CHAMPAIGN -- Blogged your way through
the history of the 1893 Chicago World's Fair lately? How about the
history of the Spanish American War in Cuba as seen through the eyes
of an African-American physician from Illinois?
Now, thanks to the University of
Illinois Library, any and
all students of history who have Web access can blog into some of
the past's most vivid chapters, page by page.
The library has launched a new free
public blog that features news of and highlights from its
large-scale digitization efforts. Collectively, these efforts
electronically scan and upload large amounts of texts and
photographs, primarily in the field of history. All the reader has
to do is subscribe to the RSS feeds to receive the blog and link to
any flipbook or PDF version of the book that is offered. The
subscription link is on the new blog page.
The new blog,
"Digitized
Book of the Week," delivers far more than it promises. The
inaugural edition offers 18 complete works of history, all viewable
in PDF and flipbook versions – from a Chicago detective's memoir
published in 1906 to an insider's view of Illinois' Jacksonville
Insane Asylum published in 1868.
The blog began last March as a
weekly e-mail to library staff members, "but it generated so much
interest in our digitization projects that we decided to turn it
into a blog with an RSS feed that anyone could subscribe to," said
Betsy Kruger, the head of digital content creation at the U. of I.
Library.
Kruger simply converted the earlier
e-mail versions to blog entries, "so even though the archives go
back to March, the blog itself just debuted." She features books
that are representative of the collections being digitized, plus
books that are "visually interesting, kind of quirky or recently
‘rediscovered.'"
Her team also features
collaborative projects, such as one with the Chicago Field Museum to
digitize the Fieldiana series.
The latest blogged items, which
also can be accessed from the library's online catalog, include:
- "Hands Up! In the World of
Crime," by Clifton Wooldridge. Wooldridge (1854-1933) was a
Chicago detective for 12 years. "Hands Up" is his popular
account of some of the 17,000 arrests he made and of a few of
the 75 young girls he "rescued from lives of shame," the book
cover says. A PBS television series described Wooldridge as "the
incorruptible Sherlock Holmes of America."
Wooldridge considered Chicago the wickedest city in the world,
so his self-appointed mission was to save the city from itself.
To do so, he associated with both the down and out and the
richest of the rich, and even elaborately disguised himself. He
would battle quack doctors, prostitution, gambling, investment
and bank scams and clairvoyants. Readers can link to a page
showing Wooldridge sporting some of his wacky disguises.
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-
"Glimpses of the World's Fair: A
Selection of Gems of the White City Seen Though a Camera
(1893)." A No. 4 Kodak Camera took all of the nearly 200
photographs.
The 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago was one of many
world fairs that were held around the turn of the century to
showcase technological and industrial advancements. The Ferris
wheel was just one of many amazing new inventions introduced at
the fair, but as Chicago's response to the Eiffel Tower, which
was built for the International Exhibition of Paris in 1889, the
wheel became the fair's signature attraction.
The book includes a photo of the wheel, which, at 64 feet high,
towered over all other exhibits. It had 36 cars, each capable of
carrying 60 passengers. A round-trip: 20 minutes; cost to build
the Ferris wheel: $300,000.
The site for the fair was Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side.
The fairgrounds came to be known as "the white city" because of
the beautiful white marble used in the construction of the
buildings, of which only the Fine Arts Building, now the Chicago
Museum of Science and Industry, still stands.
Other World's Fair attractions pictured in the book are the
Krupp Gun Building, which contained a 124-ton cannon, the
largest cast to that point; Yucatan ruins; a Japanese village; a
World's Congress of Beauty, advertising "40 ladies from 40
nations"; and Machinery Hall, the floor area covering 17 1/2
acres; cost: $1,200,000.
-
"A History of the Eighth Illinois
U.S. Volunteers" published in 1899. This "hidden gem found deep
in the bowels of the book stacks" documents the history of the
all African-American Eighth Illinois Volunteer Infantry.
"While there were other infantries of African-American soldiers
in the late 1800s, the Eighth Illinois was the first to be led
entirely by African-American officers. The Eighth was called by
President McKinley to fight in Cuba during the Spanish American
War. This volume is filled with photographs, biographical
information, the names of all the men in the unit and a
historical account of their service."
The blog features Lt. J.W. Curtis.
Born in 1856 in Marion, Ala., Curtis taught school, held a
professorship, clerked in the federal pension office, studied
medicine and graduated from Howard University in 1888; in October
1891, he went to Chicago to begin his medical practice. After he
volunteered for the war, Curtis served as the medical officer in
charge of his regiment in Cuba and only lost one soldier.
Since February, the large-scale
digitization team has scanned some 1,500 books. For more information
about the library's new blog, contact Kruger at
betsyk@uiuc.edu.
With more than 10 million volumes,
the U. of I. library is renowned for its collections, the expertise
of its staff, and its innovative and cutting-edge services.
[Text copied from
University
of Illinois news release] |