Author Archives: Sandy McAllister

Spring Food Drive at WKU Libraries

Win-win opportunity for WKU students and Bowling Green/Warren County community!

Beginning Monday, March 22, WKU Libraries will accept food donations for a local food pantry in exchange for overdue library fines. For every food item brought to Cravens 4th floor, we will forgive $1 of the student’s fines up to $10. Recommended foods to bring are canned fruits or vegetables, hearty soups like chili or beef stew, peanut butter, bagged beans, crackers, pastas. Food may be taken to any WKU library location. However, to have fees forgiven, food must be brought to the 4th floor of Cravens Library.

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US Bank Art Show higlighted on WBKO’s “A View from the Hill”

Tonight (March 18) on WBKO at both 5 pm and 10 pm, Amy DeCesare will be featuring our US Bank art show in her “View from the Hill” segment. Be sure to watch our program being highlighted.

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Monarchs and Minions

Library Public Services, together with the KY Library and Museum and the History Department present the first in an ongoing series. On March 17, at 10:20, in Helm 100, learn more about George the III – The Man, The Mischief, The Mistake, The Monument.

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The Budget Band at Java City

The lunch-time crowd at Java City was thoroughly entertained by the progressive folk sounds of local group, The Budget Band.

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Mark Irons at Java City

Mark Irons
WKU alumni Mark Irons entertained the crowd at Java City today with is original songs and his sophisticated musical styling.

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Quilting Workshop at the Kentucky Museum

Learn to piece together nine-patch quilt designs with quilter Nancy Baird. Workshop will take place on March 27 from 9-3. Registration is $15 and includes material. Email nancy.baird@wku.edu for more info.

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Author’s New Book Utilizes Kentucky Library & Museum Material

"Murder & Madness" by Matthew Schoenbachler

"Murder & Madness" by Matthew Schoenbachler

Matthew B. Schoenbachler, a history professor at Northern Alabama University, used materials from the Kentucky Library and the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives in writing his new book, Murder & Madness:  The Myth of the Kentucky Tragedy (University Press of Kentucky, 2009).  “The Kentucky Tragedy” refers to Jereboam O. Beauchamp’s murder of Colonel Solomon P. Sharp in Frankfort on November 7, 1825.  Schoenbachler deftly approaches the murder by examining the three parties involved:  Sharp, Beauchamp and the ever provocative Anna Cooke, whom he calls the “diminutive fury.”  It is a story of unbridled passion, romance and revenge.  The tale may resemble the plot of a modern romance novel, but it is a true tragedy whose chief characters hailed from southcentral Kentucky.  Within just a few short months, the three participants die:  one from murder, one from suicide, and one at the end of justice’s rope.

While conducting research at the Kentucky Library & Museum, Schoenbachler utilized Warren County and Logan County court records, including deeds, wills, tax lists, and circuit court cases.  He also used the personal papers of Joseph Underwood, Henry J. Fox, Joseph Younglove, and George D. Blakey.  The monograph’s bibliography demonstrates the author’s artful use of numerous primary source materials gleaned from the Commonwealth’s archival repositories.

Anyone remotely interested in “The Kentucky Tragedy” will find this book an interdisciplinary jewel, for the author weaves the historic warp with the literary line to create a beautifully crafted work.  Local readers will especially appreciate the detailed regional information Schoenbachler provides about the incident’s three main characters and its lesser known participants.   Literary history enthusiasts will laud the author’s effort to authenticate the use of the “Tragedy” in mid-19th century American literature, as well as the incident’s most famous and strict interpretation found in Robert Penn Warren’s World Enough in Time (1950).  Surely “The Kentucky Tragedy” is representative of the Commonwealth’s mid-19th century history, one brimming with politics, passion and hyperbole.

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