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About Betsy Pittman

University Archivist at UConn since 1997, Betsy is also responsible for the political, public polling, nursing and Connecticut History collections.

A hearty welcome to Coach Diaco…

…from the football coaches of 1934!

Football coaching staff, 1934

Football coaching staff, 1934

In 1934, Connecticut State College welcomed J. O. Christian as the new football coach.  The team was small and it’s record unremarkable.  The Nutmeg [yearbook] saw hope for for the struggling team and its new coach which saw a string of losses but still fighting to win with no serious injuries.  The season ended with only one win (against Coast Guard) and the now infamous ram-napping of the Rhody Ram (URI mascot)!  Although unidentified in the photograph, the Nutmeg identifies four coaches and a manager in the team photograph–Coaches Fisher, Christian, Moore, and Heldman and Manager Gilman can be seen on page 190 of the 1935 issue of the Nutmeg (http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/collections/nutmeg/1935.pdf).

Kwanzaa at UConn

 

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Kwanzaa, first celebrated in 1966-1967 and founded by Maulana Karenga, is a week-long celebration held in the United States, as well as other regions of the Americas. The celebration honors African heritage in African-American culture, and is observed from December 26 to January 1, culminating in a feast and gift-giving.  On campus, Kwanzaa observances have been led by the African-American Cultural Center before students leave at the end of the fall semester.

 

 

Here we go a caroling…..

Wilcox College of Nursing students set out to sing carols to their patients, undated

Wilcox College of Nursing students set out to sing carols to their patients, undated

Caroling through neighborhoods, town greens and even shopping malls is a well recognized tradition frequently associated with tree and house decorating, cookie baking and travel plans throughout the Christmas season. Students over the years have observed holiday traditions while taking a break from their studies.  At the Ona Wilcox College of Nursing in Middletown, Connecticut, the student nurses gathered to sing carols to the patients under their care in December. 

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Wilcox student nurses pose before setting out for an evening of caroling, undated

 

Best wishes for a melodic holiday season!

Nuremberg Trial Papers of Senator Thomas J. Dodd

Archives & Special Collections is pleased to announce the online availability of the papers associated with the trial of the Nazi major war criminals found in the Senator Thomas J. Dodd Papers.  Formal announcement and remarks regarding the Digitization of the Nuremberg Trial Papers of Senator Thomas J. Dodd will take place on November 13, 2013, from 3:00 – 4:00 pm in the Reading Room, Dodd Research Center.

Selected documents collected by Thomas Dodd while participating in the IMT at Nuremberg

Selected documents collected by Thomas Dodd while participating in the IMT at Nuremberg

Dodd served as Executive Trial Counsel and supervisor of the U.S. prosecution team at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg from July 1945 through October 1946, where he shaped many of the strategies and policies through which this unprecedented trial took place. Representing a small proportion of his entire collection housed at the Archives & Special Collections at the University of Connecticut, Dodd’s Nuremberg papers contain documentation relating to the proceedings of the Nuremberg Trials that are available nowhere else, including hand annotated drafts of trial briefs and annotated translations of German documents.  Found in Series VII of the Thomas J. Dodd Papers, the documents have been heavily used by scholars from around the world since they were opened to the public in 1997.

The nearly 50,000 pages of documents in the Nuremberg papers will be digitized over the next two years and made available through the Connecticut Digital Archive, a joint program of the UConn Libraries and the Connecticut State Library. Explore the Nuremberg Trial Papers at http://hdl.handle.net/11134/20002:UniversityofConnecticut

This event is being held in conjunction with the award of the 6th Thomas J. Dodd Prize in Internal Justice and Human Rights to the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, which will take place at 4:00pm in Konover Auditorium, Dodd Research Center.

Remembering Robin Romano

Underneath a street lamp, children study math in Sikasso, Mali late at night.

 

The University of Connecticut community is saddened to learn of the passing of award winning photographer U. Roberto (Robin) Romano.  Romano was a photographer, filmmaker and human rights educator. The son of the artist and Works Progress Administration (WPA) muralist Umberto Romano, Robin Romano was born in New York where he attended the Lycee Francais,  Allen Stevenson School and Horace Mann High School. Mr. Romano graduated from  Amherst College as an Interdisciplinary Scholar in 1980.  Working closely with the Human Rights Institute and Archives & Special Collections, Mr. Romano began depositing his personal papers with UConn in 2008.

Romano began his career in documentaries as a producer and cameraman for Les Productions de Sagittaire in Montreal, where he worked on several series including 5 Defis and L’Oeil de L’Aigle.

His film projects include: Death of a Slave Boy, a two-hour special shot in  Pakistan for European broadcast,  Globalization and Human Rights hosted by  Charlayne Hunter Gault for  PBS,  Stolen Childhoods, the first theatrically released feature documentary on global child labor,  The Dark Side of Chocolate, a feature documentary on trafficking in Western Africa, and  The Harvest/La Cosecha, a feature documentary on child migrant laborers in the United States for which he won the Shine Global Award. He was also a contributor to the NPR and  BBC specials on slavery in the  Ivory Coast and has contributed to films as diverse as  In Debt We Trust and  Darfur Now.

As a still photographer, his exhibition “Stolen Childhoods: the Global Plague of Child Labor,” was on view at the William Benton Museum of Fine Art at the University of Connecticut in 2006. He has been the photographer for Rugmark, a foundation working to end illegal child labor in the carpet industry) and to offer educational opportunities to children in South Asia, as well as GoodWeave (the iconic photos of child rug weavers in Nepal.  Additionally, Romano created the mural and poster for the Council on Foreign Relations announcing their universal education campaign. Other organizations that have used his work include  Human Rights Watch,  Amnesty International,  Free the Slaves,  The International Labor Organization,  Stop the Traffik,  The Hunger Project,  International Labor Rights Forum,  The Farm Labor Organizing Committee and  Antislavery International. His work has appeared in such publications as The Ford Foundation Quarterly, The Stanford Review,  Scholastic, and  UConn Magazine, and has been seen on billboards and posters around the world. Romano has appeared as a guest on Nightline with Ted Koppel as well as Newsnight with Aaron Brown.  He was recently active As an advocate for and an authority on children’s and human rights, Romano appeared at many forums, schools and universities. He gave the Frank Porter Graham Lecture at the Johnson Center for Academic Excellence, University of North Carolina, and the Gene and Georgia Mittelman Distinguished Lecture in the Arts at the University of Connecticut. In 2007 he was invited to give the plenary speech at the Association of Farmworker Opportunity Programs annual conference in Coeur d’Alene. He has also lectured at the Rhode Island School of Design and the Oak Institute for International Human Rights at Colby College.

Robin Romano will be greatly missed by all those he has touched at UConn.

A young boy at the bus station in Sikasso, Mali

(Images from the Robin Romano Papers, used with permission.)

Collections now available

John P. McDonald Reading Reading Room, Archives & Special Collections

John P. McDonald Reading Reading Room, Archives & Special Collections

Below is a list of collections that are now open and available for research (links to finding aids provided), arranged by broad collecting area.  Researchers are encouraged to contact the staff with any questions.

Business  Collections:

Somersville Manufacturing Company Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/931

  • Administrative and financial files and volumes, marketing material, photographs and scrapbooks, and correspondence and other materials associated with the  Somersville Manufacturing Company and the company’s founders and owners, the Keeney family of Somersville, Connecticut.

Children’s Literature:

David M. Carroll Collection

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/287

  • One folder containing correspondence, notes, sketches and a calendar created in conjunction with an exhibition held in the Libraries in 1996.

Anna Kirwan Papers

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/918

  • Books, posters, manuscripts, proofs, clippings, research notes, promotional material, and correspondence, dating from 1991-21012.

Barbara McClintock Papers

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/945

  •  manuscript sketches, correspondence, artwork, notes, and correspondence having to do with  Animal Fables from Aesop, adapted and illustrated by McClintock.

Labor Collections:

AFSCME, Council 4 Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/897

  • The collection contains correspondence, financial records, meeting minutes, manuscripts, publications, and files of union locals represented by AFSCME, Council 4, including corrections officers with Council 16 which later merged with Council 4.

Railroad Collections:

Max Miller Collection of the Connecticut Valley Railroad

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/937

  • Shipping documents of freight shipped out of the North Haven, Connecticut, freight yard and real estate records of properties in Middletown, Connecticut, which was a point between Hartford and Old Saybrook.

University Archives:

Center for Economic Education Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/185

  • Administrative records, correspondence, publications, financial records and other materials related to the establishment and running of the Center.

Environmental Health and Safety Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/189

  • Committee minutes, reports, and various records. Included in the collection are unit safety minutes, lab safety minutes, radiation waste shipment records, and radiation dosiemtry reports, 1965-2003.

Josef Gugler East African Survey Collection

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/900

  • Questionnaires, clippings, correspondence pertaining to surveys about East Africa conducted by Dr. Gugler from 1955-1999.

Walter R. Ihrke Papers

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/452

  • scores and recordings as well as correspondence, publications and documentation of Ihrke’s “Automated Musical Training” [“Ihrke Method”].

Louise T. Johnson Papers

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/33

  • Personal and professional materials pertaining to her tenure at the University.

Irene and Merle Klinck Papers

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/933

  • Photocopies of the text from two plaques presented to Mr. Klinck in recognition of his services and contributions to the town of Mansfield Highway Crew and the Eagleville Fire Department, Inc. as as a resolution recognizing Mr. Klinck’s six years first Selectman. Mr. Klinck’s Eagleville Fire Department badge is also included. A notebook containing lecture notes, scores and pamphlets related to the piano has Irene E. H. Klinck scratched into the verso of the cover.

Puerto Rican/Latin American Cultural Center Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/905

  • Administrative records documenting the programs and activities sponsored by the Center.

School of Allied Health Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/190

  • Administrative records documenting the work of the School of Allied Health at the University of Connecticut.

School of Nursing Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/668

  • Faculty meeting minutes, project documentation, photographs, multimedia and ephemeral materials associated with the School of Nursing.

University Communications Office Records

https://archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu/repositories/2/resources/113

  • Administrative Records, correspondence, notes, publications, media contacts, student and faculty activity, biographies, departmental communications, news releases, campus-wide communications as published in the UConn Chronicle, UConn Advance, Announce-L, and, Daily Digest, from 1979 to present.

Dodd’s Congo Foray

Thomas J. Dodd and Moise Tshombe, 1961

Thomas J. Dodd and Moise Tshombe, 1961

“…the role of the Senate [is] to advise on foreign policy and not merely to assent to faits accomplish…”

Sen. Thomas J. Dodd to Sec. of State Dean Rusk, December 1964[i]

 Within two weeks of the Congo gaining independence from Belgium in June 1960, the mineral-rich Katanga province attempted to secede, thrusting the country into chaos. The Eisenhower administration intervened in order to prevent a communist takeover of the nation. During the Kennedy administration U.S. involvement marked an unprecedented projection of American power in sub-Saharan Africa. As Secretary of State Dean Rusk said in July of 1962, “there was no other problem including Berlin in which [the] President, [the] Secretary and senior colleagues have spent as much time as [the] Congo.”[ii] The event created a paper trail at the Kennedy Presidential Library second only in volume to Vietnam; surpassing that of Britain, and even of the Soviet Union.[iii] When including donations to UN operations, U.S. aid given to that country amounted to hundreds of millions of dollars.

As I argue more thoroughly in my dissertation, the Kennedy administration viewed the crisis not only as central to the Cold War, but also to decolonization. In 1960 alone, seventeen African nations declared independence. By intervening in the Congo, Kennedy wanted to prove to newly emerging nations on the African continent, as well as the Third World at large, that American-styled democracy and capitalism could secure political and economic freedom for colonially oppressed peoples. Like other U.S. interventions during this era, however, events did not turn out as American policymakers had expected. Gen. Joseph Mobutu ascended to power in 1965, ruling the country as a dictator until 1997. The decay of the state under his rule contributed to the destabilization of the region and approximately five million deaths even after he had departed from power.[iv]

Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-CT) was one of the leading opponents of the Kennedy administration’s policies in the Congo.  Believing Kennedy’s sympathy with Third World nationalism had caused the President to lose sight of the larger Cold War struggle, Dodd used his position on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to effectively challenge the power of the executive branch. Dodd supported Moise Tshombe, the leader of Katanga with whom the Kennedy administration was at odds. Even though Tshombe was reviled by the Afro-Asian bloc for betraying Patrice Lumumba, the first Prime Minister of the Congo who was assassinated by Belgium in 1961, Dodd argued that the United States should nonetheless support Tshombe’s bid for power since he was a self-avowed anti-communist willing to partner with the West.

The UN thwarted Tshombe’s secession in 1963, but through an unlikely turn of events he became Prime Minister in 1964. By then the Kennedy administration’s nation-building efforts had failed to transform the Congo into a viable nation-state, and leftist revolutionaries with support from Algeria, Cuba, and China, were seeking to overthrow the government. Dodd’s persistent lobbying in Washington had kept alive the possibility of Tshombe becoming an American ally. Indeed, Dodd’s advocacy made a difference when the Johnson administration began searching for a new Congolese leader to back, one capable of warding off the revolutionaries and partnering with the West to bring stability to the country.

As a recipient of a Rose and Sigmund Strochlitz Travel Grant, I was able to spend a week examining Dodd’s papers at the Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center located on the campus of the University of Connecticut in Storrs.  With approximately seven linear feet of material relating to the Congo, it is an especially rich collection that provides a detailed account of the Senator’s opposition to the Kennedy administration’s policies as well as his advocacy for Tshombe. Some of the highlights of the collection include private memoranda between Dodd and his staff, the itinerary and notes from Dodd’s trip to the Congo in 1961, speeches and periodical articles written by Dodd, reports from American missionaries in the Congo, and correspondence between Dodd and Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, Secretary of State Rusk, Tshombe, and Tshombe’s representatives. The collection also contains official government documents from Katanga, including cabinet meeting minutes.[v]

Scholars studying U.S. foreign policy and/or the Congo will find this collection informative. It serves as a prescient reminder that congress can effectively challenge a president’s foreign policy, and helps reveal the agency and vision of Tshombe whom conventional narratives have portrayed as a puppet of Western interests. Recent events in that country demand that we examine its history, of which this collection helps to illuminate.

–William Mountz, PhD Candidate, University of Missouri

Recipient of  a 2013 Strochlitz Travel Grant


[i] Letter from Sen. Thomas J. Dodd to Sec. of State Dean Rusk, 21 Dec. 1964, Box 260, Thomas J. Dodd Papers, Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT.

[ii] Telegram from the Department of State to the Embassy in the Congo, 7 Jul. 1962, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1961-1963, vol. 20 (Washington, DC: GPO, 1994), 501-503.

[iii] John Kent, America, the U.N. and Decolonization: Cold War Conflict in the Congo (New York: Routledge, 2010), 2.

[iv] Gerard Prunier, Africa’s World War: Congo, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011); Jason Stearns, Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa (New York: PublicAffairs, 2011).

[v] Researchers will also be happy to know that they will encounter an exceptionally professional and friendly archival staff.

Summer 2013 Interns

Each summer Archives & Special Collections offers internships to graduate students from a broad spectrum of academic backgrounds.  Interns work with collections preserved by the Dodd Research Center and learn the intricacies of preparing collections for future use by researchers.  Archives & Special Collections benefits from the focused attention of these young scholars who work to enhance access to the collections we steward. This summer we are pleased to have five students working on a variety of projects.  Pictured below are (seated) Arielle Rubins, (standing, l-r) Jorge Santos, Andrew Maloney and Jeffrey Egan. Not pictured is Jessica Strom.

Arielle (Psychology) is working on the development of a comprehensive finding aid for the University Photograph Collection.

Jorge (English) is extracting information from a database describing
materials in the Ed Young Papers in preparation for
the publication of the first finding aid available for the Young Papers.

Andrew (Library Science) is involved in the research and preparation of materials for a publication focused on the work of children’s author and illustrator, Tomie dePaola.

Jeff (History) is processing a portion of the papers of Congressman Bruce Morrison and updating the associated finding aid for the papers.

Jessica (History) has returned this summer to continue her work with a rare collection of broadsides from the period of the Italian Risorgimento.  She is selecting broadsides from 1848 that will be digitized and made available online in September 2013.

Summer Interns, 2013

Summer Interns, 2013

Exhibit opening: PRINCESS FOR A DAY

Princess for a Day

Princess for a Day

Please join us for the formal opening of

PRINCESS FOR A DAY: WEDDING GOWNS FROM 1860- 1960

June 27, 2013 from 4 -6 pm in the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center.

The gowns are on display in the John McDonald Reading Room

from May 5th through August 31st, 2013.

 

Queen Victoria married Prince Albert in 1840 and was photographed in her white wedding gown of heavy silk satin woven at Spitalfields in East London.  Her portrait was spread around the world and this exhibition shows the results of those wedding fashions traveling to America.  Wedding gowns from UCONN’s Historical Costume and Textile Collection give a look at a time in American history when the concept of weddings changed, following in the steps of the European Royals, hoping to live happily ever after.

 

RSVP for opening reception to: princessforadayuconn@gmail.com

When Irish Eyes are Reading

Jeffrey Egan is a graduate summer intern in Archives & Special Collections working on the papers of Congressman Bruce Morrison.  Jeff is a PhD. Student in US History at the University of Connecticut.  His dissertation will examine the social and environmental history of the creation of the Quabbin Reservoir in Massachusetts during the 1920s and 1930s.

This summer, as Congress debates a bill designed to overhaul the US immigration system, one former representative from the state of Connecticut will have his ear to the ground.  Bruce A. Morrison, a Democrat who served as a Representative for Connecticut’s Third District from 1983 to 1991, is an ardent supporter of immigration reform.  During his tenure in congress, he was appointed Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Immigration and supported the passage of the Immigration Act of 1990, the last substantial immigration bill passed by the US legislature.  Perhaps his most celebrated addition to the legislation, especially in the estimation of Irish-Americans, was the “Morrison Visa” program, which increased the number of visas granted to various nationalities including 48,000 for Irish immigrants.  Morrison later served as a member of the US Commission on Immigration Reform, which produced a report in 1997 recommending further action on the issue.

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Letter to Bruce Morrison from President Bill Clinton, July 25, 1995

Beyond documents relating to immigration reform, the Bruce A. Morrison papers include materials from his 1990 campaign for the Connecticut governorship, his work as chair of the Federal Housing Finance Board, and his role in the Irish peace negotiations during the 1990s.  A former Yale Law School classmate of Bill Clinton, Morrison also devoted his political energies to rallying Irish-American support for the Clinton/Gore campaigns in 1992 and 1996.

As a graduate student intern at the Archives & Special Collections of the Thomas J. Dodd Center, my task is to prepare Mr. Morrison’s papers for the researchers of the future.  Just a few short weeks into the summer internship, my project has opened my eyes to the vitally important, and challenging, work of archival management that makes possible my studies as a graduate student in the history department.  Working behind the scenes, an archivist must strike a delicate balance between enhancing ease of access to a person’s papers and retaining the organizational integrity of the documents, which can give researchers some sense of the life and worldview of the historical actor.  This new understanding of how documents move from private to public hands, and the nuanced work of the archivist, will inform my own research this fall when I hang up my archival gloves and return to the reading room.