Viewing entries tagged "yearbooks"

High Point Women’s Club Scrapbooks and Yearbooks Now Online

New scrapbooks from the High Point Women’s Club have been added to DigitalNC. These four books cover the years 1940 to 1942, 1953 to 1954, 1955 to 1956, and 1956 to 1957. They show the range of activities that the women’s club participated in, including attending national conventions of women’s clubs, having guest speakers from various levels of government and academia, hosting fund raisers for the Red Cross and March of Dimes, and their annual talent show, among other things.

Title Page for the 1955-1956 Scrapbook

Title Page for the 1955-1956 Scrapbook

The scrapbook that covers the years 1940 to 1942 pays particular attention to World War II and issues that affected the home front. The women’s club was very involved with learning and educating others about home defense and action to help the war effort. They also had a number of activities meant to help the soldiers who were overseas.

Page concerning public defense

Page concerning public defense and keeping faith in troubled times of war.

The High Point Women’s Club was a division of the North Carolina Federation of Women’s Clubs as well as the General Federation of Women’s Clubs. The North Carolina Division is now known as the North Carolina General Federation of Women’s Clubs, and for more information you can visit their website. The High Point Club is still in operation to this day.

These scrapbooks were contributed to DigitalNC by the High Point Museum. Also digitized with these materials were two William Penn High School yearbooks from the Heritage Research Center at High Point Public Library, years 1957 and 1958. To see more materials from the museum, visit their contributor page. To browse more Heritage Research Center materials, visit their page here. To browse more yearbooks, visit our North Carolina Yearbooks collection.


Additional Yearbooks from Wayne County Public Library Now Available

Newly digitized yearbooks from Wayne County Public Library are now available on DigitalNC.org. This batch features yearbooks from six high schools, dated 1955-1965. The high schools are from Wayne, Lenoir, Craven and Pitt counties:

  • New Bern High School (New Bern, N.C.) – 1965
  • New Hope High School (Goldsboro, N.C.) – 1964
  • Dillard High School (Goldsboro, N.C.) – 1965
  • Goldsboro High School (Goldsboro, N.C.) – 1965
  • Bethel High School (Bethel, N.C.) – 1955, 19571958
  • Grainger High School (Kinston, N.C.) – 1956-1959, 1961-164

In addition to this selection of yearbooks is a 1926 senior yearbook and scrapbook from Goldsboro High School called Just Seniors. The yearbook features portraits of the 66 seniors as well as mementos, newspaper clippings, postcards, pressed flowers, personal messages, and programs collected by the copy’s owner Louise Johnston Spoon.

justseniors19261926gold_0016

From left to right, clockwise: Louise Johnston Spoon’s yearbook photo, page 12; 1925 Junior-Senior Banquet Program, p. 47; Postcards, p. 58; pressed flower and personal notes, p. 106.

To browse more yearbooks, click here. To explore more materials from Wayne County Public Library, click here.


Robeson Community College Photographs and Memorabilia Now Available!

Nursing_Pinning_Ceremony_2000 (1)

Nursing Pinning Ceremony, 2000

More Robeson Community College material has been digitized and made available online! This includes photos of Robeson Community College students, faculty, and staff, as well as the Robeson Community College Today and a selection of individual photographs.

Field_Day

Field Day, circa 1980, Robeson Community College Students

In addition to these photographs, numerous programs from past Robeson Community College events are now available. This includes programs from several years of Robeson Community College Retirement Receptions and Robeson Community College Employee Appreciation Banquets. We have also digitized more campus publications from Robeson Community College, including Commencement Exercises from the 1970s and 1980s and Pinning Ceremony Programs for the Nursing School.

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Pages 6 and 7 from the 1975 issue of Directions, the yearbook for Robeson Technical Institute.

To explore more from Robeson Community College, click here.


More Yearbooks from Charlotte Now Online

From the 1912 Elizabeth College Yearbook, "De Hooligans"

From the 1912 Elizabeth College Yearbook, “De Hooligans”

We’ve just finished working with the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library to include several additional high school yearbooks as well as yearbooks from Elizabeth College on DigitalNC.

You’ll now find the 1964 yearbooks of South, East, and West Mecklenburg High Schools, as well as West Charlotte, Harding, Myers Park, and Garinger on our site. (To help with privacy concerns, we generally have a 50-year embargo on posting high school yearbooks online. So, as the new year rolls over, we can begin including another year’s worth.)

Also in this latest batch are 1905-1913 yearbooks from Elizabeth College. Elizabeth College was located in Charlotte from 1897-1915, at which point it moved to Virginia. Its records were mostly destroyed in a fire in 1921, so we’re glad the information in these volumes is now available online. The 1901 volume is also on our site, contributed by UNC-Chapel Hill.

View all of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library’s items.


Davidson County High School Yearbooks Now Available

Davidson_Fairgrove_yb_02

More Davidson County yearbooks from the Northwestern Regional Library System are now available on DigitalNC.org. Joining over 50 other area yearbooks, these additions primarily represent Thomasville’s Fair Grove High School, which merged with another school and became East Davidson High School in 1962. The yearbook titles include The Twig and Tiger Roar, and range from 1948 – 1961. These volumes come from the Thomasville Public Library.

Many of the Fair Grove High School yearbooks feature hand drawings for their title pages. This is the case for the 1959 issue of The Twig, which also has an “Outer Space” theme and features staff as astronauts and class officers in spaceships.

twig19591959fair_0010

The Twig [1959] – Fair Grove High School (Thomasville, N.C.)

Along with the Fair Grove High School yearbooks, we have also digitized the 1954 issue of The Lexicon from Lexington Senior High School, which was contributed by the Lexington Library.


More yearbooks from Johnston County now Online

Senior Trip, from the 1962 Glen-Cedo

Senior Trip, from Glendale High School’s 1962 The Glen-Cedo Yearbook.

The Johnston County Heritage Center has shared more yearbooks from the 1950s and 1960s through DigitalNC. The schools represented in this latest batch are:

There are now 240 yearbooks and campus publications from Johnston County available on DigitalNC, and over 170 of those were contributed by the Johnston County Heritage Center.

 

 


Yearbooks from Caldwell County, from a New Partner, Now Online

The 1964 Hudson High School Band.

The 1964 Hudson High School Band.

The Caldwell Heritage Museum has partnered with us to bring the first high school yearbooks from Caldwell County high schools to DigitalNC. Over 40 high school yearbooks, along with 9 yearbooks from Davenport College are included in this batch. (The Museum is located in the only remaining building of Davenport College). The schools represented are listed below:

View all of the materials from the Caldwell Heritage Museum on DigitalNC.


Anna Siedenburg

Monday Matchup

Here on our blog, we occasionally feature “matchups” that showcase relationships between different items in our collection. Today’s matchup? Illustrations in yearbooks from Salem Academy (Winston-Salem) and Elizabeth College (Charlotte).

An idle interest in the illustration below led to today’s rather extensive blog post.

Illustration by Anna Siedenburg from Elizabeth College's Caps and Belles yearbook, 1901

Illustration by Anna Siedenburg from Elizabeth College’s Caps and Belles yearbook, 1901

It wasn’t the artwork that caught my eye, albeit the image is lovely, but the inscription of “copyrighted” at the bottom. This isn’t something I’ve ever noticed accompanying such an early hand-drawn yearbook illustration (and I’ve looked at a lot of them). So I began investigating this copyright-aware student artist… and discovered it wasn’t a student, but a faculty member. Using just the collection at DigitalNC, I was able to unfold a good bit more about this woman: Anna Magdelene Siedenburg.

Siedenburg illustration from the 1907 Salem College Sights and Insights

Siedenburg illustration from the 1907 Salem College Sights and Insights

Signed illustrations by Siedenburg can be found in the 1901 yearbook for Elizabeth College, from which the image above is taken, as well as yearbooks from Salem Academy and College in 1906 and 1907 (see right). There are a good number of unsigned illustrations that could be her work as well, or perhaps they are by students emulating her style.

From these yearbooks, I was able to piece together that Siedenburg taught at the two institutions mentioned above from at least 1900 to 1912. She was president and faculty sponsor of art clubs at both schools, and is listed as an instructor in drawing and painting (especially on ceramic and glass), as well as French and German.

But where did she come from? The Salem catalog for 1906 states her accomplishments: exhibiting in large American cities like New York, and winning various medals of excellence as well as designing for “leading art journals.” For more information I had to move beyond items on our site.

Anna Siedenburg was born in Bremen, Germany on February 23, 1854.*  I’m unsure when she arrived in the United States, but if she traveled to North Carolina around 1900 she would have been a seasoned artist in the mature part of her career at age 46. I was able to track down more information using what was hinted at in the 1906 Salem College catalog. Siedenburg’s name is peppered throughout The Art Amateur from 1892-1900. She is both subject and author, with reviews of her exhibitions along with articles she wrote about painting on glass and advertisements for her as an instructor. Through the Amateur I learned that she lived in Cinncinnati in 1892, Chicago in 1895, and New York in 1898.** During this same time period (late 1890s-1900), Siedenburg authored several books on painting as well as a curious little volume of Fairy Tales and Fancies, which she illustrated. (List of her authored publications on WorldCat.)

The cover of Fairy Tales and Fancies, by Anna Siedenburg, Chicago, 1895. Courtesy Davis Library, UNC Chapel Hill.

The cover of Fairy Tales and Fancies, by Anna Siedenburg, Chicago, 1895. Courtesy Davis Library, UNC Chapel Hill.

It’s hard not to try and imagine the personality of a moderately successful female artist of that time period who traveled widely and seemingly on her own, eventually making her way to North Carolina to devote time to instructing young women. She seems to have been a thoughtful woman who was well liked by her students; the 1906 Salem College yearbook includes a poem entitled “My Seniors,” in which she expresses especial affinity for the graduating class. She was creative. Her book of original Fairy Tales includes a good number of princesses but also strays beyond the stereotypical, as in “Just a Match” which is an allegorical tale about, well, a match.

The other pieces of personal information I could find are few, but include a reference to a friend visiting her at a cottage called “Galax,” in Blowing Rock.*** I also know she died, single, in Winston-Salem on November 12, 1926.* She was buried in God’s Acre, the Moravian cemetery that’s now part of Old Salem.

My hope was to find a picture of her in one of the yearbooks on our site, but most of the faculty photos were unreliably labeled. Thankfully, I have something even better. It’s with pleasure that I can present this photo, cheerfully provided by the archives at Salem College, of Anna Siedenburg.

Undated photograph of Pauline Bahnson (left) and Anna M. Siedenburg, Bahnson graduated Salem College in 1910. Courtesy Salem College Archives.

Undated photograph of Pauline Bahnson (left) and Anna M. Siedenburg. Bahnson graduated Salem College in 1910. Courtesy Salem College Archives.

 

*Source: Ancestry.com. North Carolina, Death Certificates, 1909-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007. Original data: North Carolina State Board of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics.North Carolina Death Certificates. Microfilm S.123. Rolls 19-242, 280, 313-682, 1040-1297. North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, North Carolina.

** The Art Amateur (February 1898) p. 76.

***The Orange County Observer newspaper (June 25, 1908) p. 3.


Yearbooks from Davidson County Added to DigitalNC

Lexington High School Football Team 1964

The Lexington High School Football Team, 1964.

Over 50 yearbooks from several branches of the Davidson County Public Library system, a new partner, are now online. These are the first high school yearbooks we’ve been able to present from Davidson County. The schools represented are listed below:

We also found several famous folks in the yearbooks above, including Richard Harrison of the Pawn Stars television series and the artist Bob Timberlake. The yearbooks above come from the Lexington Library and the North Davidson Public Library. You can view all of the yearbooks from Davidson County Public Library System on DigitalNC.


New Materials Added to Rockingham County Legacy Project

Rockingham County Drop in Library Scrapbook photo, 1977-1978We’ve just added scrapbooks, a town ledger, and several additional yearbooks from Rockingham County Public Library, part of the collaborative Rockingham County Legacy project.

Two Rockingham County Library programs from the 1970s are documented in these digitized scrapbooks. The Drop-in-Library (DIL) was a grant-funded initiative to bring resources, especially audio-visual ones, to children who couldn’t get to a physical library branch. The DIL van “dropped in” to residential areas, head start programs, day cares, schools, and other parts of the community, where staff would present filmstrips, read books, and provide the children with a variety of activities. The scrapbooks include newspaper articles, promotional materials, and documentation about the program, as well as photographs showing children taking advantage of the DILmobile’s resources. The Special Outreach Services (SOS) program similarly offered services to those who had trouble getting to a branch. This service delivered large print books and other materials via station wagon to the homebound.

This most recent batch also includes a Property Tax Register from the town of Madison, as well as more yearbooks for Booker T. Washington High School, John Motley Morehead High School, and Stoneville High School. There are now over 120 yearbooks from Rockingham County institutions available on DigitalNC.


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