audio visual material

Emory History in Picture and Sound: A New Resource in the University Archives

Breaking Ground at the Nursing School

Emory President Sanford S. Atwood, right, helps commemorate the
groundbreaking for the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing building,
the proceedings of which are recorded in Series 210


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In the spring of 2012, the Emory University Archives began an audiovisual materials survey and re-processing project. After months of wrangling cassette tapes, VHS tapes, 16mm film, and more, the vast majority of archival audiovisual resources in the University Archives have been added to our finding aids in MARBL's EmoryFindingAids database. One new collection consisting exclusively of these audiovisual resources is a significant resource for documenting University history through sound and video: the Teaching Aids Department audiovisual materials (Series 210). 


The Teaching Aids Department was responsible for purchasing and circulating film and audio resources for teaching and instruction, loaning recording and projector equipment, and creating reproductions and photographic slides. What really makes this collection important to Emory is that it contains recordings of campus events from the early 1940s through 1979. This group of recordings documents developments at Emory, changes in academia and higher education as a whole, and specific subjects like desegregation and civil rights, the Cold War, public health, and theology.

Below are just a sample of some of the kinds of subjects and events documented in this collection:

  • Eleanor Roosevelt
    Former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
    speaks at the World Affairs Conference
    held at Emory University in 1960

    Recordings of public programs or lectures with figures such as Margaret Mead, President (then-Governor) Jimmy Carter, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Strom Thurmond, as well as many more intellectuals, scientists, journalists, politicians, doctors, theologians, and Emory presidents, deans, professors, and administrators.

  • Two series of recordings entitled "Health Education for Emory College students" from 1969 and 1973, offering a glimpse into how public health issues were addressed at that time.
  • "Crisis in the Schools:" a series of recordings of public programs hosted by Emory's Community Educational Services from 1957-1959 about desegregation in schools featuring politicians, journalists, and others.
  • Eleven recordings of an Emory News Bureau radio program called "Let's Talk" consisting of 3 to 5 minute talks by Emory professors on a wide range of academic subjects.
  • A series of recordings from a conference on theology education celebrating Emory University's fiftieth anniversary
  • Local memorial ceremonies for President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Emory Charter Day (December 12) ceremonies from 1951 to 1962
  • Emory Birthday Party celebrations (analogous to Founders Day) from various years from 1963 to 1973
  • Baccalaureate sermons and graduation exercises for many years between 1942 and 1977
  • Musical performances from Emory groups like the Glee Club, Women's Chorale, Emory Chamber Singers, and Atlanta Chamber Orchestra

All of these materials can be requested for listening or viewing in the MARBL reading room, but you must contact MARBL a few weeks in advance to have them digitized. Don't be shy, once they are digitized, they will remain available for the next researcher who wants to listen or watch!

(I would like to add a BIG hearty thanks to Ben Nobbs-Thiessen, PhD candidate in History, for trudging through these materials with me and helping make these resources available. Thanks, Ben!)

Authored By: 

John Bence, Research Library Fellow, Emory University Archives

New Insights into the Early Political and Philosophical Thought of Jesse L. Jackson

By Michael R. Hall, Graduate Processing Assistant, Southern Christian Leadership Conference records, MARBL

"Working for Freedom: Documenting Civil Rights Organizations" is a collaborative project between Emory University's Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library, The Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History, The Amistad Research Center at Tulane University, and The Robert W. Woodruff Library of Atlanta University Center to uncover and make available previously hidden collections documenting the Civil Rights Movement in Atlanta and New Orleans. The project is administered by the Council on Library and Information Resources with funds from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Each organization regularly contributes blog posts about their progress.

The SCLC collection has proven to be very rich in audio visual material revealing not only the diverse programs and events in which the organization participated, but also the early development of political and philosophical thought of some of its most recognizable figures.  Among the cassette tapes, vinyl records, reel to reels, VHS and DVDs, one can find recordings of panel discussions and speeches at National Conventions, demonstrations like the March from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, involvement in national and international policy issues like health care, and public speaking engagements and programming.  In a series of three blog posts, I would like to note gems which I have come across while processing the collection’s audio visual material and illustrate the potential for new research and study which such sources offer. 

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