Rosemary Meszaros, Associate Professor and Coordinator of Government Documents & Law from the Department of Library Public Services, received the 2010 Award for Research and Creativity. Christy Spurlock, Assistant Professor and Education Curator from the Department of Library Special Collection, received the Award for Public Services. They were nominated and selected by their peers. They received their awards at a reception given by the University on the evening of April 26, 2011.
Category Archives: Events
WKU Libraries Faculty Won University Awards
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Undergraduate Research Award Winners Honored in Libraries
On April 26, 2011, two students from University Experience classes were honored at Cravens Library with the first Undergraduate Research Award. WKU student Andrew Alvey accepted his award for Best Career Essay and faculty representative Paula Trafton accepted the Best Annotated Bibliography award on behalf of WKU student Megan Stohner. These awards were the result of the collaborative effort between WKU Libraries and University Experience.
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Genealogy Question of the Week
My great-grandfather was Baptist Minister; do you have any church records or minutes in your collections?
Church records are among the best records for genealogists to locate and study. They can provide information that is not recorded in any other source such as births, baptisms, marriages, deaths, and even the burial location of your ancestor. Additionally, you can learn about your ancestor’s participation in the church’s life or separation/transfer from the church rolls. Discipline in churches has changed dramatically over the years but in many cases, members were removed from the church for non-attendance, profanity, drinking or dancing. They can reveal the extent to which your ancestors participated in religious affairs. They are also helpful for tracing family relationships or migration patterns.
For those ancestors who were ministers, priest or rabbis, biographical information may be found in a printed source, obituary listing or in church or synagogue archives.
Finding theses important records can be difficult. Many churches do keep good records but they may have been sent to a central archive, placed in private hands or given to a historical society or special collections library. Fortunately, many churches have microfilmed these records, or at least given copies to local organizations.
The Kentucky Library and Museum’s manuscript collection of church records can be found at
http://www.wku.edu/Library/kylm/collections/inhouse/mss/ChurchRecords/index.html
Other records have been published in book form and may be found by using TOPCAT.
There are excellent chapters on the information provided by church records and how to locate them in The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy, edited by Arlene Eakle and Johni Cerny (Ancestry Publishing, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1984) and in Val Greenwood’s revised edition of the Researcher’s Guide to American Records (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, Md., 1990.
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2011 Summer Camps
Kentucky Museum Summer Camps are held each week in June from 8:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
After camp care is available from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. Space is limited so please register early!
For more information call 745-2594 or visit: Summer Camps
Lynne Marrs Hammer Ferguson
Artist In Residence at Kentucky Library & Museum
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25th Year of Best Reference Selection by Brian Coutts
Head of Library Public Services, Dr. Brian Coutts, conducted his annual Best Reference Workshop on Friday, April 22 in Helm-Cravens Library. Coutts’ is the co-author of the annual “Best Reference” article in Library Journal — 2011 marks his 25th year. This year’s selections included some unique titles like The Story of Men’s Underwear, Salamanders of the Southeast, and Weeds of the Midwestern United States and Central Canada. Other important publications include the new The Oxford Companion to the Book, the first Encyclopedia of Muslim-American History, the updated classic The Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages, the Encyclopedia of the Ghettos During the Holocause, and many more. For the complete review, please see Library Journal‘s Spring 2011 issue, available online at LibraryJournal.com or in print at Helm Library (Periodicals, 2nd Floor). –Amy Slowik
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Intern Works With Architect’s Drawings
WKU Folk Studies graduate student Katherine Chappell is completing an internship in the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives of the Kentucky Library & Museum. Last semester while conducting research to provide information for a National Register of Historic Places nomination of James Ingram-designed home, she discovered how prolific Ingram’s career as a Bowling Green architect truly had been. He designed well over a thousand homes, schools, and businesses in and around the city from the 1930’s through the mid-1950s. Thanks to a donation made by his widow, Ruby Stephens Ingram, the Kentucky Library & Museum is home to nearly 1200 sets of his architectural drawings.
Since January, Chappell has been working to catalog some of these drawings and adding them to a publicly accessible online database. She has also transcribed a 1982 interview with Ingram’s widow, in which Ruby Stephens Ingram talks about her husband’s career, many of the people he worked with, and how he felt about the buildings he designed. Chappell has sought out many of the Ingram-designed homes still standing in Bowling Green to match new photographs with the archival drawings and to reveal how influential, long lasting, and popular his designs were in the area. One of her most exciting moments was contacting Ingram’s grandson to let him know that his grandfather’s work is still known and appreciated. Thanks to her work in this internship, she was recently awarded one of three Russell M. and Mary Z Yeager Graduate Scholarships.
Chappell is currently designing the content for a new website to honor Ingram and to showcase his prolific local career. Included will be excerpts from Ruby Stephens Ingram’s interview, some representative samples of his drawings and photographs of the completed buildings, research on Ingram by former WKU students, and more. Chappell would be interested in hearing from you if you live in an Ingram-designed home or have your own Ingram memories to share. To see records created for the Ingram drawings search under his name in KenCat.
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Technology vs. Horse wows crowd at Java City
The local alt-rock band “Technology vs. Horse” brought its high energy, wonderfully creative style of music to a very appreciative crowd at Java City today. Learn more about them here.
The Noon Concert series continues next week with Sean Giddings on April 27th. Find Sean on Facebook here.
Thanks to Independence Bank for their continued sponsorship.
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SOKY Book Fest: A 13th Successful Event
The 2011 SOKY Book Fest, our 13th in a row, took place on Saturday, April 16, preceded by the Writers Conference and Children’s Day at the Carroll Knicely Conference Center on WKU’s South Campus. Headliners like Nicholas Sparks drew a big crowd to the event. They gave presentations and signed their books for hundreds of people.
The Southern Kentucky Book Fest is one of the state’s largest literary events and is presented by WKU Libraries, Warren County Public Library, and Barnes & Noble Booksellers. Held annually during National Library Week, the Book Fest appeals to thousands of readers of all ages who welcome the occasion to meet their favorite authors and purchase signed copies of their books.
Photo Albums: Headliners | Authors | Panels | Authors’s Reception | Writers Conference | Children’s Day
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Local favorite Banjo Bill entertains the crowd at Java City
The Crowd at Java City was thrilled by local music legend
and humorist “Banjo Bill” aka William Green
as he performed all of his favorites like “Bowling Green,”
“This All I Get For Looking Like Burt Reynolds?”
and “I want your blood” a vampire love song.
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Baptist Begat Both Bethels
Samuel Baker, a Baptist minister, is credited with initiating the scheme to begin two Bethel Colleges in southcentral Kentucky, one in Russellville for males and one forty miles west in Hopkinsville for females. Born in Sussex County, England in 1812, Baker emigrated to the United States in 1834 to study theology. He started his ministerial duties at Alton, Illinois in 1837, followed by pastorates in Missouri and Shelbyville, Kentucky.
In 1841, Baptists from Russellville aggressively recruited Baker to take charge of their fledgling church. The group “cordially” invited Baker “to take up his residence” and become their pastor for an annual salary of $600. The pastor search committee admitted that “the church has been long without pastoral supervision,” but assured the candidate of the church’s unity. The committee also informed Baker that they were willing to wait up to six months for him to settle his personal affairs in Shelbyville before assuming duties.
Baker remained at Russellville for five years before taking a similar position at Hopkinsville Baptist Church, where he served for four years. While at Hopkinsville, Baker chaired Bethel Association of Baptists’s education committee. Under his leadership, the Association appproved the establishment of Bethel College in Russellville; it began operation in 1854. That same year Baker delivered an address at the Association’s annual meeting outlining the needs for a similar institution for young ladies. The Russellville school remained in operation until 1933; its female counterpart stayed open until 1964. Baker later served churches in Nashville, Williamsburg, NY, Chicago, Evansville and Brooklyn, New York. In 1873 he returned to the church in Russellville and pastored there until 1885.
The Kentucky Library and Museum owns a small collection of letters and documents that belonged to Baker. This material includes facsimiles of letters written by important Baptist leaders of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The collection also contains some of Baker’s personal correspondence related to his pastorates. The finding aid for this collection can be found here. For more information about Kentucky Baptists in the Kentucky Library & Museum collections search KenCat and TopSCHOLAR.
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