We've said it before, but Happy New Year everyone! 2025 is a big year for us at the BDC; our calendar is packed with programs and events, like the bicentennial of Lafayette’s visit to Beaufort in March, and we are one year closer to the Semiquincentennial of the American Revolution in 2026.
The new year also welcomes the release of copyrighted materials from 1929 into the public domain. This means that certain books, films, art, and music published in 1929 can now be shared and transformed without need for a licensing fee or permission from the copyright holder. US Copyright law states that materials published before 1978 are subject to a 95-year copyright term which expires on January 1st of the year following that term’s end, prompting January 1st to be considered "Public Domain Day." There are additional rules and stipulations, which you can read more about in the Public Domain Day 2025 article from the Center for the Study of the Public Domain. This article also goes in-depth on some of the media now in the public domain, including sound recordings from 1924.
Here at the BDC, we’ve joined in on the fun by identifying a handful of materials in our collection published in 1929 that may have entered into the public domain this year. Check them out below:
- SC 975.799 WIL 1929 Beaufort County, South Carolina: The Shrines, Early History, and Topography by N. L. Willet. Augusta, GA: Phoenix Printing Company, 1929. This short booklet promotes the culture and history of Beaufort and its sea islands to would-be tourists.
- SC 973.782 CHE 1929 A Diary from Dixie: As written by Mary Boykin Chesnut, wife of James Chesnut, Jr., United States Senator from South Carolina, 1859-1861, and afterward an aide to Jefferson Davis and a Brigadier-General in the Confederate Army by Mary Boykin Chesnut. New York: Peter Smith, 1929. A reprint of the published diary of Mary Boykin Chesnut (original copyright date was 1905), this book details her life and musings on society during the Civil War as a Confederate politician’s wife. A digital version is available via HathiTrust.
- SC FIC HEY 1929 The Half Pint Flask by Dubose Heyward. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1929. Written by the author of Porgy (1925), The Half Pint Flask is a short novel that criticizes racial anthropology of the time with a supernatural story of the disturbance of a Sea Island burial ground. A digital version of this book available through GoogleBooks.
- SC 929.10416 EAS 1929 History of the St. Andrew's Society of Charleston, South Carolina, 1729-1929 by J.H. Easterby. Charleston, S.C.: The Society/Walker, Evans & Cogswell, 1929. This book outlines the history of the St. Andrews Society of Charleston, formed by Scottish immigrants in 1729. While this volume is not Beaufort-related, it was part of the collection before Grace arrived, so we’ve kept it in our catalog. A copy is available digitally via HathiTrust.
- SC FIC OEM 1929 Johnny Reb: A Story of South Carolina by Marie Conway Oemler. New York: Century Co., 1929. A novel set in 1890s Maryville, SC, Johnny Reb tells the story of Confederate veteran Johnny Crutchfield and the rekindling romance of his childhood love, along with the dramas of other townsfolk.
- SC FIC CUR 1929 Little Maid of South Carolina by Alice Turner Curtis. Philadelphia, PA: Penn Publishing Co., 1929. Part of Curtis’ The Little Maid's Historical Series, this fictional novel set in 1781 tells the story of 12-year-old June Lambert and her escapades as a young patriot in Charleston.
- SC 940.4 OFF V. 1, V. 2 The Official Roster of South Carolina Soldiers, Sailors and Marines in the World War, 1917-18. [Columbia, S.C.]: General Assembly, 1929. These two volumes, published as part of an Act of the General Assembly of South Carolina, list the names of World War I veterans and brief information from their service record. This resource is available online in the South Carolina State Library’s Digital Collections.
The BDC cannot definitively state that these materials are in the public domain, as there are other qualifications that may impact their copyright and release, or the release of photos/art within the volumes. Determination of copyright and restrictions are the responsibility of the researcher.
If you are interested in reading any of these works, come visit us at the BDC. For assured service, please make an appointment to visit our Research Room by calling us at 843-255-6468 or emailing bdc@bcgov.net.
Just a heads up: the Library will be closed Monday, January 20th in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.