23 April 2021

Update: State of Preservation in the BDC

Preservation Week is a good time to assess the state of preservation in the Beaufort District Collection.   The most basic principles - limiting ultraviolet light exposures, temperature and humidity extremes, and monitoring for leaks and pests - are in place. But archival processing for preservation has come to a standstill due to current circumstances related to public health, staffing levels and budget issues. This puts the BDC is its usual and customary position re: preservation. On the whole, we are worst off than some, and much better off than others, of our peers in the larger Libraries, Archives, and Museums community. In the process, we "know" things about preservation principles and practices to share. 

In previous years we have held workshops and programs for the public about how to properly take care of collections. Several factors prevent us from doing so this year. The BDC has been plagued by staff shortages since January 2020, and then there was COVID mitigation efforts that eliminated the possibility of gathering together in person.  Accordingly, the BDC's Preservation Week 2021 is another low-keyed celebration similar to PW 2020. 

In some ways a low-keyed acknowledgement fits the topic of materials preservation quite nicely.

The general public tends not to think too much about the true costs of stewardship of community and personal "treasures". There is a lot of lip service given to "preserving" history through monuments and historic documents, and often contributions towards the erection or acquisition of those items are made. I acknowledge that these offer "feel good moments" that we collectively and individually are "preserving history" - but few people think or donate money towards the daily costs of good stewardship of cultural heritage resources. Preservation isn't "sexy" or likely to go viral on social media but that does not mean that all is lost. Improvements can be made and a group banded together to raise awareness of principles of good stewardship in institutions, in organizations, and at homes all across America.

It's hard to believe that we are now in Year 11 of the annual awareness campaign to foster good stewardship of collections in libraries, archives, museums, historical societies and private hands.  In 2010, the American Library Association organized the first Preservation Week with the support of the Association for Library Collections and Technical Services, Preservation and Reformatting Section; Library of Congress; Institute of Museum and Library Services ; American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works; Society of American Archivists ; and, Heritage Preservation.

The groundbreaking Heritage Health Index of 2005 was the first comprehensive national survey of the condition and preservation needs of collections held by U.S. libraries, museums, and archives. The conclusions of that report definitely affected my professional life from then until now. The study gave me evidence to advocate for relocation of the special collections unit and for better funding and eventually additional staff to help care for the contents of the special collections unit (though part of that staffing has now been reallocated to other library positions).

An update to the seminal report was issued in 2019 as "Protecting America's Collections." The 2019 report showed that significant improvements had been made since 2005 even as there remains much to do. The challenges wrought by insufficient staffing and funding for preservation continue. Quoting from the document's foreword : 

The nation's libraries, museums, historical societies, archives, and scientific institutions hold in their collections an incredible 13 billion items, from furniture to photos and sheet music to soil samples. These make up the tangible objects of our national heritage ... [spread among] museums (47%); libraries (35%), historical societies (12%), archives (3%), and other scientific organizations (2%). ... Some of the results also challenge traditional thinking about museums and libraries. [Libraries] hold 92% of our nation's photographic records [while] museums hold 96% of unbound sheets such as letters, artwork, notes, and other documents. And yet, small organizations, while supported by their communities, continue to struggle."

Q: Why is preservation of local materials important?

Small institutions hold important archives, maps, transactional records and other documents which are irreplaceable artifacts of cultural, governmental and community contexts. The modest budgets of many ... fail to give a fair notion of their importance in preserving our national heritage. - Dr. Kathryn K. Matthew
Q: What are some of the key challenges for local organizations holding cultural heritage collections? 

A. Environmental factors, such as light, heat, moisture, and pollutants can cause serious and irreparable harm to books, photographs, documents, works of art, and artifacts. It takes dedicated and knowledgeable staff, helpful and talented volunteers, and sufficient funds to properly take care of collections. The bottom line is:

Prevention is always better than intervention - and usually costs less as well. 
Q: What do we do here in the BDC Research Room to be good stewards of the materials entrusted into our safekeeping? 

Because money is always an issue, and "A stitch in time saves nine," here in the BDC we concentrate on low cost (or no cost) ways to mitigate harm to our collections:

A: We limit UV emissions from our light fixtures.
A: We cut off our lights when we don’t need them. Our storage area is kept dark except when staff is actively retrieving materials for customers to use.
A: We do not have windows in our materials storage area.
A: With Facilities Management personnel, we monitor the heat and humidity of our area all the time, making adjustments as conditions warrant.
A: We relocated to the 2nd floor a decade ago to rise above the flood plane.
A: We look up whenever there is a rainstorm – to make certain that our roof isn’t leaking.
A: We attend workshops and webinars on the best way to take care of our materials. Preservation is an evolving field. In fact, we don't even have to wear white cotton gloves as much as we used to!

Some of the basic prevention methods are as relevant to private collections as they are for institutional collections. For that reason, you'll find preservation tips for personal treasures in earlier Connections as well as on the BDC's Facebook page, particularly during Preservation Week each year. 

Check out the free webinars listed on the Preservation Week website and available as Collections Care videos, The NorthEast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) offers informative free pamphlets about preservation of paper-based, photographic and audio materials for download. And as always, if you have a preservation question I'll do my best to share correct and appropriate information sources to meet your needs.

15 April 2021

State Legislative Manuals in the Research Room and Online

"The Hidden Senator" local history program reminded me about the Legislative Manuals and the State Government records and materials here in the Research Room and digitally through the South Carolina State Library and the South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Take my word for it: together there's a lot! In fact, you can get a rough overview of the range of government records that we have in the Research Room by revisiting a series of Connections posts about municipal, county, state and federal government records that I wrote back in July 2018.

Cover of the South Carolina Legislative Manual 1949.Niels Christensen, Jr. was Beaufort County's state senator for 20 years, 1904 - 1924. While the BDC has plenty of South Carolina Legislative Manuals in the Research Room, we do not have copies for the years that he served in the Senate. Our earliest South Carolina Legislative Manual is dated 1929, then we have four for the 1930s, a solid run 1941 - 1951, and then we start again with 1953 - 2005; 2008 - 2011; 2018 and 2020. Therefore it is quite fortunate that the South Carolina State Library (SCSL) has more years of SC Legislative Manuals in its collection - and in addition to physical copies, SCSL has digitized South Carolina Legislative Manuals from 1917 to the present day and made them available online. 

The annually published manual provides detailed information, including photographs and biographies of officials in the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the South Carolina State Government, the South Carolina Congressional Delegation, and State Officers. Additionally, the manual serves as a useful resource for information on State Senate and House of Representatives districts; Rules of the Senate and House of Representatives; State Agencies; State Symbols and Emblems; South Carolina County Officers; United States Government Departments in South Carolina; and historical information on South Carolina Governors, Lieutenant Governors, and Speakers of the House.

From the online files of the Legislative Manuals made by the SCSL, one can follow his tenure in the Senate from 1917 through his retirement in 1924 - as well as the political careers of other elected and appointed officials from 1917 until 2021.

Don't delay, watch the "Historically Speaking" Lecture 3, Season 2 program on the Library's YouTube Channel before it gets taken down on Thursday, April 22nd at 6 pm. You'll learn a lot from Mrs. Pollitzer about early 20th century Beaufort and see some nifty family photographs and items from our own Research Room related to State Senator Niels Christensen, Jr..

A reminder: The Library system will be closed on Wednesday, April 21, 2021 for Staff Development Day. 

Please remember to make arrangements with me in advance to visit the Research Room. Staff shortage and COVID-19 mitigation efforts have limited access to our facility since March 18, 2020. We remain unable to accept walk-in customers at the present time. Contact me: gracec@bcgov.net ; 843-255-6446 during normal and customary Beaufort County government hours. If I am not here to answer your phone call, please leave a message. I will respond to your inquiries during regular business hours as quickly as possible and in the order in which the inquiries were received.

06 April 2021

Mary S.B. Dana : Poet from Beaufort District

Please note: April is National Poetry month so I decided to review previous entries that I have written about poets, poetry, and poems here in Connections to confirm that the links still worked and/or that the content was "worth" revising. I think that Mrs. Dana deserves more recognition than she tends to receive. Thus the following post is based on Connections posts of April 30, 2012 and April 1, 2013 - gmc. 

Mary Stanley Bunce Palmer was born February 15, 1810 in Beaufort to Rev. Benjamin Morgan Palmer and Mary Stanley Bunce Palmer (Yes, she had the exact same name as her own mother; and matters are further complicated by two Rev. Benjamin Morgan Palmers, her father 1781 - 1847 and his nephew, (her cousin) Benjamin Morgan Palmer, 1818-1902  who became a renowned Presbyterian minister).  In 1813, her father moved the family to Charleston, SC where he served as the minister of the Circular Church until 1835.  She was educated in the private school of Dr. Ramsey and his daughters in Charleston and in various seminaries for young ladies in Connecticut and New Jersey.  In 1835, she married Charles E. Dana of New York.  They had one son.  Both her husband and her son died at their home in Bloomington, Iowa during August 1839.

She returned to the home of her parents in Charleston as a childless widow and poured out her grief about her string of recent losses through writing The Parted Family, and Other Poems (1842) under the pen name of Mary S. B. Dana. Both her parents died in 1847. Her religious poems reflect on themes of comfort in the struggles of life and death. Recognition of her poetry, often infused with religious sentiment such as in "Passing Under the Rod", began during this decade. 

Passing Under the Rod 

And I will cause you to pass under the rod, and I will bring you in to the bond of the covenant." Ezekial, Chapter 20, Verse 37.

I saw the young bride, in her beauty and pride,
  Bedeck'd in her snowy array;
And the bright flush of joy mantled high on her cheek,
  And the future look'd blooming and gay:
And with woman's devotion she laid her fond heart
  At the shrine of idolatrous love,
And she anchor'd her hopes to this perishing earth,
  By the chain which her tenderness wove.
But I saw when those heartstrings were bleeding and torn,
  And the chain had been sever'd in two,
She had changed her white robes for the sables of grief,
  And her bloom for the paleness of wo[e]!
But the Healer was there, pouring balm on her heart,
  And wiping the tears from her eyes,
And he strengthened the chain he had broken in twain,
  And fasten'd it firm to the skies!
There had whisper'd a voice -- 'twas the voice of her God,
"I love thee -- I love thee -- pass under the rod!"

Later she set some of her poems to music, often favoring folk tunes for the melody. Respected musician and music teacher, George Frederick Root, composed musical arrangements for some of her poems. A number were used as lyrics in 19th century hymns. The Hymnary website includes images of some of the verses set to music. 

She married an Episcopalian minister, Robert Doyne Shindler at some point between 1848 and 1851 (sources vary as to the precise date of the nuptials).  They had one child, a son, Robert Conrad Shindler, who was born in Shelbyville, Kentucky in April 1852.  They were living in Tennessee by 1859.  After the Civil War, the family relocated to Nacogdoches and San Augustine, Texas. Rev. Shindler died in Nacogdoches in 1874; she died 9 years later on February 8, 1883.  Among her famous descendants are the former US Senator from Texas, Kay Bailey Hutchison and actress Mary Tyler Moore.   

Her works include The Southern Harp, The Northern Harp, and The Western Harp in which her religious poems are set to music, several novels, and religious and spiritualism essays. 

In our Research Room we have:  

Letters Addressed to Relatives and Friends: Chiefly in Reply to Arguments in Support of the Doctrine of the Trinity (1846; 2011)

The Southern Harp: Consisting of Original Sacred and Moral Songs, Adapted to the Most Popular Melodies: For the Piano-forte and Guitar (1841; 2011) 

The Parted Family, and Other Poems: An Offering to the Afflicted, and a Tribute of Love to Departed Friends (1842; 2011)  

A Southerner Among the Spirits: A Record of Investigations into the Spiritual Phenomena (1877; 2011)

Forecastle Tom or, The Landsman Turned Sailor (1846, 2011)

For the serious researcher, her papers are included in the Shindler-Palmer Family Papers at the Ralph W. Steen Library of the Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas.

You are welcomed to set up an appointment to visit our Research Room to review her works and the sources from the SHINDLER, MARY STANLEY BUNCE PALMER DANA, (1810 - 1883) vertical file I used to write this post. Contact us: bdc@bcgov.net OR 843-255-6468