-
The White House Library of the early 1960s on LibraryThing
- This library was selected for the White House in the early 1960s by Yale librarian emeritus James T. Babb, at the request of First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy. In his foreword to the published catalog of the library (used to create this LT collection), Babb wrote that the library was “intended to contain books which best represent the history and culture of the United States, works most essential for an understanding of our national experience.” LibraryThing members have recreated the catalogue of the library from a limited-edition “Short-Title List” printed by the White House Historical Society.
-
Connecticut History Online
- Connecticut History Online (CHO) is a digital collection of over 15,000 digital primary sources, together with associated interpretive and educational material.
-
Ulysses S. Grant Digital Collection
- This digital collection consists of the 31 volumes of the Papers of Ulysses S. Grant (as published by Southern Illinois University Press between 1967 and 2009), along with political cartoons and sheet music donated to the Ulysses S. Grant Association. Other material from the Ulysses S. Grant Collection at the Mississippi State University Libraries will be added in the future.
-
May 4 Collection: Oral History Project
- The May 4 Oral History Project collects, records and provides access to oral history accounts pertaining to the shootings on the Kent State University campus in 1970 and their aftermath. Founded in 1990 by Sandra Perlman Halem, the Project continues to seek first-person narratives and personal reactions to the events of May 4, 1970. It seeks accounts from all viewpoints: members of the Kent community; faculty, alumni, staff and administrators who were on campus that day; National Guardsmen, police, hospital personnel; or other persons whose lives were affected by these historical events. The Oral History Project is conducted by Kent State University Libraries’ Department of Special Collections and Archives and follows the standards of the Oral History Association.
-
Suffragist Oral History Project
- In the early 1970s the Suffragists Oral History Project, under the auspices of the Bancroft Library’s Regional Oral History Office, collected interviews with twelve leaders and participants in the woman’s suffrage movement. Tape-recorded and transcribed oral histories preserved the memories of these remarkable women, documenting formative experiences, activities to win the right to vote for women, and careers as leaders of the movements for welfare and labor reform, world peace, and the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment. The words of these activist women, born from the 1860s to the 1890s, are made accessible for future scholarly research and public information via the Internet. Seven major figures in twentieth-century suffragist history are represented here with full-length oral histories: Alice Paul, Sara Bard Field, Burnita Shelton Matthews, Helen Valeska Bary, Jeannette Rankin, Mabel Vernon, and Rebecca Hourwich Reyher.
-
Kentuckiana Digital Library
- The Kentuckiana Digital Library is a gateway to rare and unique digitized collections housed in Kentucky archives. Search over 550,000 digital images including historic newspapers, photographs, rare Kentuckiana imprints, Sanborn maps, oral histories, and historic issues of the Daily Racing Form.
-
Studs Terkel: Conversations with America
- Conversations with America is a collection of the interviews Studs Terkel conducted for his books and his radio programme. The site is organised into several collections including: Division Street: America (twentieth century urban life in and around Chicago), Hard Times (Terkel interviewed hundreds of people across the United States for his book on the Great Depression of the 1930s. In 1973, he selected several interviews that were included in his book to be broadcast in eleven parts on the Studs Terkel Program on WFMT radio. This gallery includes the interviews in those programs.), The Good War (memories of World War II from a perspective of 40 years of after the events.), and Race (interviews with a cross-section of Americans about their views on race).
-
C-SPAN Video Library (Beta)
- The archives of C-SPAN fully available for free online as streaming video – over 160,000 hours of video footage dating back to 1987. There are plans to upload another 10,000 hours of footage from before 1987 soon.Â
http://delicious.com/vhllib