On Sunday, January 17th, over 100 art students, parents, and professional artists attended the “2010 Side By Side VSA arts” exhibit opening at the Kentucky Library & Museum. The art exhibit, which is in the Garden Gallery, includes paintings, drawings, sculpture, and ceramics. VSA arts of Kentucky is a statewide, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting arts, education and creative expression for all, with an emphasis on persons with disabilities.The work will be on exhibit thorough March 31st.
Side by Side: VSA Arts Exhibit Kicks Off
Filed under Events, Past Events
Data on Past Quilt Exhibit Preserved in Folklife Archives

Scraps to Quilts exhibit, 1986
In 1986, students in WKU’s Folk Studies program created “Scraps to Quilts: Derby Fabrics, Women’s Quilts, and Family Stories,” an exhibit of local quilts that had been made using fabric scraps from the Union Underwear Company’s “Derby” plant in Bowling Green. The students began by inviting owners to bring in quilts to be photographed and have their histories documented. The Kentucky Museum then displayed a selection of the quilts from April to October 1986.
Although the physical exhibit is long gone, the information collected by the students, including photo proof sheets and negatives, quilt data sheets, audiotaped interviews, exhibit labels and associated research, remains available in WKU’s Folklife Archives. A finding aid for the “Scraps to Quilts” exhibit materials can be downloaded here.
Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives
Kentucky Museum open over Dr. Martin Luther King Holiday
The Kentucky Museum exhibit galleries and Museum Store are open during the upcoming holiday weekend (January 16-18). Hours are 9 to 4 on Saturday and Monday and 1 to 4 on Sunday. The Harrison-Baird Reading Room will close during this period however. Regular hours for the Kentucky Library & Museum resume on Tuesday, January 19.
Filed under New Stuff
GI Joes Added to Kentucky Library & Museum Toy Collection
Two GI Joe action figures, a WWII Pacific Marine™ and GI Joe Pearl Harbor Hickam Field Defender™ action figures recently “enlisted” in the KYLM Toy Collection. One of the iconic toys of the 20th century, GI Joe made his first appearance at the 1964 International Toy Fair in New York where he was presented as an action figure rather than a doll. Made with 21 moving parts, action figures representing all four branches of the service were introduced during the first year.
The two figures in the KYLM collection resulted from the generosity of a WKU alumnus who participated in a talk on the Kentucky Library & Museum Toy Collection during the 2009 Alumni College.
Learn more about the KYLM Toy Collection which includes more than 1,200 toys, dolls, and games.
Fire Alarm Indicator on Exhibit at Bowling Green Fire Department
A unique combination fire alarm/indicator that most likely was used prior to 1907 in the fire house on State Street is now on display at the Bowling Green Fire Department Headquarters Building. Manufactured by Gaynor Electric Company of Louisville, KY, this alarm indicator was wired to call boxes throughout the city. Whenever someone used a box to call in a fire, this central alarm or indicator would ring in the Fire House and register the number of the box giving the firemen a location to respond to.
In addition to this item, The Kentucky Library & Museum collection houses other memorabilia from the Bowling Green Fire Department including the Maltese Cross badge or emblem from the cap of Fire Chief Walter J. Harvey, a section of fire hose, and photographs of the Bowling Green Fire House, firemen, and fire equipment.
Magruder-Clysdale Collection at Special Collections Library

Fred & Florence Clysdale, with a friend at left, 1951
In 1960, the executive director of the Louisville Area Council of Churches, N. Burnett Magruder (1914-2005), created a stir when he accused Protestant clergy of succumbing to the “Marxist virus” and acknowledged his membership in the John Birch Society. In the decade leading up to this declaration, as he worked to stem the tide of liberalism in the Council, Magruder had two other principal objectives: completing his doctorate at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and promoting the work of his equally conservative, Canadian-born wife, Edith Clysdale Magruder. A collection of correspondence now available at WKU’s Special Collections Library casts light on the work and family lives of this ambitious couple.
Edith Magruder was a graduate of Yale and Columbia and the author of several books including A Historical Study of the Educational Agencies of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1845-1945. During much of the period covered by this collection, she stayed at her parents’ cottage in Grand Bend, Ontario, working to establish a reputation in the field of Christian-based psychotherapy and counselling and, with the help of her husband in Louisville, trying to gain a foothold for her ideas in the United States. Adopting the professional name of “Judith Brigham,” she also hosted radio broadcasts in Ontario and later on station WAKY in Louisville.
As the collection shows, Edith’s parents, Fred and Florence Clysdale, wrote faithfully to their rather doctrinaire and iconoclastic daughter. Their letters provide a portrait of a small-town Ontario clergyman and his wife adjusting to the challenges of semi-retirement including a change of residence, the care of an aging relative, and the purchase of their first television set.
A finding aid for the Magruder-Clysdale Collection can be downloaded here.
Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives
VSA arts of Kentucky Side by Side Exhibit Opens on January 17
The Kentucky Library & Museum and VSA arts of Kentucky have partnered to produce an exhibition of artwork created during VSA arts workshops held at the KYLM. The exhibit features artwork of students with disabilities, area artists, and the artwork they have created collaboratively. The exhibit kicks off with a reception on Sunday, January 17th, at 2:00 p.m. (CDT) and is free to the public.
VSA arts of Kentucky is a statewide, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting arts, education and creative expression for all, with an emphasis on persons with disabilities.
Jack Montgomery at Warren County Public Library
Jack Montgomery, his wife Lesley, and Elizabeth Hayes performed at the Warren County Public Library Thursday, December 10 to a crowd of over 80 adults and children. Jack also read “Twas the Night before Christmas” to the kids.
Filed under Events
Registrar’s Office Records
The Registrar’s Office was created in 1909 and served the dual purpose of admissions/registrar and bookkeeping for the school early on. The University Archives holds a complete run of undergraduate catalogs and commencement programs from the office. Commencement programs list the names of all graduates. The first graduate catalog in the collection is from 1941, the next is 1962. Please contact us if you have graduate catalogs published between 1942 and 1961.
Other less, well-known records include a short run of baccalaureate programs 1911-1918 and 1932-1965 and commencement schedules. In the early days, commencement activities included baccalaureate service, graduating exercises, alumni symposium, concerts, receptions, chapel services for alumni and an excursion to Mammoth Cave.
Student registers include student name, date enrolled, address, county and in some cases religious affiliation and parents’ names. They can also contain the number of course hours taken. The archives does not currently house student grades. These records are extant for the years 1907-1949; and 1956-1960. There is also a statistical file which gives information regarding enrollment numbers.
The records of the Registrar’s Office have been processed and finding aids posted in TopScholar. These records are available for researchers to use in the Harrison-Baird Reading Room.
Filed under University Archives