30 September 2011

Tour the BDC in honor of SC Archives Month

Sign up to get a "Behind-the-Scenes Tour" of the Beaufort District Collection during October to celebrate SC Archives Month.

Even if you came last year, this year the highlight is on transportation related materials, maps, postcards and other images in our holdings, so you're bound to see something new!

Anyone over age 12 interested in learning more about the transportation holdings, operations, and preservation activities of the Beaufort District Collection is welcomed to attend. The program is free. Registration is limited to 10 people per session. Pre-registration is required.

We have two sessions planned:
Tuesday evening, Oct. 4th at 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Thursday evening, Oct. 13th at 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm.
Register today by calling 843-255-6468 or by e-mailing Charmaine Seabrook Concepcion at cseabrook@bcgov.net.

Please note: We do not give these tours for individual members of the public at any other time of the year - and that the City of Beaufort Parking kiosk doesn't have to be fed after 6 pm.

To find out more about SC Archives Month 2011 “On the Move” special events, tours, and exhibits, please visit http://scarhivesmonth.palmettohistory.org.

Support for Archives Month 2011 is provided to South Carolina institutions and organizations by the South Carolina State Historical Records Advisory Board (SC SHRAB) through funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC).

29 September 2011

Library Website is Sort of Up


The Library website is up - but the BDC webpages are old, old, old.

The BDC web pages: Beaufort District Collection homepage and the BDC Services page are currently showing as if it were April 13, 2010.

The BDC web pages are updated at least every other week, sometimes on a weekly basis if there is no information to share.

IT is aware of the problem. We hope to have this fixed soon.

27 September 2011

Library Website is currently down

Our Systems person says that unfortunately the hardware for our Library website has failed. Actions are being taken to mitigate the situation as quickly as possible. We will restore the library website as soon as we can.

23 September 2011

Free Your Mind: Read a Banned Book!

Banned Books Week (BBW) is an annual event celebrating the freedom to read and the importance of the First Amendment. Banned Books Week highlights the benefits of free and open access to information while drawing attention to the harms of censorship by spotlighting actual or attempted bannings of books across the United States. BBW 2011 runs from September 24th through October 1st.

Intellectual freedom — the freedom to access information and express ideas, even if the information and ideas might be considered unorthodox or unpopular — provides the foundation for BBW. BBW stresses the importance of ensuring the availability of unorthodox or unpopular viewpoints for all who wish to read and access them.

The books featured during BBW have been targets of attempted bannings. Some of the classic works of literature on the challenged list may surprise you.

For titles challenged in 2009-2010, click here.

In a majority of cases the books were not banned, all thanks to the efforts of librarians, teachers, booksellers, and members of the community to retain the books in the library collections. However, sometimes the bans stand.

Imagine how many more books might be challenged — and possibly banned or restricted — if librarians, teachers, and booksellers across the country did not use BBW each year to teach the importance of our First Amendment rights and the power of literature, and to draw attention to the danger that exists when restraints are imposed on the availability of information in a free society.

Banned Books Week is sponsored by the American Booksellers Association; American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression; the American Library Association; American Society of Journalists and Authors; and the National Association of College Stores. It is endorsed by the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress. In 2011, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, National Coalition Against Censorship, National Council of Teachers of English, and PEN American Center also signed on as sponsors.

Q: What can you do to show your support for intellectual freedom?

Here are a few suggestions:
1) Check out and read a title that has been banned or challenged from our holdings in the SC LENDS catalog.
2) Visit and "Like" the Banned Books Week Facebook page.
3) Contribute your own 2 minute video reading from your favorite challenged book to YouTube.

This entry was informed by the ALA webpage found at http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/banned/bannedbooksweek/index.cfm and links therefrom.

21 September 2011

Free Genealogical Webinars - Act Fast!

October is designated as "Family History Month.” Are you interested in researching your ancestors? Looking for the family’s black sheep? Don’t know how or where to get started? Perhaps we can help.

Genealogical research is very personal and context is key to a successful result. Each researcher has to deal with a unique set of circumstances, personalities, and potential sources of information for each and every person on their family tree. A basic understanding of the history of the places, times, and, surviving records relating thereto is crucial to the research process. As Anonymous once said:
Genealogy begins as an interest,
Becomes a hobby;
Continues as an avocation,
Takes over as an obsession,
And in its last stages,
Is an incurable disease.

Although one has to always remember “There is no ultimate database that has every record ever,” there are some fine genealogical databases available. Numbering among those fine resources is Ancestry Library Edition (abbreviated as ALE).

It’s best to think of ALE as a conglomeration of other databases. It is a massive resource, containing over 7,000 record collections directly relevant to family history research. And, it's not cheap. With the County mandated budget cuts for FY 12, providing this resource to our customers costs almost 30% of the BDC budget for materials (includes books, magazines, DVDs, CD-ROMs, and archival ephemera). Because ALE is a key resource for anyone doing family history research, the BDC provides it to all the branch libraries as well as in the BDC Research Room.
You have to sign up to use our public computers (which is available free to valid BCL card-holders) to access the full ALE database.

We are committed to doing one ALE workshop per calendar year (and did so in 2011, at the Hilton Head Branch, in February). Announcements for BDC sponsored genealogy related workshops appear in here in Connections no less than one month before presentation. But “once is not enough,” and we know it.

Q: So what are some other ways can we help you learn the features of ALE?

A: We can tell you about free ALE training webinars through ProQuest, our vendor for ALE!

There are four upcoming opportunities for you to sign up for the free ProQuest training webinars:

Thurs., Sept. 29, 2011 1:00 pm Overview of ALE
Tues., Oct. 4, 2011 1:00 pm ALE - US Focus
Tues., Oct. 11, 2011 9:00 am ALE - UK & Ireland Focus
Wed., Oct. 26, 2011 4:00 pm ALE - US Focus

The most daunting aspect of the registration process is the URL, choosing the Genealogy section, and then selecting the session(s) you'd like to attend online! You don't have to limit yourself to just one session either.

According to Linda Cubias, MLIS, Supervisor, Customer Education & Training, Eastern U.S., for ProQuest,

• Anyone can attend with an internet connection (including WiFi) from any computer.
• Here are the technical requirements for the computer (included here by operating system).
• For any users that have difficulties joining a webinar, there are recordings available later.

Registrants have two audio options for the ProQuest ALE webinars: An audio broadcast through your computer headset/speakers; or, call in using the toll-free phone number that is included in your email invitation to join the meeting (sent to you after you register directly with ProQuest. We won't have this information to give to you!).
If you have any trouble with home or office access to the training sessions for ALE, contact Linda Cubias, MLIS, Supervisor, Customer Education & Training office +1 704 947 8170 mobile +1 240 672 5695 or linda.cubias@proquest.com.
Please note: Beaufort County Library staff are not able troubleshoot your technical difficulties with personal computing equipment.

To show the difference a little professional reference librarian intermediation can make -

Hilton Head Branch will set up its computer lab to receive the online webinar on Tues., Oct. 4th at 1:00 pm. Space is limited. Registration is required. Call the Hilton Head Branch Reference Desk 255-6525 no later than Mon., Oct. 3rd at 1 :00 pm to register.

BYOL (as in “Bring your own laptop” – with sufficient battery power to last 2 hours) to the BDC Research Room on Thurs., Sept. 29, 2011 1:00 pm for access to the online ALE webinar. Space is limited to 2 registrants. Be sure to allot enough time to set up WiFi access before the webinar training. We will be available to answer questions about ALE for an hour after the webinar session. Pre-registration is required. Call the BDC Research Room Reference Desk at 255-6468 to register. Deadline to attend the BDC Research Room session is Wed., Sept. 28th at 1:00 pm.

St. Helena Branch will project the online webinar on Wed., Oct. 26th at 4:00 pm. Registration is limited to 12 persons. Registration is required. Contact Branch Manager Maria Benac at 255-6486 or mbenac@bcgov.net by Sat., Oct. 22nd to attend.
Why not get a no cost basic orientation to the ALE database through one of these webinars offered by ProQuest as part of your observance of “Family History Month”?

A final way that the BDC helps genealogical researchers is to offer research consultation appointments during our regular working hours. We do our best to guide family historians to possible records with the answers to your questions. Our specialty, not surprisingly, is the old Beaufort District (Beaufort, Jasper and Hampton Counties), South Carolina state records, and Federal records relating to the southeastern US. Call me at 255-6446 to arrange a professional reference librarian consultation session. Advance notice is much appreciated - and be sure to bring along what you already have on the family members in which you are most interested!

The Beaufort District Collection Research Room is customarily open Mondays through Fridays, 10 am until 5 pm.

20 September 2011

A Multitude of Programs on History and Archaeology

If you are a history, archaeology, genealogy or music buff, you have plenty of options to exercise your interest over the next 10 days:

Tues., Sept. 20th - Nena Powell Rice (SCIAA) is the speaker at the Hilton Head Chapter of the Archaeology Society of South Carolina at 1 pm in the Coastal Discovery Museum. Free. For more information, contact George Stubbs 843-363-5058 www.assc.net.

Thurs., Sept. 22nd - Beaufort County Historical Society is hosting re-enactor Joseph McGill, who will discuss the actions and people of the 54th Massachusetts. The BCHS meeting begins at Noon and is open to the public. Free. The meeting will be held the Yacht Club on Lady's Island. Contact: Pamela Ovens sail@singlestar.us or call 843-785-2767.

Sun., Sept. 25th - Dwayne Pickett, coauthor of “The European Struggle to Settle North America” will discuss his book and sign copies at a reception in honor of William Hilton Day at the Heritage Library, 852 William Hilton Pkwy on Hilton Head Island. The lecture begins at 1:30pm. Call 686-6560 for reservations. Donation suggested.

Mon., Sept. 26th - Beaufort Branch Library begins to gear up for the New Harmonies: Roots of American Music exhibit with a series of noontime musical performances. First up is Laura Lee Rose and Friends performing a variety of folk songs and Civil War tunes. The session will be held in the USCB Performing Arts Center from Noon until 1:00pm. Bring your own lunch. Free. Lunch & Listen series is co-sponsored by USCB Center for the Arts.

Mon., Sept. 26th - Ron Roth presents a special lecture entitled "Undaunted Valor: Stephen Elliott and the Beaufort Volunteer Artillery." Attendees will get gallery tour of a new permanent exhibit at the Verdier House about the BVA. The event will begin at 5:30 pm, 801 Bay Street. Fee. Sponsored by the Historic Beaufort Foundation.

Tues., Sept. 27th - Bill Altstaetter will present a lecture on “The Pre-Columbia Low Country and the Lost Century,” beginning at 1:30 pm in the Heritage Library, 852 William Hilton Pkwy on Hilton Head Island. Fee. Call 686-6560 for details.

Wed., Sept. 28th - Nancy Burke will lead the first of a two-part program titled “Starting Family Research,” with the second session scheduled for Oct. 5. Classes begins at 1:30 pm in the Heritage Library, 852 William Hilton Pkwy on Hilton Head Island. Fee. Call 686-6560 for details.

Fri., Sept. 30th - The Heritage Library will waive its daily research fee for non-members in honor of William Hilton Day, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Short history talks on selected genealogical and historical subjects will also mark the occasion. Call 686-6560 for details.

18 September 2011

Lunch & Listen series lead-in to New Harmonies Exhibit


Amanda Brewer, Beaufort Branch Library, has put together a musical Lunch & Listen series as a lead-in to the arrival of the Smithsonian's New Harmonies exhibit in December.

She's a guitarist herself and it appears that she just might have called in a few favors from her performer friends to set up the free noontime concerts for the community.

Mon., Sept. 26th - Laura Lee Rose and Friends - Civil War and Folk Tunes

Mon., Oct. 10th - Craig Washington - Jazz on Electric Guitar

Mon., Oct. 24th - Kirk Dempsey - Blues on harmonica and guitar

Mon., Nov. 14th - Chris Jones - History of Blues guitar from the mid 1930s to present day.

Mon., Dec. 12th - Chris Jones - High energy performance showcasing guitar playing styles of iconic guitar players


Bring your lunch to the USC-Beaufort Center for the Arts auditorium on the historic Beaufort campus, 801 Carteret Street, and enjoy the music of Beaufort’s local musicians this fall through Lunch & Listen, a music series brought to you by the Beaufort Branch Library and the University of South Carolina Beaufort Center for the Arts.

These one hour lunchtime music performances are free, and open to all who are interested in enjoying music by local performers! The series is free and open to the public with doors opening at 11:30 am. and performances running from Noon to 1 p.m. Bring a lunch or purchase one at Outtakes Cafe next door to the Performing Arts Center.

17 September 2011

Heads up: BDC@ The Branches returns in October

Throughout the year, the Beaufort District Collection brings in authors and speakers on a variety of topics meeting our mission to share information about the history, culture, and environment of our area.

Because staff is working very hard preparing metadata for our "300 for the 300th" project with the Lowcountry Digital Library, we have no scheduled BDC@ The Branches programs during September.





To celebrate "Archives Month" in October, register to get a "Behind-the-Scenes Tour" of the BDC. Anyone over age 12 interested in learning more about the operations and preservation activities of the Beaufort District Collection is welcomed to attend. The program is free but registration is limited to 10 people per session. We have two sessions planned:
Tuesday evening, Oct 4th at 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Thursday evening, Oct. 13th at 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Contact us at 843-255-6468 to register. Please note: The City of Beaufort parking kiosk doesn't have to be fed after 6:00 in the evening.

October is also "Archaeology Month." Thurs., Oct. 27th - Archaeologist Chris Judge on "Making Artifacts Talk: Fifteen Years at the Johannes Kolb Site––Archaeology and Education." BDC@ Beaufort Branch, 5:30 pm. Co-sponsored by Beaufort County Planning Department.

The BDC is on the move in November. Tues., Nov. 1st - BDC@ Bluffton Branch, 2:00 pm. Review of the book and documents from the BDC re: Great Sea Island Storm, 1893

In November, we kick of our local commemoration of the Civil War as it happened here with ...

Mon., Nov. 7th - "Battle of Port Royal Sound, 1861" with author/archivist Mike Coker (2 sessions). BDC@ Bluffton Branch 2:00 pm and BDC@ Penn Center 6:30 pm. The evening event includes special guests Dr. Larry Rowland, Stephen Hoffius, and Neil Baxley. Co-sponsored by Penn Center.

And in December, don't forget that the Smithsonian's New Harmonies: The Roots of American Music exhibit is coming Dec. 17th. Details divulged later.

September 17th is (US) Constitution Day

Today we honor the United States Constitution and the vigorous debate about what it says, what the Founders meant, and what it means for Americans 224 years after the document was signed at the Convention in 1787. (The Bill of Rights, ratification, and implementation all came later.)

From the Gilder Lehrman Institute:
In honor of Constitution Day, and with the permission of the author, the Gilder Lehrman Institute is pleased to send you “One Document, Under Siege” by Richard Stengel.

We hope you enjoy this thought-provoking article and share it with teachers, students, and friends.

Richard Stengel is Editor-in-Chief of Time Magazine and former President of the National Constitution Center. He welcomes your comments and questions, which can be sent to him at richard_stengel@time.com.

Read last year's Connections entry about Constitution Day.

16 September 2011

Civil War Topics at BCHS Meetings

The Beaufort County Historical Society has two Civil War related programs on their Fall Speaker Series.

On Sept. 22nd re-enactor Joseph McGill will discuss the actions and people of the 54th Massachusetts, an African-American Union Troop that was stationed here in Beaufort and fought valiantly in the assault on Fort Wagner in Charleston Harbor. This program is funded in part by The Humanities Council SC, a state-based program of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Six weeks later on Nov. 10th, Kristine Dunn Johnson will speak on her book No Holier Spot of Ground: Confederate Monuments and Cemeteries of South Carolina and the history of the Beaufort US National Cemetery.

All meetings are held at noon at the Beaufort Yacht & Sailing Club, Meridian Rd., Beaufort, SC. The public is welcome and encouraged to attend at no charge. For further information about the series, contact: Pamela Ovens-President sail@singlestar.us or call 843-785-2767.

If you like to lunch and learn, contact Nancy Gilley at 843-524-7969 for an optional light lunch catered by Debbi Covington will be served at 11:30 for $10.

 

14 September 2011

Audiobooks, Place Names, and a Favorite Book

Besides working in the Library, I use library services to pursue personal interests.

(I believe in getting extremely good value for my property taxes and thus use the Library often. You should too! If you don’t already have a Library card, sign up now. September is “Library Card Sign-up Month,” after all.)

Because I do my best to keep my personal life separate from my working life, I don't usually share what I've read (or listened to) with others. (Librarians are private individuals, too.) However, I'm making an exception today. I'm writing about audio formats available through BCL, a pet peeve, and one of my favorite books all-in-one go.


For the most part, the only time I listen to the radio is in the car. I prefer NPR. The two men I live with (my husband and our youngest son) prefer Talk Radio or music stations. In other words, I usually get outvoted while traveling with them. Therefore, I select audiobooks from the Library that I want to listen to while on a road trip to accompany me on the journey. (There is such a thing as too much family togetherness.)

AUDIOBOOK FORMATS Available at BCL

When selecting, I estimate the traveling time for the round trip. I'll browse the Audiobook section of the Beaufort Branch, my personal home library, looking for an audiobook approximately the length of my planned trip. (I usually don't plan far enough ahead of time to get audiobooks through SCLENDS. But if you're a better planner than I am, you can do that if you wish. You'll definitely have more titles to pick from that way).

Here are my audiobook choices in BCL for grown-ups:

1. Audiobooks on CDs
2. Audiobooks on Playaways
3. EBSCOhost Audiobook Collection

1. Audiobooks on CDs can be played in any CD player. When traveling alone, I listen through my vehicle's compact disk player. If I'm traveling with my family members, I can take along my ancient bulky disc player for the CDs.

2. Audiobooks on Playaways. A Playaway is a 3" by 2" self-contained MP3 audio recording player unit that can fit into one's pocket. It's very lightweight. Customers have to supply the battery (one AAA) and the ear pieces (buds or phones, depending on what one has).
(I've been rather lucky, about 50% of the Playaways I've checked out already had a battery in them. I consider this a random act of kindness from another lover of libraries.)

In my personal opinion, a Playaway seems more resistant to disruption due to movement than the older disc player. In other words, I can continue to listen while stretching my legs at the Rest Area. (My husband believes in 5 minute comfort breaks about once every 4 hours during a road trip.)

You can find the audiobooks on CD or Playaway listed in the SCLENDS catalog.
For purposes of illustration, I did an advanced catalog search, in the BCL only, of audiobooks on the subject of "Civil War," for adult customers, and got 28 hits. I wish that I could limit the search by length of the recording, but alas, the SCLENDS catalog advanced search screen does not provide this option.

3. From your home or office computer, Beaufort County Library also offers access to the EBSCO Host Audiobook Collection for our cardholders. Follow the directions to set up your account and to download audiobooks to your computer, MP3 player, or iPod. Not all titles are available in all three formats. As always, ask any of our Branch Library Reference Librarians for assistance.

Please note: The titles in the EBSCO Host Audiobook Collection are not listed in the SCLENDS catalog.

PET PEEVE:

To keep me occupied in the car on the way to Norfolk in early August, I choose a Playaway loaded with Noah Andre Trudeau's biography of Robert E. Lee, read by Tom Weiner. Weiner has a deep bass masculine voice that I like. He has won an Earphones Award and been nominated for an Audie Award. He's well practiced at recording books.

All was going well until he came to the chapter about Lee's term of service here in Beaufort District. He butchered the place name of one of the former County seats of Beaufort, Coosawhatchie. He said "Coo suh waht chee." I groaned aloud - and shouted aloud -- "No! No!" My husband and son thought that we were about to be run over by a semi-truck or something!

Grace's Grumpy Gripe: Readers recording printed books should make certain that they pronounce local place names appropriately.

A FAVORITE BOOK:

One of my favorite books is a little volume entitled Correct Mispronunciations of Some South Carolina Names by Claude and Irene Neuffer (1983). The preface states:
Among Americans, South Carolinians have done more than any other group to carry on the fine old English tradition of pronouncing a name one way and spelling it another...Of course, there is probably no word in the English language that isn't pronounced in different ways by different people, even if the differences are sometimes too subtle to be perceived by anyone other than a trained phoneticist. Which pronunciation is the 'correct' one? For the purposes of this little book we take the correct pronunciation of a family name to be the one the family uses, and the correct pronunciation of a place name to be the one that has traditionally been preferred by most reasonably well-educated people in the neighborhood... By 'correct mispronunciations' we mean, of course, pronunciations that are considered correct in South Carolina but will seem wrong to you if you've just arrived from Connecticut, bless your sun-seeking heart, and you've never been in the Palmetto State before. (pp. v-vii)

The Neuffers tell a joke that illustrates the pride we native South Carolinians take in our traditional pronunciations of our family and place names and what is perceived by many non-South Carolinians to be wacky spelling:

Three dogs meet at the Four Corners of Law (that is, the junction of Broad and Meeting Streets in Charleston). The first dog, a mongrel, says: "I'm from New York and my name is Spot. That's spelled S-P-O-T." The second dog, a German Shepherd, says "I'm from Ohio and my name is Rover. That's spelled R-O-V-E-R." The third dog, a French Poodle says "Welcome to Charleston. My name is Fido and that's spelled P-H-I-D-E-A-U-X." (pp. vi-vii)

Q: How should one correctly mispronounce "Coosawhatchie?"
A: According to the Neuffers: "Coosawhatchie KOO-suh-HATCH-i (OO as in booze.) The unknowing sometimes put the w in the third syllable (KOO-sa-WAHTCH-i). It's an Indian word that may mean cane-creek people." (p. 41)

My advice: In case of doubt on how to pronounce a South Carolina based family name or a place name, visit the BDC to consult Correct Mispronunciations of South Carolina Names. There are reference copies available at Beaufort Branch, Bluffton Branch, Hilton Head Branch, and Lobeco Branch as well.


12 September 2011

Nena Rice on South Carolina Archaeology

The Archaeological Society of South Carolina, Hilton Head Chapter will host the next meeting Tuesday, Sept 20th at 1 pm at the Coastal Discovery Museum at Honey Horn featuring Nena Powell Rice of SCIAA (South Carolina Institute of Anthropology and Archaeology).

The meeting is free and open to the public.

In preparation of the celebration of Archaeology Month in October, Rice will discuss Discovering South Carolina Archaeology: 16,000 Years of Cultural Occupation. She will deliver a general synopsis of the archaeology of South Carolina during the past 16,000 years, focusing on technological change through time.

She will also address a large variety of programs offered during the 20th Annual South Carolina Month in October 2011.

For further information about the meeting or lecture, please contact George Stubbs- 843-363-5058 www.assc.net.

09 September 2011

BCL Remembers 9 -11 with a local archive

Please note: The links have been removed and appointments are now required to access the materials in the Beaufort District Collection Research Room. -- gmc 9 September 2021

People throughout the world will commemorate the 10th anniversary of the tragic events of September 11th, 2001 this Sunday. As Christine Watkins wrote on the first anniversary:
"The events of last September didn’t only happen in New York and Washington, D.C.: They happened in every state and in every community. The need to commemorate, to understand, to grapple with the tensions between freedom and security is a national one. While understanding needs to be global, local actions ... are among the most powerful responses, bringing something almost too huge to be imagined down to human scale."
One of the local reactions to the events of 9-11 is a small unique collection of oral histories about that tragic day recorded as part of the September Project, 2004. The September Project's goal was that: "On Saturday, September 11th, 2004, people across the nation will go to public spaces to participate collectively and think creatively about our country, our government, and our media. With public libraries as host, The September Project will help facilitate talks and roundtables, public forums, and performances in towns and cities across the US." Fran Hays of our staff led the Beaufort Branch Library's participation in the September Project. On Saturday, September 11, 2004, she set up a cassette tape recording station for people from our community to share their memories. Almost a dozen Beaufort residents and visitors offered their oral history recollections and reflections on what was the 3rd anniversary of the terrorist attack. These oral histories are first-hand reflections on the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and Flight 93, and the consequences of the terrorist attacks on American freedoms, with a lapse of three years to process one's grief, emotions, and reactions. The recordings were placed in the BDC for permanent retention upon conclusion of the project. Beloved BDC docent, Hugh Folk, transcribed the oral histories in 2008. Charmaine Concepcion and I recently reviewed, edited, and added explanatory content to the transcriptions. Read the BDC's oral history transcripts. Fellow BCL reference librarian, Amanda Brewer, wrote about some of the materials the Library has on the attack and its consequences in our holdings and on display in the "From the Beacon" column in the Island Packet/Beaufort Gazette on Sunday, August 28th. Be sure to drop by the Branch libraries to see the displays or check out materials on the topic. You'll have to drop by the BDC Research Room to hear the audio recordings. 

07 September 2011

Sign up for a BDC "Behind-the-Scenes Tour"

To celebrate "Archives Month," the BDC is offering its 1st annual (2nd year) extra special "Behind-the-Scenes Tour" to individual members of the general public.

We do not give these tours for individual members of the public at any other time of the year.

Anyone over age 12 interested in learning more about the operations and preservation activities of the Beaufort District Collection is welcomed to attend. The program is free but registration is limited to 10 people per session.

We have two sessions planned:
Tuesday evening, Oct 4th at 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Thursday evening, Oct. 13th at 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm.
Pre-registration is required. Contact us at 843-255-6468 to register.

Please note: The City of Beaufort parking kiosk doesn't have to be fed after 6:00 in the evening.

Second please note: Organized group tours may be arranged upon prior agreement and consultation throughout the year. Call 255-6446 to discuss your group's needs and our capabilities to handle groups.

05 September 2011

How to Get Your Beaufort County Library Borrower's Card:

* Library Borrower's Cards are free to all Beaufort County residents ages 4 and up. (A parent or legal guardian is required to sign for children who are 4-14 years old.)

* May be obtained at any branch library location upon verification of name and address.

* May be used at all Beaufort County Public Library locations (and subject to each library's policy at the University of South Carolina at Beaufort Library and the Technical College of the Lowcountry Learning Resources Center ).

For details, go to our "Borrowing Materials" page.

01 September 2011

Library Closed Sept. 5th

All Beaufort County Library branches, including the BDC, is closed to celebrate the Labor Day holiday on September 5th.

Regular hours of operation resume Tuesday, September 6th.