Women’s History Month, Part IV

Margaret Morehead Hobson, 1890-1987

Margaret Morehead Hobson, 1890-1987

By the time Margaret Morehead Hobson (1890-1987) graduated from Bowling Green’s Potter College for Young Ladies in 1909, she had become known to her teachers and classmates for her artistic ability.

But over the next few years, Margaret had more practical things in mind as she searched for economic opportunity following the death of her father.  In 1918, when Bowling Green became the center of a five-county oil boom, she schooled herself in the region’s geology, examined surveys, and established relationships with investors, petroleum scientists, and potential lessees.  Eventually, she earned the rights to drill for oil in more than 14 Kentucky counties.  Even as the oil boom subsided in the late 1920s, Margaret’s particular interest in the resources of Edmonson County put her into partnership with an association formed to secure national park status for Mammoth Cave.  In exchange for drilling rights in the area, she obtained purchase options for the association covering some four thousand acres.

Besides her career in the oil industry, which lasted well past her eightieth birthday, Margaret was devoted to another traditionally masculine pursuit, fox-hunting.  Still, her artistic ability and sense of style served her well.  Maps she created for oil development projects became valuable resources for the Kentucky Geological Society.  Margaret had also made it a rule to appear at every lease negotiation meticulously dressed and coiffed because, as this successful businesswoman put it, “first impressions are important.”

To download finding aids for collections at WKU’s Special Collections Library relating to the life and career of Margaret Morehead Hobson, click here and here.

3 Comments

Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives

WKU Favorite Professor(s)

Carol Crowe-Carraco  Who do you remember most? Which one was your favorite? Why?

We’re taking nominations . . . check out the Favorite Professor website and add your thoughts.

Send you nominee to archives@wku.edu

  Carol Crowe-Carraco

2 Comments

Filed under Events, University Archives

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.

8 Comments

Filed under Events

Dictionary of Irish Biography Online

The library has acquired a subscription to the Dictionary of Irish Biography online!

The Dictionary of Irish Biography is a collaborative project between Cambridge University Press and the Royal Irish Academy, available in print and online, involving 700 contributors and spanning 9,000 lives. The Dictionary is the indispensable reference work for Ireland. It includes the lives of Irish men and women who made a significant contribution in Ireland and abroad, as well as those born overseas who had noteworthy careers in Ireland from James Ussher to James Joyce, St Patrick to Patrick Pearse, St Brigit to Maud Gonne MacBride, Shane O’Neil to Eamon de Valera, Edward Carson to Bobby Sands. The Dictionary will put their lives into every major library in the world and on the shelves of scholars, journalists, teachers, broadcasters, diplomats and general readers. It will be especially important in helping to sustain Irish studies courses in universities throughout the world. ~DIB

To access the subscription from WKU,  go to http://dib.cambridge.org/. From the homepage go to “Browse” or “Advanced Search” to find what you want. No need to log in!* This is a great resource for historians, English Literature majors, and anyone who deals with important Irish citizens and issues of the past and present.

*If you are off campus, you will first have to log into the Proxy server. Look up “Dictionary of Irish Biography” in TopCat through WKU’s library homepage. There is a link to The Dictionary of Irish Biography when you click the catalog entry.

4 Comments

Filed under Acquisitions, Latest News

Zephyrus

In Greek mythology, the Anemoi were the wind gods. Zephyrus was the west wind and bringer of light spring and early summer breezes.

1969 Cover

1969 Cover

At WKU, Zephyrus is the fine arts magazine published annually by the English department. It features art, poetry and short stories created and written by students. University Archives holds the full run of this magazine which first appeared in 1969. We are in the process of digitizing every issue for publication on TopScholar.  Originals are available for researchers in University Archives UA68/6/1.

5 Comments

Filed under Events, University Archives

Women’s History Month, Part III

Rachel Eddington letter, 1858

Rachel Eddington letter, 1858

“This is not the Country that was recommended to me,” mourned Rachel Eddington.  Rachel, her husband Sandy, and their seven children had been the property of Charlotte Belt, an Ohio County, Kentucky widow.  In 1857, however, the family found themselves in Liberia, the subjects of a decades-old movement to free American slaves and recolonize them in Africa.  After her emancipation, we might have known nothing more of Rachel, but she was determined to hold Mrs. Belt to a promise to correspond with her.  The result was a unique and heartbreaking story that is preserved in WKU’s Special Collections Library.

Rachel had much to tell her former mistress, as she and her family quickly fell on hard times in Liberia.  Like many newcomers, they became ill with fever and suffered from skin wounds that would not heal.  They had no horses or cattle, and insufficient land and implements for farming.  They were chronically short of work and food.  Over the next several years, Rachel sent letters to Charlotte Belt and Charlotte’s brother, Henry Stevens, pleading for everything from meat, lard and butter to thread, soap, candles and nails.  Her situation became even more dire when her husband, making a return visit to America, abandoned her, then three of her children died.  “I want to come back to my old home for this is a poor place,” she declared; still, she expressed her resolve to do all she could to provide for her family.  Here, unfortunately, after six years, is where the fate of Rachel Eddington is lost to history.

Click here for a finding aid, scans and typescripts of Rachel’s letters.

1 Comment

Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives

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.

31 Comments

Filed under Events

Far Away Places – John Moore, the Road to Santiago & Pilgrimage

John Moore talked about the Road to Santiago & Pilgrimage as part of the WKU Libraries' Far Away Places series at Barnes & Noble, Bowling Green, KYOur Far Away Places series featured John Moore on the evening of March 25 at Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Bowling Green, Kentucky. He gave a talk entitled “The Road to Santiago and Pilgrimage.”

John is a Road Scholar with the Alabama Humanities foundation, and in May of this year he will lead a group of students on “The Road to Santiago.” It is the famous walk across Spain sometimes called the French Road to Santiago de Compostela where some believe the remains of the first martyred apostle of Jesus, St. James are housed. People have been following this pilgrimage route since the medieval period. It’s now designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

More Photos | Podcast | Audio File

3 Comments

Filed under Events

Retired General Presented Libraries with Books

Dan Cherry, Retired Brigadier General for the United States Air Force, presented Dr. Mike Binder, Dean of WKU Libraries, with several copies of his book, My Enemy My Friend: a story of reconciliation from the Vietnam War as a donation to each of Western's six library locations. Dan Cherry, Retired Brigadier General for the United States Air Force, presented Dr. Mike Binder, Dean of WKU Libraries, with several copies of his book, My Enemy My Friend: a story of reconciliation from the Vietnam War as a donation to each of Western’s six library locations. Mr Cherry is President of Aviation Heritage Park, an educational aviation museum in Bowling Green, Kentucky. Dan served for twenty nine years as a fighter pilot in the United States Air Force. His military credentials include flying 295 combat missions during the Vietnam War and serving as Commander and Leader of the Air Force Thunderbirds. Dan currently resides in Bowling Green, Kentucky and is a member of the Kentucky Aviation Hall of Fame.

Book Description: On April 16, 1972 at 15,000 feet in the skies near Hanoi, North Vietnam, Major Dan Cherry first met Lieutenant Nguyen Hong My. In an intense aerial battle Dan shot down the MiG-21 piloted by Hong My. Thirty six years later Dan and Hong My met face to face in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) for the first time since that fateful day. This book describes that meeting, Hong My’s subsequent trip to the United States and the strong friendship that has evolved between these two men. The book’s universal message of reconciliation and friendship has appeal to all ages.

5 Comments

Filed under Latest News

US Bank Art Show to Be Featured on WBKO Tonight

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. FYI, Jennifer

2 Comments

Filed under Latest News