, GA 30314;
Tel: 404-978-2052; Fax: 404-978-2109; Email: kjefferson@auctr.edu;
Web: http://www.auctr.edu
The Atwater Report
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Week of October 1-9, 2005
- Where: The Drummer Boy Civil War Museum, 109 Church Street,
Andersonville, GA 31711
- Description: Also available for research will be copies of The
Atwater Report, listing the names of 12,912 Union soldiers who died at the
Andersonville Prison, compiled by Pvt. Dorance Atwater of the 2nd New York
Cavalry while an Andersonville prisoner. Andersonville Confederate Prison
was only open 14 months, but because of over-crowding (45,000 prisoners held
in a stockade designed to hold 10,000) inadequate food, water, and shelter,
the death rate was 25 percent.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Peggy Sheppard, P.O.Box 6,
Andersonville, GA 31711; Tel: 229-924-2558
"Augusta's Hidden Music Treasure: J. Louis
Sayre"
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: During the week of October 1-9
- Where: Augusta State University
- Description: Mr. Sayre was a native Augusta musician and composer
who was very active in the 1910's and 1920's music scene in the area. The
highlight of the week will be a presentation beginning at 2:30 pm on
Tuesday, October 4, including performances of some of his music by students
and faculty at Augusta State University as well as a slide show and dramatic
reading of Sayre anecdotes. There will be displays during the month of
October of Sayre memorabilia and original compositions.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Carol Waggoner-Angleton at
706-667-4904 or cwaggone@aug.edu.
Bones
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 1-31
- Where: Science Library, UGA Campus
- Description: The University Libraries and the Georgia Museum of
Natural History are teaming together to highlight items from their
respective collections. The libraries have many works from early
naturalists, such as John Audubon, Mark Catesby, and John Abbot. These
selections will be on display at the Science Library along with
corresponding specimens from the Georgia Museum of Natural History. The
display will be up through the month of October.
- For more information: To learn more about the Georgia Museum of
Natural History, visit their website: http://museum.nhm.uga.edu
Born to be Wild: The Leading Men of American Dance
Theatre
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
CBS Report: Whose America Is It?
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
Cinnamon Kiss and 47 by Walter Mosley
(author lecture and book signing)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Friday, October 14, 2005 at 8:00 p.m.
- Where: Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, Atlanta, Georgia
- Description: Walter Mosley is the author of nineteen critically
acclaimed books and his work has been translated into twenty-one languages.
His popular mysteries featuring Easy Rawlins began with Devil in a Blue
Dress in 1990. Others in the series include A Red Death, White
Butterfly, Black Betty and A Little Yellow Dog (both of
which were New York Times bestsellers). Mosley's sizzling new novel pits
Easy Rawlins against his greatest challenge ever--a terrifying murder during
the Summer of Love. Mosley has also published his first book for young adult
readers, “47”. It is an ingenious mix of history, science
fiction, and adventure.
- Cost: All author lectures and book signings are open to the public
at no charge.
- For more information: Contact the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum
at 441 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, Georgia 30307-1498; Telephone: (404)
865-7100; Fax: (404) 865-7102; Email: carter.library@nara.gov;
Web: www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov.
Confederates at Andersonville 1864-1865
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Week of October 1-9, 2005
- Where: The Drummer Boy Civil War Museum, 109 Church Street,
Andersonville, GA 31711
- Description: Copies of Confederates at Andersonville 1864-1865,
listing more than 2,000 names of Confederate soldiers stationed at Camp
Sumter, Andersonville Confederate Prison, compiled by Aldyne Johnson Maltbie
and Mary Maltbie of Atlanta will be available for research.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Peggy Sheppard, P.O.Box 6,
Andersonville, GA 31711; Tel: 229-924-2558
A Day in the Life of an Archivist
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 5, 3pm
- Where: Auditorium, Russell Library, Main Library, UGA
Campus
- Description: What is an archivist? What do they do? A panel of UGA
Libraries staff and faculty who work with historical materials will
demystify archival work. Please join us for a lively discussion!
- For directions to the Russell Library, visit: http://www.libs.uga.edu/russell/geninfo/index.html
- Please RSVP to Carla Buss at: cbuss@uga.edu
Dear Old Roswell: Civil War Letters of the King
Family of Roswell (author lecture)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Saturday, October 8, from 10 AM to noon,
- Where: This event will be held on the fifth floor of the Central
Library of the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System, in the Georgia Local
and Family History Department (GLFH).
- Description: In celebration of Georgia Archives Week, Tammy Harden
Galloway, author of The Inman Family and numerous historical articles, will
discuss her latest book, Dear Old Roswell: Civil War Letters of the King
Family of Roswell. There will also be a brief presentation by a
member of the staff of GLFH on “Doing Your Research in Archives.”
- Cost: No registration is required; the presentation is free and
open to the public.
- For more information: Please call 404-730-1896 or contact referenceline@co.fulton.ga.us.
“Discover Hidden Treasures” (Dawson County Library)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Month of October 2005
- Where: Dawson County Library 342 Allen Street Dawsonville, GA 30534
- Description: “Discover Hidden Treasures” will highlight
resources for caring for family heirlooms, and information about two Public
Broadcasting Services television shows that draw attention to hidden family
treasures: “Antiques Roadshow” and “History Detectives.” On
October 20, individuals can stop by the Information Desk during regular
hours for a short demonstration of Ancestry Library Edition to familiarize
themselves with recent changes in the service to public library users.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact MeloDee French, Information
Specialist, at 706.344.3690 x25
"Discover Hidden Treasures at Georgia State
University"
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: The exhibit will remain on display throughout the month
of October.
- Where: The department is located on the 8th floor of
University Library South, 103 Decatur St. SE, Atlanta. The department
is open from 9:00am-5:00pm Monday through Friday.
- Description: In celebration of Georgia Archives Week, the
Special Collections department at Georgia State University will feature an
exhibit of items from each of its curatorial areas: University Archives and
Rare Books, Lane Brothers and O'Neal Photographic Collections, Women's
Collections, Popular Music Collection, and the Southern Labor Archives.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Please call 404-651-2477 or e-mail libsc@langate.gsu.edu.
Doodles, Drafts, and Designs: Industrial Drawings from the
Smithsonian Institution
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Through October 9, 2005; On display Tuesday through Saturday
from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
- Where: The Atlanta History Center will host this unique exhibition
in the Kenan Research Center at McElreath Hall.
- Description: "Doodles, Drafts, and Designs: Industrial
Drawings from the Smithsonian Institution" documents two centuries of
American ingenuity and industry, from inventor's hand to investor's
boardroom, from patent office to factory floor. Drawn from the rich
collections of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History and the
Smithsonian Institution of Libraries and organized by the Smithsonian
Institution of Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES), the traveling
exhibition encompasses familiar domestic and industrial icons as well as
ideas that never got off the drawing board. The exhibition has been made
possible by the support of Marsh Inc., the global risk and insurance
services firm. A more detailed description can be found on the
Smithsonian's website at: http://www.sites.si.edu/exhibitions/exhibits/doodles/main.htm.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Hillary Hardwick at 404-814-4083 or HHardwick@AtlantaHistoryCenter.com.
Drummer Boy Civil War Museum
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Ongoing
- Where: The Drummer Boy Civil War Museum, 109 Church Street, Andersonville, GA
31711
- Description: The Drummer Boy Civil War Museum, supported and operated by The Andersonville Guild, the town's historical society is an amazing collection of hidden treasures such as the bonnet Mary Surrat, the first woman executed by the United States government, was wearing when led to the gallows, 4 diaries of the Civil War years by Capt. Albert Wilbur of the 16th New York Cavalry along with a life-like mannequin of Capt. Albert Wilbur dressed in his complete original uniform, a collection of letters and documents of Gen. Thomas Eckert, head of the U.S. Telegraph Service during the war, a complete list of African American U.S. Colored Troops Medal of Honor Recipients, and guns, swords, flags, and authentic uniforms of both the Union and Confederacy.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Peggy Sheppard, P.O.Box 6, Andersonville, GA 31711; Tel: 229-924-2558
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Archives Week Activity
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Tuesday, October 4
- Where: Federal Reserve Bank
- Description: Four oral history interviewees will be available
for questions from Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta employees. The
interviewees collectively have 165 years experience as employees of the
Bank, and one person, hired in 1963, remains an active employee today.
- Note: Although this Archives Week activity is only available to
Bank employees, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's Visitors Center and
Monetary Museum is open to the public for self-guided tours Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Bank is at 1000 Peachtree Street, Atlanta,
Georgia 30309 with directions available at the Visitors Center and Monetary
Museum web site (http://www.frbatlanta.org/atlantafed/visitors_center/vc_directions.cfm).
For a brief history of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, view the New
Georgia Encyclopedia article at http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-1740.
- For more information: Contact Annie Tilden, Library and Information
Center, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta; Tel: 404 498-8740; Fax: 404
498-7931
"First Ladies: Political Role and Public
Image" (exhibit)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 22- January 15, 2006
- Where: Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, Atlanta, Georgia
- Description: The "First Ladies" exhibit is the
largest traveling exhibition ever created by the Smithsonian Institution. It
features more than 150 historic objects, including First Ladies' gowns,
White House furnishings, political and personal memorabilia, photographs and
portraits. This exhibition will give visitors a wonderful view inside the
world of the First Lady. A&E has a companion website for this
exhibition at: http://www.aetv.com/class/firstladies/index.jsp.
- Cost: Carter Presidential Museum admission is $8 for adults,
$6 for seniors (60+), $6 for military and students with IDs. Children 16 and
under are free. Parking at the 35-acre wooded park site of the Carter Center
is also free.
- For more information: Contact the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum
at 441 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, Georgia 30307-1498; Telephone: (404)
865-7100; Fax: (404) 865-7102; Email: carter.library@nara.gov;
Web: www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov.
"First Ladies:
Political Role and Public Image" (lecture)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Saturday, October 22, 2005 at
2:00 p.m.
- Where: Jimmy Carter Library and Museum,
Atlanta, Georgia
- Description: Edith Mayo, curator of
the "First Ladies: Political Role and Public Image" exhibition and
author of the book by the same name, will present a colorful and
entertaining slide lecture. Ms. Mayo is curator emerita in political history
at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, where she
developed the permanent exhibition on the First Ladies, one of the most
popular in all of the Smithsonian museums. Her books include - From
Parlor to Politics: Women and Reform in America, 1890-1926, Images of
Women in the Woman Suffrage Campaign, Black Women Role Models at the
Turn of the Century, Textiles as Expressions of Women's Political
Voice, and History of the Women's Club Movement. Ms. Mayo serves
as a 2005-2006 distinguished lecturer for the Organization of American
Historians.
- Cost: Free with paid admission to
the Museum
- For more information: Contact the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum
at 441 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, Georgia 30307-1498; Telephone: (404)
865-7100; Fax: (404) 865-7102; Email: carter.library@nara.gov;
Web: www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov.
Fitzgerald History Lecture
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: During the week of October 4-8, 2005
- Where: Blue and Gray Museum, Fitzgerald, Georgia
- Description: Power point presentation with some text which focuses
on architecture and residents of Fitzgerald in the late 1800's, early 1900's
as well "Shacktown" which developed immediately upon arriva(1894
& 1895) of the "Union Veterans" from the northern and
midwestern states. Fitzgerald was incorporated in 1896.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Patricia Walker, Director P. O. Box
1285, Fitzgerald, GA 31750; Tel: 229-426- 5069; E-Mail: bgmuseum@mchsi.com
; Web: http://www.fitzgeraldga.org/Blue&GrayMuseum.htm
From Sideboard to Pulpit: Silver in Georgia
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: November 7, 2005-March 26, 2006
- Where: Georgia Museum of Art, UGA Campus
- Description: An exhibit of more than 100 examples of silver made,
retailed, owned, or presented in Georgia, primarily in the 19th century,
curated by Ashley Callahan, curator, Henry D. Green Center for the Study of
the Decorative Arts, and Dale L. Couch, senior archivist, Georgia Archives.
Presented in the Martha and Eugene Odum Gallery of Decorative Arts.
Sponsored by the W. Newton Morris Charitable Foundation.
- For more information, call (706) 542-4662 or visit: http://www.uga.edu/gamuseum/
Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill exhibit
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 1-9, 2005, from 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. (and throughout
the month of October)
- Where: Reading Room of the Georgia Tech Archives
- Description: Founded in Atlanta during the late 1860s, the Fulton
Bag and Cotton Mills operated under the management of Jacob Elsas and his
descendants for more than a century. The Elsas family, long-time supporters
of Georgia Tech, greatly expanded the Atlanta operations and opened mills in
seven other locations in the United States during the first sixty years of
the twentieth century. The Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills collection was
brought to the Georgia Tech Archives in 1985, where it now forms the
backbone of the Archives' collection of materials on textiles and the
textile industry in the South. The exhibit in the Reading Room of the
Georgia Tech Archives highlights the materials in the Fulton Bag collection,
featuring especially the strike of 1914-1915.
- Cost: Free and open to the public
- For more information: contact Christine de Catanzaro; Tel:
404-385-0107; Email: christine.decatanzaro@library.gatech.edu
Georgia Archives Building Tours
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: During the week of October 1-9 (and ongoing)
- Where: Georgia Archives
- Description: The Georgia Archives is conducting several tours for
civic groups during Georgia Archives Week. To schedule a tour during
Archives Week or any other time of the year, please contact us. The general
building tour includes a brief history of the Archives and provides glimpses
into researchers’ areas, archival storage vaults, the reformatting
laboratory (scanning/microfilming), and the conservation laboratory.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Valerie Frey, Education Coordinator;
Georgia Archives, 5800 Jonesboro Road, Morrow, GA 30260; vfrey@sos.state.ga.us;
678-364-3782
Georgia College and State University--Grand Opening of the
Library and Information Technology Center
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 6, 2005 at 11:00 a.m.
- Where: Georgia College and State University (Milledgeville,
Georgia) at the Clarke Street Entrance of the Museum. Parking will be
available in the lot at the corner of Montgomery and Liberty Streets, and
limited handicapped parking will be available in a lot adjacent to the
Library on Montgomery Street.
- Description: Georgia College & State University cordially
invites you to the Ribbon Cutting and Grand Opening of the GC&SU Library
and Information Technology Center. Tours and a reception in the Atrium
will follow the ceremony. Museum exhibits will include The Birds of Georgia:
The Paintings of Richard Parks; Flannery O'Connor and GC&SU; and The
Life of Senator Paul Coverdell.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Please contact the GC&SU Library at (478)
445-4047. Web: http://library.gcsu.edu/~sc/archivesweek/
Georgia College and State University in the 1940s
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Thursday, October 6, 2005, at 7:00 p.m.
- Where: Georgia College and State University Museum Education Room,
Milledgeville, Georgia.
- Description: Lecture: GSCW in the 1940s Dr. Helen Matthews Lewis,
whose current research focuses on the former Georgia State College for Women
(GSCW) in the 1940s, will discuss college life during the time Flannery
O'Connor was a student here.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Please contact the GC&SU Library at (478)
445-4047. Web: http://library.gcsu.edu/~sc/archivesweek/
GHRAB 2005 Outstanding Archives Awards Ceremony
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- What: 2005 Outstanding Archives Awards Ceremony
- Sponsored by: Georgia Historical Records Advisory Board
- When: During the week of October 1-9, 2005
- Where: Georgia Archives
- Description: Secretary of State Cathy Cox and GHRAB Chair R. Lee
Kinnamon will present awards to 17 outstanding individuals and
organizations. GHRAB established the Archives Awards Program in 2003 to
recognize outstanding efforts in archives and records work in Georgia. By
publicly recognizing excellent achievements, the Board strives to inspire
others.
- For more information: Contact Elizabeth Aloi Barr, GHRAB Assistant
Coordinator; Georgia Archives, 5800 Jonesboro Road, Morrow, GA 30260; ebarr@sos.state.ga.us;
678-364-3718
Gilmer County Library and Gilmer County Genealogical
Society
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 1-9, 2005
- Where: Gilmer County Library, 103 Dalton Street, Ellijay, GA 30540
- Description: Gilmer Genealogical Society will co-host an open house
with the Gilmer County Library
- Cost: Free
- For more information: call Betty Ridley, 770-735-4970
The History Detective: Stories by Civil War Michigan
Soldiers
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 1-2, 2005
- Where: The Drummer Boy Civil War Museum, 109 Church Street,
Andersonville, GA 31711
- Description: During the 30th annual Andersonville Historic Fair,
Chris Czopek, "The History Detective" of Lansing, Michigan, will
be at The Drummer Boy Museum with a complete list of Michigan soldiers who
died at Andersonville and stories told by survivors who made it back to
Michigan. He will have a display of newly discovered Civil War photographs
and some great stories to tell.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact Peggy Sheppard, P.O.Box 6,
Andersonville, GA 31711; Tel: 229-924-2558
The March by E.L. Doctorow (author lecture and
book signing)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Tuesday, October 11, 2005 at 8:00 p.m.
- Where: Day Chapel, Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, Atlanta,
Georgia
- Description: Sherman's march through Georgia and the
Carolinas produced hundreds of thousands of deaths and untold collateral
damage. In this powerful novel, Doctorow gets deep inside the pillage,
cruelty and destruction—as well as the care and burgeoning love that
sprung up in their wake.
- Cost: All author lectures and book signings are open to the public
at no charge.
- For more information: Contact the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum
at 441 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, Georgia 30307-1498; Telephone: (404)
865-7100; Fax: (404) 865-7102; Email: carter.library@nara.gov;
Web: www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov.
Mummies: Unwrapping the Secrets
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
A Mystery is Solved: PBS Comes to the Archives
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Sunday, Sept. 25, 2005, at 3:00 p.m.
- Where: Athens-Clarke County Library, 2025 Baxter Street, Athens,
Georgia
- Description: Ken Thomas, historian from the Georgia Department of
Natural Resources, will talk about his experience with the History
Detectives television show and how archives were used to research the story.
After showing the episode he worked on, he will talk about how local history
materials were used to unravel the mystery of “Preston Brooks’ Riding
Crop.”
- Cost: Free and open to the public
- For more information: Stacey Overstreet, Public Relations Specialist,
Athens-Clarke County Library, 2025 Baxter Street, Athens, Georgia 30606: Tel
(706)
613-3650, ext. 336; Fax: (706) 613-3660
“National Archives-Southeast Region: A National Treasure
in a Local Setting”
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Wednesday, October 5th, 3 p.m. – 5 p.m.
- Where: National Archives-Southeast Region, 5780 Jonesboro Road,
Morrow, GA
- Description: Join us for a special tour of the new,
state-of-the-art National Archives facility and its inaugural exhibit, “Firsthand
History.” The exhibit showcases over 500 facsimiles of regional holdings,
featuring the following topics: Our Favorite Records, Federal Courts and
Civil Rights, Tennessee Valley Authority, Atlanta Federal Penitentiary,
Earliest Archival Records, Southeast Region Family Album, The Tuskegee
Study, [World War I] Draft Registration, and Selections from State Archives
(in the Southeast region). Light refreshments will be provided.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact the National Archives-Southeast
Region at (770) 968-2100.
The New Nuclear Danger
by Helen Caldicott (author lecture and book signing)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Tuesday, October 18, 2005, at 8:00 p.m.
- Where: Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, Atlanta, Georgia
- Description: The single most articulate and passionate
advocate of citizen action to remedy the nuclear and environmental crises,
Dr Helen Caldicott, has devoted the last 35 years to an international
campaign to educate the public about the medical hazards of the nuclear age
and the necessary changes in human behavior to stop environmental
destruction.
- Cost: All author lectures and book signings are open to the public
at no charge.
- For more information: Contact the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum
at 441 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, Georgia 30307-1498; Telephone: (404)
865-7100; Fax: (404) 865-7102; Email: carter.library@nara.gov;
Web: www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov.
"Oglethorpe's England"
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Thursday, October 6, 2005 at 7:00 p.m.
- Where: Three Rivers Regional Public Library, Brunswick, GA
-
Description: Roger Smith, the Georgia Historical Society Director of
Education and Outreach, will give a lecture entitled “Oglethorpe’s
England.” The lecture will discuss the life and times of General James
Oglethorpe and the political and social climate of England at the time of
the founding of the Georgia colony.
- Cost: This event is free and open to the public.
- For more information: Three Rivers Regional Public Library, 208
Gloucester St., Brunswick, GA 31520, 912-267-1212
Oktoberfest: Celebrating German Culture and Heritage
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Month of October 2005
- Where: Dawson County Library 342 Allen Street Dawsonville, GA 30534
- Description: Oktoberfest honors the German heritage of over
twenty-three percent of Americans with artifacts that symbolize Germany’s
rich cultural heritage, including music, literature, cinema, and art.
Traditional iconic symbols of the country, such as steins, dirndls, and
castles, will also be on view.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Contact MeloDee French, Information
Specialist, at 706.344.3690 x25
Paul Coverdell: His Life and Impact on Politics (lecture)
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Wednesday, October 5, 2005, at 4:00 p.m.
- Where: Georgia College and State University Museum Education Room,
Milledgeville, Georgia
- Description: Dr. Chris Grant, assistant professor of
political science at Mercer University, will give a gallery talk on the late
Senator Paul Coverdell's life and impact on Georgia and national
politics.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Please contact the GC&SU Library at (478)
445-4047. Web: http://library.gcsu.edu/~sc/archivesweek/
The Poisoned Capsule: or, The Mystery of the Devoured
Documents
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Dates to be Announced
- Where: Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Main Library, UGA
Campus
- Description: Was it acid in the paper or iron-toothed gophers
in the quad? Delve into the mysterious disappearance of the 1872 University
of Georgia Time Capsule!
- For more information about the Hargrett Library, visit: http://www.libs.uga.edu/hargrett/speccoll.html
"Postmarked Wilkes County" A live action Civil War
drama!
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 7 and 8, 2005 at 7:00 PM
- Where: Callaway Plantation 5 miles west of historic Washington,
Georgia on Highway 78
- Description: Come to Washington, Georgia, the place where the
Confederacy died and watch as history is brought back to life through
letters written by people who were there. On Satuday night October 8th,
before the drama begins, enjoy our Georgia "Pig Pickin" barbeque
with all the trimmings. 5:00PM - 6:30PM also at Callaway Plantation.
- Cost: Tickets $10.00
- For more information: Washington Historical Museum 706-678-2105 or
Washington-Wilkes Chamber of Commerce 706-678-2013. Presented by
Historic Outdoor Drama New South Productions, Inc. Web: www.postmarkedwilkescounty.org
Power To The People! Rural Electrification in Georgia
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: September 24, 2005-September 30, 2006; Hours for the exhibit
during fall semester will be Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., and
Saturdays, 1 p.m.-4:45 p.m., except during home football games and
University holidays.
- Where: Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and
Studies, UGA Campus
- Description: For most people born in Georgia after 1950 it's hard
to imagine life without electricity. But for many people born earlier,
particularly in rural areas of the state, the memories of life without
electricity are hard to forget: No running water, no refrigerators, no
electric lights inside or outside, laundry day without a washing machine,
milking cows by hand, and watering crops with buckets and ditches—the list
was endless! Private electric companies provided power to towns and cities
around the state of Georgia starting in the late 19th century, but most
people living in rural Georgia could not get electricity until President
Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Rural Electrification Administration
(REA) to bring electricity to rural places. With hard work and dedication,
leaders in rural communities convinced neighbors to sign up for electricity
and to become members of electric cooperatives. These electric membership
cooperatives (EMCs) worked diligently to obtain loans from Washington and to
build their network of electric lines; in just over 10 years, 42
cooperatives were operating in Georgia—forever altering the landscape and
patterns of living for rural Georgians.
- Cost: The exhibit is free and open to the public.
- Location: The Russell Library is located on the west side of the
Main Library, North Campus, at the University of Georgia in Athens. Parking
is available in the North Campus Parking Deck on South Jackson Street. For
directions and maps, call (706) 542-5766 or visit: http://www.libs.uga.edu/special_collections/locations.html
Preserving Your Family Treasures
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 6, 2005 from 6:00-8:00
- Where: Camden County Public Library in Kingsland, GA
- Description: A lecture by SOLINET's Preservation Field Service
Manger, Tina Mason
- Cost: Lecture is open and free to the public
- For more information: Contact Darren Harper at 912-576-5841.
Preserving Your Personal Documents
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: November 7
- Where: Auditorium, Athens Clarke County Library
- Description: A presentation by UGA archivists and librarians
discussing preservation issues for your most important collections. Covers
paper and electronic documents.
- For directions to the Athens Clarke County Library, visit: www.clarke.public.lib.ga.us/libraryinfo/librarydirections.html#dirath
Proclamation Signing
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
Richard Parks: A Lecture
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: October 5, 2005 at 2:00 p.m.
- Where: Georgia College and State University Museum Education Room,
Milledgeville, Georgia.
- Description: John Swiderski of the Georgia Ornithological Society
will speak on the work of Richard Parks.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Please contact the GC&SU Library at (478)
445-4047. Web: http://library.gcsu.edu/~sc/archivesweek/
Special Libraries Association (Georgia Chapter) Archives
Week Event
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Wednesday, October 5, 2005, 1:30 - 5:00 p.m.
- Where: Georgia Archives AND Southeast Regional Archives, Morrow,
Georgia
- Description: This program introduces the mission, facilities,
resources and staff of both archives and ends with a reception at the
Southeast Regional office of the National Archives in honor of Georgia
Archives Week. Our program begins at 1:30 at the Georgia Archives,
moves to the Southeast Regional Archives at 3:00 and concludes with a
reception at their facility. Lunch and transportation are up to each program
attendee, but we encourage car-pooling whenever possible. Program attendees
are welcome to leave at each break in the program: before and after each
facility tour.
- Cost: Free; but must RSVP by 6:00 p.m., Friday, September 30, 2005
- For more information: Ernie Evangelista Library and Information
Center Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Ernie.M.Evangelista@atl.frb.org;
Tel: (404) 498-8927
Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History's Hidden
Treasures
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Ongoing
- Where: Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History, 2829 Cherokee Street,
Kennesaw, GA 30144
- Description: Poster display depicts the hidden treasures located in the Southern
Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History Archives including: Civil War photos
of "The General"; Civil War and Locomotive History books; Historic
photos of the Glover Machine Works and the Southern Railway Company; Reference
materials including the legal document installing the Mayor of the newly formed
city, Machinery City, 12 February 1908 (Machinery City is one of Georgia's Lost
Cities); Historic trade catalogs map
- Cost: Adults $7.50; Senior Citizens (over 60) $6.50; Children 4-12 $5.50; Children 3 and under Free
- For more information: Please contact Sallie Loy, Senior Archivist;
E-mail: sloy@kennesaw-ga.gov; Phone:
770.427.2117 x 107; Fax: 770.421.8485; www.southernmuseum.org
Thomaston-Upson Archives “Discover Historic Buildings
and Places”
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: Ongoing
- Where: Thomaston-Upson Archives, 301 S. Center Street, Thomaston,
GA 30286
- Description: A newly-created newsletter features historic buildings
and places in Upson County. Color digital photographs with brief historic
histories take the visitor across the county from diverse places as
Yatesville’s only lighthouse to a recreated, soon-to-be functioning grist
mill. A limited number of newsletters with color-digital photographs are
available; black and white will replace the color newsletters once they run
out.
- Cost: Free
- For more information: Please contact Penny Cliff,
Director/Archivist; E-mail: tuarch@alltel.net;
Phone: 706-646-2437; Fax: 706-646-3524; http://home.alltel.net/tuarch
Time of the Butterflies
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: September 22, 7pm
- Where: Room 150, Student Learning Center, UGA Campus
- Description: A film based on the novel by Julia Alvarez about
Minerva, Maria Teresa, and Patricia Miralbal and their struggle to bring
democracy to the Dominican Republic. (Peabody Awards entry 2001159 ENT) Dr.
Lesley Feracho, Romance Languages and the Institute of African-American
Studies, will introduce the film and lead a discussion after it is shown.
The film runs 92 minutes.
- For more information about the Peabody Collection, visit: http://www.libs.uga.edu/media/collections/peabody/index.html
- For more information about the UGA Libraries Media Department, visit: http://www.libs.uga.edu/mediadept/index.html
- For directions to the Student Learning Center, visit: http://www.slc.uga.edu/directions.html
Tupperware
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: September 30, 7pm
- Where: Tate Student Center Theater, UGA Campus
- Description: Beneath the bowls, there was a story nobody
knew..." A Center for Humanities and Arts - Peabody Conversation.
Sponsored by the Center for Humanities and Arts and the Peabody Awards
Program. The Peabody-Award-winning film Tupperware (Peabody Awards
Entry 2004181 DCT) "will be screened followed by a conversation between
the film's creator Laurie Kahn-Levitt and Horace Newcomb, Director of the
Peabody Awards Program.
- Cost: Free
Valdosta State University's 5000 Year Old Hidden Treasures
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
- When: On our Web Site starting October 12, 2005
- Where: http://books.valdosta.edu/arch/Babylonian/babylonian.htm
- Description: The Valdosta State University Archives presents our
collection of 5000 year old Babylonian clay tablets. These ten cuneiform
tablets date from 2300 BC to 500 BC and were acquired from Edgar Banks, a
famous, or infamous, archaeologist working in Iraq in the early 20th
century. After we first put the tablets on the web two years ago, we were
approached by Cale Johnson, a cuneiform scholar from UCLA who wanted
to translate the tablets. He has completed his translations and we have
added them to our web site. In addition, VSU history professor Melanie Byrd
has created a timeline, map and bibliography related to the translations. We
are very happy to present this updated online display of our clay tablet
collection for Georgia Archives Week. On the web they are "hidden"
treasures no more.
- Cost: Free
- For More Information: Contact Deborah Davis, Archivist, Valdosta
State University Archives. dsdavis@valdosta.edu;
Tel: 229- 249-8407
World of Coca-Cola Traces the History of the World's Most Popular Soft Drink
[Activities by City] [Activities
by County]
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