The Unquiet Library

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Archive for the ‘history’ Category

Remembering D-Day

Posted by theunquietlibrary on June 6, 2009

Next to December 7, 1941, the most memorable date in the history of World War II is that of June 6, 1944, when Allied forces landed on the beaches of Normandy. Thanks to German miscalculations, the invasion met much less resistance than thought possible. D-Day marked the beginning of the end of the war in Europe, though it would rage on for another 11 months. Here are stories of men who stormed those beaches, who directed the landings, who sailed or flew in support of the invasion, who parachuted or piloted gliders into France on the night of June 5, and who arrived in the days after June 6 (D-Day Plus 1, etc.) to continue the perilous work of pushing back and defeating the German Army.

Be sure to check out our favorite resources on D-Day that we have bookmarked with delicious.  Here are some terrific resources you will want to check out to help commemorate this important event in world history:

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The History of Valentine’s Day

Posted by theunquietlibrary on February 14, 2009

Have you ever wondered how Valentine’s Day began?  How did this lovefest begin?  The History Channel has all the answers to your burning questions!  Check out the fun and informative Valentine’s Day mini-website at http://www.history.com/minisites/valentine/.

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This Day in History, November 26, 1941: FDR Establishes Modern Thanksgiving Holiday

Posted by theunquietlibrary on November 26, 2008

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Participate in the National Day of Listening, November 28, 2008

Posted by theunquietlibrary on November 26, 2008

http://www.nationaldayoflistening.org/

National Day of Listening via kwout

Friday, November 28, 2008 is the first ever National Day of ListeningThis event is sponsored by StoryCorps.  StoryCorps is an independent nonprofit that has helped more than 40,000 Americans record their stories.  As one of the largest oral history projects of its kind, their mission to help people honor and celebrate one another’s lives through listening.

What is this national day of listening all about?  Here is how StoryCorps describes it:

This Thanksgiving, StoryCorps asks you to start a new holiday tradition—set aside one hour on Friday, November 28th, to record a conversation with someone important to you. You can interview anyone you choose: an older relative, a friend, a teacher, or a familiar face from the neighborhood.

You can preserve the interview using recording equipment readily available in most homes, such as tape recorders, computers, video cameras or a pen and paper. Our free Do-It-Yourself Guide is easy to use and will prepare you and your interview partner to record a memorable conversation, no matter which method of recording you prefer.

We hope that you’ll make a yearly tradition of listening to and preserving a loved one’s story. The stories you collect will surely become treasured keepsakes, growing more valuable with each passing generation.

I would like to encourage you to participate in this National Day of Listening—at your age, it seemed as though I had forever to spend with my family members, but now that I am adult, I realize how fleeting time is.  So many times I wish that I had videoed or recorded the stories of my beloved late grandmothers who had so many memorable experiences to share.  If you can’t participate on November 28, 2008, consider participating on a day that works for you during this upcoming holiday season—the gift of a living memory is priceless.
Read more about how others are planning on to celebrate this National Day of Listening by visiting my links at http://delicious.com/theunquietlibrary/nationaldayoflistening .

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Life Magazine Photo Archive @ Google!

Posted by theunquietlibrary on November 19, 2008

http://images.google.com/hosted/life

LIFE photo archive hosted by Google via kwout 

Check out the amazing new Life magazine photo archives hosted by Google!  This is a treasure trove of important and striking historic photos that are great for the study of history and culture.  Many thanks to Dr. Peter Smagorinsky at UGA and David Warlick for the scoop on this terrific new resource!  You can read more about this collection and public use of these photos at:

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Remembering September 11

Posted by theunquietlibrary on September 11, 2008

We have several books of nonfiction, poetry, and stories on display in the library this week to commemorate the anniversary of September 11.  Please feel free to come by and browse or check out one of the books.

Mrs. Hamilton, Mrs. Fleet, and Mrs. Beasley

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Happy 4th of July!

Posted by theunquietlibrary on July 4, 2008

 

We at The Unquiet Library want to wish you a safe, happy, and fun 4th of July!  As we pause from our hot dogs, hamburgers, fireworks, and Peachtree Road Race to ponder the significance of this date, we encourage you check out some of the great resources below to learn more about this historic date in history.  You can browse our favorite resources at http://del.icio.us/creekview_hs_library/4th_of_July !

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A Real Flea Market Find: An Original Manuscript of “America”!

Posted by theunquietlibrary on July 4, 2008

A New York gentleman purchased a framed picture of a flower for $10 at a Manhattan flea market three weeks ago.  When he got home, he discovered some mysterious sheets of yellow paper behind the picture.  Experts have now confirmed those sheets of paper are a rare original copy of the lyrics to “America (My Country Tis of Thee)”!

Read more about this historic flea market find at:

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64th Anniversary of D-Day

Posted by theunquietlibrary on June 6, 2008

Today, we at The Unquiet Library celebrate the 64th anniversary of “D-Day”, the pivotal invasion of Normandy that marked the beginning of the end of the Nazi regime in western Europe.

Here are a few of our favorite resources:

Of course, we also encourage you to check out our treasure trove of resources for reading more about this historic day through our research databases available at http://webtech.cherokee.k12.ga.us/creekview-hs/mediacenter/databases_2007_2008.htm .

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The Road to Freedom: Photographs of the Civil Rights Movement, 1956-1968

Posted by theunquietlibrary on June 6, 2008

 http://www2.high.org/main.taf?p=3,2,1,7,1

Introduction | High Museum of Art Atlanta

An amazing and poignant new exhibition opens this weekend at the Atlanta High Museum of Art: “History Remixed—The Road to Freedom:  Photographs of the Civil Rights Movement, 1956–1968″.   This exhibit will be on display until October 5 before it moves to the Smithsonian in November.  To read more about the photographs in this exhibit and the photographers who captured these historic moments, try these terrific articles from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

This special collection of primary sources tells the story of the Civil Rights Movement through photography.  What a wonderful opportunity to learn about this pivotal chapter in American history!

Here is how the High Museum of Art describes this special exhibition:

The exhibition features work by more than twenty photographers, with recognized names such as Bob Adelman, Morton Broffman, Bruce Davidson, Doris Derby, Larry Fink, James Karales, Builder Levy, and Steve Schapiro. Also included is the work of press photographers and amateurs who made stirring visual documents of marches, demonstrations and public gatherings out of a conviction for the social changes that the movement represented. Key photographs include Bob Adelman’s Kelly Ingram Park, Birmingham, 1963; Morton Broffman’s Dr. King and Coretta Scott King Leading Marchers, Montgomery, Alabama, 1965; Bill Eppridge’s Chaney Family as they depart for the Funeral of James Chaney, Philadelphia, Mississippi, 1964; and Builder Levy’s I Am a Man/Union Justice Now, Memphis, Tennessee, 1968.

Supplementing the photographs are archival documents, newspapers, magazines and posters from the period. These complementary materials demonstrate how, in the hands of community organizers and newspaper and magazine editors, photographs played a pivotal role in shaping public opinion. Documents such as Rosa Parks’ fingerprint paperwork and the blueprint of the bus on which she protested are shown alongside related photographs for the very first time. Also included will be several contemporary portraits, by photographer Eric Etheridge, of the young men and women who challenged segregation as Freedom Riders in 1961 and who are now senior citizens. All the photographs and documents in this exhibition will be accompanied by descriptive captions and an audio-visual component to provide deeper historical context.

Two significant groups of photographs in Road to Freedom have recently been acquired by the High. A portfolio of twenty-eight photographs by Danny Lyon, a leading photographer of the Civil Rights Movement, was given to the High Museum by Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., in 2006. Turner acquired them directly from Lyon in the 1990s, when he was hired as a photographer on the TNT movie Freedom Song about the 1960s campaign for voting rights in Mississippi. The portfolio includes photographs of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Representative John Lewis, Ralph Abernathy and other movement leaders.

The second is a group of thirty-three vintage photographs by Washington, D.C.-based freelance photographer Morton Broffman. In addition to working for several major publications, Broffman was the photographer for The Cathedral Age, the magazine of the Washington National Cathedral, for more than twenty-five years until his death in 1992. He was a campaign photographer for Senator Eugene McCarthy, who ran for president in 1968, and took numerous photographs of the Civil Rights gatherings in Washington, D.C, artist.  and in Selma and Montgomery, Alabama. His collection includes images of marchers and movement leaders, including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Coretta Scott King, Representative John Lewis, Ralph Abernathy, Joan Baez and James Baldwin. The photographs were given to the High by the Broffman family in 2006 in honor of the artist.

For more information on the Civil Rights Movement, we encourage you to check out our research database page and explore the wealth of information sources available to you even though school is out until August! 

 

 

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