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May 31st, 2017
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New Collections on the Portal

Aransas Pass ProgressThe Aransas Pass Progress has served as the leading hometown news source for the “The Harbor City” and the surrounding area for 100 years. Founded by a young printing equipment salesman named W.H. Vernor, the newspaper was initially backed by a real estate firm working to… (more).

 

Lee College Oral HistoriesThis collection is actually three collections in one.
The Baytown World War II Collection, consists of 20 oral histories of World War II veterans which was done as part of a fiftieth anniversary of World War II.
The Baytown Veteran’s Oral History Collection is a series of approximately 100 interviews of Baytown veterans.
The Oral Histories of the Citizens of Baytown is a series of approximately 70 interviews of… (more).

 

Edward A. Clark Texana CollectionOne of the largest special collections in the nation among schools of Southwestern’s size, the Edward A. Clark Collection was a gift of more than 2,400 volumes donated in 1965 from the private collection of Ambassador Edward A. Clark. It is rich in printed materials for the period… (more).

 

Senator John G. Tower CollectionJohn Goodwin Tower, a Southwestern alumnus, represented Texas in the United States Senate from 1961 through 1984. Before his retirement, he named Southwestern University as the official repository for his papers. The approximately 800 linear feet of materials primarily reflect… (more).

 

News from the Portal
Call for Submissions: The Portal to Texas History

Rescuing Texas History Mini-Grants 2017


The Portal to Texas History at the University of North Texas is accepting applications for its Rescuing Texas History Mini-Grant program. Each approved applicant will be provided up to $1,000 of digitization services all of the materials will be scanned at UNT Libraries and hosted on The Portal to Texas History.  Both newspapers and archival collections are considered for digitization.

Find more information about the mini-grants here.

 


From the UNT Digital Library
[Dr. Helen Hewitt visits with four unknown people]


Photograph of Dr. Helen Hewitt, sitting on a seat in a room, talking with four unidentified people. This photograph is part of the collection entitled: University Photography Collection and was provided by UNT Libraries Special Collections to Digital Library, a digital repository hosted by the UNT Libraries.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[Beetle Bailey Fort Wolters Cartoon]

Cartoon depicting a sign held in the air by helicopters at the upper corners and dangling soldiers in the lower corners; it says “11th Anniversary Primary Helicopter School.” Sergent Snorkel is leaning out of the helicopter on the left to say “Come on Beetle! You’re letting your end sag!” A note at the bottom says “With best wishes to all the gang at Fort Wolters – Mort Walker.”. (more)

 

 

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May 17th, 2017
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New Collections on the Portal

Private Papers of Daniel Kempner ThorneFamily papers from the first and second generation of the influential Kempner Family of Galveston. Handwritten letters from February 1898 – March 31, 1899 from Daniel Webster Kempner to his mother Eliza Seinsheimer, and brother Isaac Herbert Kempner during an extended trip and stay in Europe. Other miscellaneous letters, cards to and from Daniel W. Kempner, Jeane Bertig Kempner, his wife and Mary Jean Kempner, their daughter. (more)

 

Travis County Clerk RecordsNaturalization records of the Travis County District Clerk’s Office include declaration minutes, naturalization records, and indexes, dating from 1884-1906. The indexes refer to all Travis County naturalization records, including those found in the records of the District Clerk, County Clerk and the Commissioners Court. (more)

 

Broadening Access to Books on Texas and OklahomaOut-of-print books related to Texas and Oklahoma history made available as ebooks thanks to a Humanities Open Book Program grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Celebrating 50 Years of Excellence. (more)

 

From the UNT Digital Library
3Dhotbed: 3D Printed History of the Book Teaching Tools


The collection includes downloadable datasets necessary to 3D print the individual pieces or a complete model set: a punch, a matrix, an adjustable hand mould, an individual piece of type with an attached jet, and a piece of type with a removable jet attachment. (more)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[Drawing for the Foxfire Brochure]

Photograph of a drawing by an eleventh grade student for Foxfire. It is an illustration of a train and the bottom right corner says Shannon Jackson. (more)

 

 

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Posted by & filed under General.

May 3rd, 2017
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Featured on the Portal

Orange Area Newspaper CollectionThe Orange newspaper was published in Southeast Texas under a variety of names including The Orange Tribune, Orange Weekly Tribune, Southeast Texas Journal, Tribune Southeast Texas Journal, Daily Tribune and the Orange Daily Tribune, to name a few. The archive copies retained by the microfilm company have disappeared… (more).

 

KXAS-NBC 5 News CollectionNew scripts and assorted items are being added to this collection every day! KXAS was the first television station in Texas and the Southwest when it signed on as WBAP-TV on September 27, 1948. It is an NBC-owned station in Fort Worth which serves the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Check it out here.

 

From the UNT Digital Library
End of Term Presidential Harvest 2012


This is the collection for the End of Term Presidential Harvest 2012, an effort by the Library of Congress, the California Digital Library, the University of North Texas Libraries, the Internet Archive, and the U.S. Government here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[Postcard of Adler’s Ranch, Boerne, Texas]

Postcard of Adler’s Ranch in Boerne, Texas. Th postcard features a photograph of an l-shaped, two-story building with light-colored wood siding and a wrap-around front porch. Much of the ranch house is obscured by tall trees, and there is a wooden fence surrounding the house and lawn. There are several… here.

 

 

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April 19, 2017
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New to the Portal

Rescuing Texas History 2016The 2016 edition of Rescuing Texas History is a compilation of newspapers, photographs, and other materials that give a glimpse into the diverse people and fascinating places that have contributed to the growth of Texas over the past two centuries. Materials in this collection come from a wide variety of partners… (more).

 

From the Web
 

1. How important are Unique Collections in your teaching, learning or research?

The Unique Collections play a vital role in my research by opening up a new dimension of nineteenth-century culture. I’m currently completing a book that is tentatively entitled Worlds Beyond: Miniatures in the Victorian… (more).

 

From the UNT Digital Library
The Rattler (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 15, 1924


One of the morerecent collection in the Portal is The Rattler, the semi-monthly student newspaper from St. Mary’s College in San Antonio, Texas that includes campus news along with advertising. This edition, from 1924, features stories about the paper, the new school year, and the tennis courts. Read more here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[50th Annual Meeting of the Oral History Association Photograph 26]

This is a digital photograph taken at the 50th Annual Meeting of the Oral History Association in Long Beach, California, held in conjunction with the 35th Annual Meeting of the Southwest Oral History Association. The theme of the conference was “OHA@50: Traditions, Transitions and Technologies From The Field.” Find more here.

 

 

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The Junction Eagle Masthead

Posted by & filed under General, Grants, Texas Digital Newspaper Program, TexTreasures.

This TDNP post was written by our own Project Coordinator, Sarah Lynn Fisher. Having just celebrated her ninth year working in the UNT Digital Libraries Division, she has served in the Digital Newspaper Unit for seven of her nine years as a coordinator for multiple newspaper grant projects. Currently, Sarah Lynn is working on a grant for the National Endowment for the Humanities-sponsored, National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP), to digitize 100,000 pages of Texas newspapers in Chronicling America. She has prepared this guest blog post in preparation for essays she will create for the NDNP grant award.

 

In September of 2016, the UNT Libraries’ Digital Newspaper Unit received a TexTreasures grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) and the Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC) to digitize historic newspapers from Texas counties located along and near the border with Mexico. The TexTreasures competitive grant program aims to help member libraries increase the accessibility of their collections. The Texas Borderlands Newspapers Digitization Project grant supports The Portal to Texas History’s goal of including the histories of communities from the entire state of Texas. Newspapers from many of the counties and communities in this region were previously not represented in the Texas Digital Newspaper Program (TDNP).

Since the start of this grant award, TDNP staff have been busily locating and digitizing newspapers for the Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection on the Portal. New newspaper titles now available in the Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection represent Kimble, Pecos, Kleberg, and Reeves Counties in south-central and southwest Texas from the years 1908 to 1924. News reporting in these issues include discussions of the unique agricultural, geographical, and social challenges encountered by residents in these Texas regions.

When completed, digitization of The Fort Stockton Pioneer, published in the Pecos County seat of Fort Stockton, will include nearly two decades of issues from this former army camp along the Pecos River. From 1858 to 1886, U.S. Army fort_stockton_mastheadInfantries were stationed at Camp Stockton, later Fort Stockton, to protect travelers heading west to Mexico and California who stopped in this area to access natural springs, as Tour Texas explains. As Fort Stockton transitioned from army post to ranching community, the theme of protection continued to be represented in issues of the newspapers. In this article from the May 19, 1916, issue, Dr. Homer Powers describes his capture and escape from “bandits” who raided a store and mines nearby Glenn Springs and Boquillas, taking several captives along the way, Dr. Powers among them. As the bandits headed with their “loot” across the Rio Grande into Mexico, Dr. Powers and his fellow captives were able to disarm their captors and return to Texas where they received “a touchingly hearty welcome from the Sheriff’s posse, river guards and soldiers.” The Fort Stockton Pioneer has been published continuously since 1908. The Portal will include issues published from 1908 to 1922.

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Another Borderlands newspaper title currently available on the Portal is The Junction Eagle, published in Junction, the county seat of Kimble County. The Junction Eagle is not the town’s first newspaper (that honor goes to the West Texas), but it has been published continuously since 1882, according to the Junction Eagle website. Issues currently on the Portal begin in 1919. The Junction city history tells us that its city name refers to the town’s geographic location at the intersection of the North and South Llano Rivers. Junction was a small community with only a few hundred residents until the “Four Mile Dam” was constructed on the South Llano River. The dam’s infrastructure enabled the growth of the town, providing water for the town’s residents, irrigation for farming, and as well as generating power for mills and mining . The dam provided entertainment for residents as well. The August 13, 1920 “Telegraph Tellings” column notes,
Mrs. Conde Hardeman entertained the Henderson house party last Tuesday afternoon at the dam with supper and bathing and quite an enjoyable time was spent by all.

These brief glimpses into the lives of rural community residents may sometimes only be found in the town’s newspapers, a fact that underscores the importance of TDNP’s newspaper preservation efforts. TDNP will continue to add newspapers to this collection throughout 2017. Upcoming titles include The Daily Ranchero from Brownsville in Cameron County, the southernmost county in Texas.

 

 

 

 

 

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