Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Rugby 50th

Spent much of the afternoon yesterday with some current and former rugby players at Alumni House. Got some great photos of some memorabilia, which was shared on Instagram. Much discussion and planning. I need to do more re the history. They want to do a memory book etc. One challenge I am having aside from generally being very busy is that some of the indexing in the NYS Historic Newspapers is off. So an article is said to be a certain date and page #, but when I look at the bound print copy I have a hard time finding it to scan. (I sometimes scan from the print to get a cleaner sharper copy.)

Threatre - posters etc c1965-1969???

Request from an alum of '69. Unfortunately this is a pretty blank era. The files mostly have programs etc. 1980s - early 2000s. The period she wants is pretty limited for photos too. Probably best I can do is scan old Stylus articles re specific productions, crop, clean up for her.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

School colors

For a piece in the May issue of The Port I wrote about the history of the school colors. Had to dig a little in the old Normalia, but that and the Stylus gave me what I had thought was the story.

According the January 1902 Normalia, forerunner to the Stylus, "A short time ago a committee of students was appointed in conjunction with Prof. McFarlane to choose colors for the school. They finally decided on olive and yellow. The colors were worn for the first time on Dedication Day, when they adorned the speakers and faculty, and blossomed out in brilliancy on our loyal alumni." 
   The colors were highlighted in an annual event which launched in 1902, that of "Color Day." After initially refering to the colors as olive and yellow, by May 1902 the report on the first Color Day noted thatthe colors were prominently display, "In the office windows were the green and gold banners. The faculty and students appeared in chapel wearing the school ribbons..."
   In a 1932 Stylus article reference was made to the long standing tradition that "...the green of the grass and the yellow of the dandelion constitute the school colors..." 


Thursday, April 18, 2019

George Lee, BCI

Family history request for this fellow. Yes, he was here in 1852, in the "collegiate" program. Interesting, when I checked the 1852 catalog, he turned out to have also been in that "Euglossian Society," an early literary society. He was from Twinsburg OH, rather unusual to have someone from such a distance attend here back then.

Carillion

Was asked for some info on the history of this for remarks the President is preparing. What I had covered the history of it 1955-1993. It was originally a memorial to war service and veterans. In the 1990s somewhere the original mechanical chimes died, and were replaced by a digital/electronic setup. The original chimes, or what is left of them, are in a storage room here in the library. I wish I had more hard info about the chimes after '93 but I don't at this point...

Update: another staff person called on this, and reminded me of the Ron Watts memorial effort, after he died in 1987, that resulted in a rebuilt carillon. I found an article in the old AlumNews from '88 and added that to the file and sent that to the folks who had inquired about it.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Frank E. Smith

Genealogy request, was this fellow here, he was born c1880. I didn't see him in the list of grads, nor in the old register.

Monday, April 15, 2019

Millard Street - College expansion - acqusition of property

This was west of Kenyon, part of that whole neighborhood taken by the college as it expanded in the 1950s and '60s. Someone posted in "Remembering Brockport" in Facebook about visiting Brockport with her mother, who had lived there, contacted me... I have replied and asked her parents names and street number, so I can see what I have. There are a number of files re house/property acquisitions, but at a glance I only see one Millard St. file.

As I looked through the files in RG20/1 I was struck by the fact that there were several college people who had their homes acquired. Wolf, library secretary, McCrory, librarian, several others..

Update: there is only one file for Millard St., #22. There were at one time, c1945, 7 or 8 houses on there. The files we have on property acquisition seem to be late '50s, early - mid '60s. Some of Millard had already been acquired by then, but the records are not in the archives