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Introducing College Students to the Joys of Archival Research

Faculty learning about library policies. Photo taken by SAFA Intern Alison Bunis

This past week, Brooklyn Historical Society hosted a week-long institute for eighteen college professors participating in the Students and Faculty in the Archives project (SAFA).

As regular readers may remember, this spring BHS commenced the SAFA project, thanks to funding from the U.S. Department of Education’s Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education (FIPSE). For the next five semesters, SAFA partner faculty from St. Francis College, Long Island University Brooklyn Campus, and New York City College of Technology will bring their first year students to BHS’s Othmer Library to immerse them in our rich historical collections. This upcoming year alone, over 800 students will hone their research and critical thinking skills by working with newspapers, broadsides, slave indentures, maps, atlases, pamphlets, correspondence, diaries, and many other archival materials housed here at BHS.

At the end of the three-year project, BHS will have created a replicable pedagogical model for collaboration between archives and institutions of higher learning. We’ll also have exposed thousands of first-year college students to the joys of archival research.

Before these students descend upon BHS, the SAFA staff (Outreach and Public Services Archivist Robin M. Katz and me, BHS Public Historian Julie Golia) wanted to give partner faculty some time to design their classes and to get to know our collections.  During the Summer Institute, we gave faculty ample research time in Othmer Library.  There they pored over hundreds of different documents.  We were blown away by their ideas, and by the creative ways they are using our collections.

Archivist Matthew Gorham teaches SAFA faculty about searching our catalogs. Photo taken by Robin Katz.

St. Francis College professor Athena Devlin, for example, is using the decade of the 1860s as a lens to introduce her American Studies students to a myriad of materials: diaries, personal correspondence, political broadsides, and much more. Professor Devlin found our recently published Civil War Subject Guide a great help.  In particular, the correspondences between Brooklyn soldiers and their families in collections like the Cranston Papers will allow students a personal glimpse into life in camp and on the home front.

City Tech professor Peter Catapano, teaching American History since 1877, has a long list of subjects that he needs to address in his survey course. He decided to focus on the history of theater in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Brooklyn. During their visit, Professor Catapano and his students will examine issues of the turn-of-the-century theater periodical The Opera Glass and contextualize the locations of theaters with our rich map collection.

Leah Dilworth, professor of English at LIU Brooklyn, is teaching Rubbish!, a course that will chronicle the cultural and material history of garbage. One of the collections that Professor Dilworth and her students will use this fall is the Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality Collection. When we think of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, our minds go to segregation and sit-ins before they go to garbage. But the inequitable collection of waste in neighborhoods with large non-white populations was a key issue championed by Brooklyn CORE.

These are just three of the inventive courses that our faculty began designing during our SAFA Summer Institute. As the students visit our archive in the fall, we’ll report back about their experiences. In the meantime, we hope you’ll be inspired by the SAFA experience and visit Othmer Library to do some archival research of your own.

Students and Faculty in the Archives

Connecting to Universities

The Brooklyn Historical Society has officially kicked off our Students and Faculty in the Archives (SAFA) project.  The BHS has long been committed to introducing students of all ages and backgrounds to our remarkable facilities and collections.

SAFA is a three-year, US Department of Education Fund for the Improvement of Post Secondary Education (FIPSE) grant that will create a replicable pedagogical model for collaboration between museums like BHS and institutions of higher learning.

In the first year, we will be working with local partners from New York City College of Technology; Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus; and St. Francis College.  First-year undergraduate researchers will have the chance to conduct archival research in the Othmer Library and to create physical and digital exhibits with BHS. 

Over 20 enthusiastic faculty collaborators representing a wide range of disciplines came to the February 25th SAFA planning meeting with ideas and energy to spare.  Deborah Mutnick, Professor of English and Director of the Writing Program at LIU Brooklyn, reported, “We all walked away feeling very energized and excited about the project.“

BHS Welcomes SAFA Staff

To help support this exciting new venture, BHS has hired two new staff members:

Robin M. Katz, Outreach and Public Services Archivist, was previously the Outreach Librarian for the University of Vermont Libraries’ Center for Digital Initiatives.  At UVM, Robin helped a wide range of constituents collaboratively produce unique digital research collections.  She has also worked to connect people to primary sources at Kent State University’s Special Collection and Archives Department, Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Cleveland Museum of Art’s Ingalls Library, and the Cleveland Institute of Art’s Gund Library.  She expects that SAFA will demonstrate the many benefits of incorporating primary source research in undergraduate education, and she hopes the project will inspire similar collaborations nationwide.

Julie Golia, Public Historian at BHS, is a scholar of American history, with interests in the history of women and gender, race, popular culture, and media.  Julie received her Ph.D. from Columbia University in 2010, where she served as a teaching fellow and wrote a dissertation examining the cultural and economic history of advice columns in early twentieth-century newspapers.  As a public historian, Julie has helped produce documentaries including the 2003 film “Tupperware!”   She has researched and curated exhibits at the New York Historical Society and the Columbia Rare Book and Manuscript Library.  And she gives vibrant and informative walking tours in neighborhoods across Brooklyn and Manhattan.  She hopes that SAFA will continue to break down boundaries between academic and public history, and reveal the intellectual joys of using the BHS collections to a new generation of students.

Looking Forward

Robin, Julie, and the SAFA faculty will spend the next several months immersed in the BHS collections. A good deal of research, planning, and collaborating will occur during the upcoming SAFA Summer Institute at BHS. The result will be archives-based approaches for courses in History, Photography, English, Architecture, and many other disciplines. 

We are looking forward to sharing our discoveries and ideas with the BHS blog.  Check back soon for more updates on our work!