Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

12/20/2017

A Time Travel Tour of Baltimore's Public Markets

Richmond Market, formerly at the location of Howard and Read Streets


Hung over from the hustle of last minute holiday shopping? Langsdale Special Collections has an antidote: traveling through time to visit stores--in this case, Baltimore's public markets--and simultaneously not doing any spending whatsoever.
Behold: the wonder of Historypin, which currently hosts the new Special Collections virtual exhibit “Baltimore City Markets" (Isn't archival research magical?)

The exhibit features digitized images of Baltimore’s public markets, the oldest continuous public market system in the United States. All images are from various collections in our regional history archive, largely from the Thomas J. D’Alesandro papers, The Blakeslee Lane Photographs, and the Post Card Project at the University of Baltimore Collection. Baltimore's markets have been around since the 1780s. Many have shuttered, like Belair Market, which was demolished to make way for Old Town Mall; and Richmond Market, where the University of Maryland Medical System now sits.  Six are still in business, and are worth an IRL visit: Avenue Market (formerly Lafayette Market), Lexington Market, Cross Street Market (its recently proposed redesign is a retro facade based on Cross Street Market's look circa 1953), Hollins Market, Broadway Market and Northeast Market.
Once-Bustling Belair Market 

The main attraction for pairing an application like Historypin with historical photographs and ephemera is that it works with Google Maps to overlay the image on a contemporary location. By comparing the archival image with a municipal market's current digs we're not only reminded that the world around us has evolved, but that history stays with us, always. Oh, and if you have some spiffy archival images of any of the city markets of your own, you can add them to the collection on Historypin and make the exhibit that much more faboosh. Enjoy this historical tour, the holiday season, and 2018, too!




7/19/2017

The Other Side of Summer

Dance Troupe, 1972. Robert Breck Chapman Collection. Via flickr
When I decided last week to do a seasonal library display of items in Special Collections with a theme of “summertime leisure”, I couldn’t imagine a fluffier, less serious topic. I thought that-- aside from having multiple boxes across collections retrieved from storage-- the whole thing would be a breeze; just rainbows and kittens and glitter and sunshine all the way. Of course, mostly, it is:  selecting photographs taken by Robert Breck Chapman, former photographer for City Hall, is always an opportunity to gaze at beautifully composed images capturing city life during the 1970s. Also, poring through scenes from the Post Card Project-- featuring kitschy vintage paper and ephemera-- is pretty fun.

5/04/2017

National Museum of African American History and Culture website



Can’t make it to the National Museum of African American History and Culture, the newest Smithsonian Institution museum on the National Mall?  Then explore the collection of 27,000 historical artifacts, documents, photographs, and media on their excellent website.  

When you go to the “Explore” section, you’ll find the following categories to choose from: 
Image for Pinback button for the Baltimore Elite Giants 
·         American South
·         American  West
·         Civil Rights
·         Clothing and Dress
·         Communities
·         Education
·         Family
·         Literature
·         Military
·         Music
·         Photography
·         Politics
·         Religious Groups
·         Segregation
·         Slavery
 




You can also search the collection.  Head on over to the website to explore the collection at:  https://nmaahc.si.edu/explore/collection