PRESS RELEASE
February 6, 2003
“Treasures of Special Collections” Exhibit
Opens in Hornbake Library
A brilliant array of rare books, manuscripts, maps, photographs,
artwork, and memorabilia is now on display in the first floor exhibit gallery
in Hornbake Library on the University of Maryland, College Park, campus.
This new exhibit, entitled “Treasures of Special Collections,”
celebrates the transformation of Hornbake Library into one of the premier
special collections facilities in the Mid-Atlantic region. It features
riches from Marylandia, Rare Books, the National Trust for Historic Preservation
Library, University Archives, Historical Manuscripts, and Literary Manuscripts,
as well as broadcasting treasures from the National Public Broadcasting
Archives and the Library of American Broadcasting.
On display are items that show the exceptional variety
and significance of primary source materials available to the public in
Special Collections at the University of Maryland Libraries. Exhibit
viewers will find many interesting items on display, including:
-
James Joyce’s Ulysses, first edition (1922). One of
only 100 copies signed by the author, this volume is arguably the most
influential novel in modern times and a much sought-after work of twentieth-century
fiction;
-
Maryland Agricultural College cadet uniform and dress sword
(c. 1914). The all-male MAC student body was originally organized
as a corps of cadets. The young men were required to wear wool uniforms
wherever they went on campus—to class, in the dormitory, at mealtime, and
at work on the college’s farm. Company commanders carried a sword
for dress parade;
-
An original NBC chime box (early twentieth century).
Announcers in pre-tape days actually had to strike the notes live on the
air; in later years this famous three-tone sequence became the first audio
trademark in U.S. history;
-
Mark Twain’s Sketches, New and Old (1875). Twain inscribed
this copy to Mary "Aunty" Cord, a former slave, whose life inspired Twain
in his sketch, “A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It”;
-
Djuna Barnes artwork (1919-1934). Barnes was an extraordinary
modernist American author, best known for her novel Nightwood (1936), but
also began her career as an artist and illustrator;
-
John White’s Americae Pars, Nunc Virginia Dicta (1590).
This is the first map printed that contains cartographic reference to the
Chesapeake Bay and the oldest item in the Maryland Map Collection;
-
Postcards from the San Francisco earthquake (1906).
These unique postcards depict the destruction of historic buildings in
that region of the country;
-
Storyboard for the lower case “a” segment of Sesame Street
(undated). This popular program from Children's Television Workshop
assisted generations of children with reading skills by focusing on a different
letter or number in each episode;
-
Pyon Su was the first Korean student to receive a degree
from an American college or university, graduating from the Maryland Agricultural
College (forerunner of the University of Maryland) in 1891. Upon
completing his education, he worked briefly for the United States Department
of Agriculture. Tragically he was killed by a train at the College
Park railroad crossing on October 22, 1891, only months after his graduation.
He is buried in Beltsville, Maryland, and today is a highly revered figure
in Korea.
This exhibit pays tribute to the many special collections
honored in Hornbake Library’s Showcase event series, a collaborative project
involving Hornbake curators and the Friends of the Libraries. For
more information, please visit www.lib.umd.edu/HBK/showcase.
The exhibit is open to the public from 10:00 AM to 5:00
PM Monday through Friday and 12:00-5:00 PM on Saturdays when the Maryland
Room is open.
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