LU Lone Arranger

"Lone arranger" is archivist-speak for someone who works as a solo professional, rather than as a member of a large team of archivists (a generalist rather than a specialist). In this weblog I will share announcements, responses to reference questions that have come my way, and some of my previously unpublished writings relating to Lincoln University and its Archives and Special Collections, located in The Langston Hughes Memorial Library of Lincoln University of Pennsylvania.

My Photo
Name:
Location: United States

I was the Special Collections Librarian in Lincoln University of PA’s Langston Hughes Memorial Library from August 15 2005 - August 12, 2010, having served as Archivist Assistant in the same department prior to that, starting in 2000. My advanced degrees are an M.L.I.S. (Master of Library and Information Sciences) from the University of Pittsburgh and an M.A. (history) from West Chester University (PA), and I am a Certified Archivist (by ACA, The Academy of Certified Archivists). My undergraduate major (Bryn Mawr College) was anthropology.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

LU Archival materials contribute to new book by Andrew Billingsley

Yearning to Breathe Free: Robert Smalls of South Carolina and His Families (University of South Carolina, 2007) is the title of a recently published book by Andrew Billingsley, professor of sociology and African American studies and senior scholar in residence at the Institute for Families in Society at the University of South Carolina.

Robert Smalls was an African American slave, known as "the first black hero of the Civil War" because of his sensational escape to the Union troops with the confederate ship Planter in 1862, who rose to prominence after his combat service in the Civil War, becoming a political leader -- a founding member of the South Carolina Republican party, a delegate to the South Carolina Constitutional Conventions of 1868 and 1895, and between those two pivotal events, one of which granted blacks the right to vote, and the other of which took that right away, he served as state legislator, state senator, and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

The Lincoln University connection to Robert Smalls is via Samuel J. Bampfield, an 1872 graduate of Lincoln University. Bampfield married into the Smalls family on April 24, 1877, when the nineteen-year-old daughter of Robert Smalls, Elizabeth Lydia, became his wife. Another Lincoln University alumnus in the same graduating class who appears in the book is Thomas E. Miller, another black delegate at the 1895 South Carolina Constitutional Convention, who along with Robert Smalls lobbied for an independent state college for blacks and eventually became the first president of the "Normal, Industrial, Agricultural and Mechanical College for the colored race."

At the time that Andrew Billingsley contacted me for information about Samuel Bampfield we were in early stages of our digitization efforts. By now, however, all of the materials that were helpful to him in his research are actually available online via our digital collections website, www.lincoln.edu/library/specialcollections/digitalcollections.html.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

free counters
Internet Service