Digitized Trail Diary Now Available!

Are you interested in learning more about westward expansion during the 1850s? If so, you’ll be interested to learn that University of Wyoming’s American Heritage Center (AHC) has digitized and made accessible online the diary and 2 transcripts of the diary from the Charlotte E. Allis diary collection.

A page from the diary--you can see why the transcriptions come in handy!

A page from the diary–you can see why the transcriptions come in handy!

Charlotte “Lottie” Elizabeth Jackson was born July 28, 1828 in Chesterfield Township, New York. Her husband, William Warren Allis, was born October 28, 1823 in Conway, Massachusetts. She and W.W. Allis were married September 11, 1849 in Beloit, Wisconsin. In 1853, W.W. Allis traveled overland to mine gold in California. In 1854, Charlotte followed him, leaving Beloit in April and arriving at Monte Cristo California in July. She maintained a diary during her journey that relates her trek by wagon and foot traveling with newlyweds George and Hannah Haskell and possibly with George’s sister-in-law Marie Haskell, as well as others who are not recorded in Allis’ diary.

The collection contains the diary of Charlotte Allis and two transcripts of the diary. The first transcript was by Esther Gay, wife of the diary’s donor Jim Gay. The second transcript was by Tamara Linse, freelance writer and American Heritage Center volunteer who researched and transcribed the diary from 2001 through 2003. The bulk of the collection is the research files created by Tamara Linse.

Links to digitized items and additional information about the Charlotte E. Allis diary can be found in the on-line finding aid.

–Jamie J. Greene, Archives Specialist, Digital Programs Department

Posted in 19th century, American history, American West, newly digitized collections, Oregon trail, Western history, Westward migration | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Seat Pocket Pioneer: The Rose A. Benas Collection

Rose A. Benas with Secretary of Transportation Volpe, 1972. Rose A. Benas papers and Airlanes Magazines, Collection Number 09321, Box 4, Folder 11.

Rose A. Benas with Secretary of Transportation Volpe, 1972. Rose A. Benas papers and Airlanes Magazines, Collection Number 9321, Box 4, Folder 11. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

When you travel by airplane, do you enjoy the reading material stored in the seat pocket in front of you?  Your in-flight reading material that highlights tropical hotels and regional cuisine might just help you through those long minutes on the tarmac, waiting for take-off.

The American Heritage Center (AHC) at the University of Wyoming, has digitized and made accessible online the business and personal records from the Rose A. Benas papers and Airlanes Magazines #9321.  Ms. Benas was the editor and publisher of the first in-flight magazine, so it’s her legacy that you have to thank each time you turn those glossy pages.

Rose A. Benas was the publisher and editor of Airlanes Magazine and its successor Airworld Magazine. Airlanes was published monthly from January 1936 until October 1965. The magazine was the first “in-flight” periodical but later developed into an executive trade publication. The successor, Airworld, was intended to be an “in-flight” magazine and was carried by 10 U.S. airlines. However Airworld was suspended after 5 months.

The collection contains printed issues of Airlanes Magazine (1936-1965) and Airworld Magazine (1966). These monthly periodicals contained articles and advertisements on travel destinations, as well as information of general aviation interest. The publications document the development of commercial airline travel. There are also Airlanes Publishing Company records, correspondence, biographical information, photographs, news releases, and reports about Rose A. Benas’ career and work with commercial aviation publications.

Ms. Benas Test Crew certificate. Rose A. Benas papers and Airlanes Magazines, Accession Number 09321, Box 4, Folder 2. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Ms. Benas’ Test Crew certificate. Rose A. Benas papers and Airlanes Magazines, Accession Number 09321, Box 4, Folder 2. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Links to digitized items and additional information about the Rose A. Benas papers and Airlanes Magazines can be found in the on-line finding aid.

-Jamie Greene, AHC Digital Programs

Posted in aviation history, Commercial Aviation, Women in Publishing | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Mick McMurry’s Contributions to Wyoming Extended Far and Wide

ah560001_526In 2010, the AHC began an oral history project to look at the effects of natural gas development on Sublette County, Wyoming.  We interviewed more than forty people; many were residents of Sublette County, but there was also a number of people outside that area who were very influential in that gas development.  One of them was Neil “Mick” McMurry.

In November 2010, Mick sat down with Sublette County historian Ann Noble to talk about his philosophy when it comes to oil and gas development and the chances he took in developing a largely forgotten gas field that became the Jonah Field, one of the largest on-shore natural gas discoveries in the U.S. in the early 1990s.  Mick sold his stake in the field to Alberta Energy (now Encana) and became of the Wyoming’s leading philanthropists.

Here is an excerpt from that interview:

[Jonah Field] was a great Wyoming story because a lot of good things started happening in 1991.  We bought the leases at the right moment as far as value…Fracking technology was quickly improving.  We had a very astute fracking engineer, James Shaw, and he devoted 100% of his time to McMurry Oil focused on fracking wells at Jonah, and we had a lot of other dedicated hardworking people that just focused on Jonah. Our whole company, McMurry Oil, Nerd, and Fort Collins, that’s all we had was Jonah, so we all got focused on Jonah, we didn’t look at any other investments, didn’t need to.  We had lots of needs of spending money in the Jonah. We were having success; nobody else wanted it.  And, you know, I think that just a lot of good things happened at the right moment for the State of Wyoming and McMurry Oil, and the family.

The entire interview (audio and transcript) is part of the Wyoming Energy Boom Sublette County Natural Gas Oral History Project.

The American Heritage Center joins many others in the state of Wyoming in recognizing Mick’s contributions to our state, especially to our home institution, the University of Wyoming.

–Leslie Waggener, Processing Archivist

Posted in oral histories, Western history, western politics and leadership, Wyoming history | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

American National CattleWomen Films Now Available Online

Good news!  The University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center (AHC) has digitized and made accessible online 16 films and video from the American National CattleWomen records.  The collection as a whole documents the promotional activities of the organization, especially the National Beef Cook-Off contest, in particular. The National Beef Cook-Off materials includes budgets, clippings, contestant entry forms, materials relating to the promotion of the cookbooks, photographs and negatives of the events, and contestant recipes.  Some of the digitized film also documents the Cook-Off, but also covers the National Beef Ambassador Contest.

Third place cook-off winner, Frances Davis, 1974, American National Cattlewomen records, Box 19, Folder 1. Collection #5552,  University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center,

Third place cook-off winner, Frances Davis, 1974, American National CattleWomen records, Box 19, Folder 1. Collection #5552, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center,

A group of fifteen women met at the Four Bar Ranch near Douglas, Arizona, in October 1939 to form the Cowbelles, an organization to help promote the beef industry and friendship among cattle people; by 1951 it development into a national organization. The organization changed its name to the American National CattleWomen in 1986 to provide national leadership and coordinate promotion, education and legislative activities for women in the cattle industry. The collection documents the activities of the American National Cowbelles and the American National CattleWomen in promoting the beef industry and consumer education from 1951-1995. The collection includes correspondence, articles of incorporation, minutes, membership index and rosters, minutes and reports with state members and chairs, scrapbooks, news clippings, photographs, budgets, and audio visual materials relating to its annual conventions, committees, and promotional activities, especially the National Beef Cook-Off.

Links to digitized items and additional information about the American National CattleWomen records can be found in the on-line finding aid.

–Jamie Greene, Archives Specialist, Digital Programs Department

Posted in Digital collections, newly digitized collections, Western history | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Victor Gruen: Architect of Urban Renewal

Anyone interested in American architectural history, especially those intrigued by the mid-century modern style, will be pleased to learn that the University of Wyoming’s American Heritage Center (AHC) has recently digitized part of an important collection in this area.  The AHC has digitized and made accessible online 5 films, 2 audio recordings, and a small sample of blueprints and photographs from the Victor Gruen papers.

Black and white photograph of a Victor Gruen architectural drawing. Taken from back "Project: VG Book, Heart of our Cities."  University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center, Victor Gruen Papers, Collection #5809, Box 57.

Black and white photograph of a Victor Gruen architectural drawing.  American Heritage Center, Victor Gruen Papers, Collection #5809, Box 57.

Victor Gruen was an Austrian-born architect known for pioneering the design of shopping malls in the United States and urban revitalization projects in the late 20th century. He worked as an architect in Vienna until 1938 when he emigrated to the U.S. to escape World War II. He first worked as a set and store designer in New York City and then established Victor Gruen Associates, one of the nation’s leading architectural, planning and engineering firms. Gruen Associates designed the first regional shopping center, the Northland Shopping Center in Detroit in 1954 and the first fully enclosed shopping center, Southdale Shopping Center near Minneapolis in 1956. This collection contains materials relating to Gruen’s architectural career including speeches, clippings, professional correspondence, photographs, audio tape, film, blueprints, and architectural project files on shopping centers, urban renewal, and area planning.

Black and white photograph of a Victor Gruen architectural drawing. Taken from back "Project: VG Book, Heart of our Cities."

Black and white photograph of a Victor Gruen architectural drawing. Taken from back “Project: VG Book, Heart of our Cities.”   American Heritage Center, Victor Gruen Papers, Collection #5809, Box 57.

Links to digitized items and additional information about the Victor Gruen papers can be found in the online finding aid.

We hope you enjoy this new digital collection!

-Jamie J. Greene, Archives Specialist

Posted in announcements, architectural history, Architecture, Shopping centers, Urban Planning | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

“The Land Divided, The World United:” Reporting from the Panama Canal

A newly digitized collection, the Eleanor McIlhenny papers, provides researchers with a glimpse into the keen reporting of of woman journalist working in the Panama Canal zone from the pre- to post-WWII era.  The University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center (AHC) has digitized and made accessible online 180 photographs, printed materials, and subject files from the collection; the majority of the collection is now digitized.

McIlhenny's photos aren't all work and no play! Here is a photograph of a wedding, shedding additional light on the social life and customs of the Panama Canal Zone. Eleanor McIlhenny papers , #7704, Box 3. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

McIlhenny’s photos aren’t all work and no play! Here is a photograph of a wedding, shedding additional light on the social life and customs of the Panama Canal Zone. Eleanor McIlhenny papers , #7704, Box 3. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Eleanor McIlhenny was a reporter living and working in the Panama Canal Zone from the 1940s to the 1960s. She covered life and work in the Canal Zone during World War II for a variety of papers. The collection contains drafts of stories on the Canal Zone by Eleanor McIlhenny (1940s-1960s); printed materials; photographs, including original canal construction, a 1906 visit by President Theodore Roosevelt, and the Third Locks Project (1941); and bound newspapers.

A ship in the Canal. Eleanor McIlhenny papers , #7704, Box 3. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

A ship in the Canal. Eleanor McIlhenny papers , #7704, Box 3. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Links to digitized items and additional information about the Eleanor McIlhenny papers can be found in the on-line finding aid or directly through the digital collections website at: https://digitalcollections.uwyo.edu/luna/servlet/uwydbuwy~131~131

–Jamie Greene, Digital Programs Department

Posted in International relations, Internationalism, Journalism, newly digitized collections, Photography, Post World War II | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Digging into the Archives: A Peek at Petroleum Collections at the American Heritage Center

In 1857, Edwin Drake drilled the first oil well in Titusville, PA, a momentous event that ignited the birth of the modern petroleum industry. From the humble beginnings of Drake’s well to the expansive industry it has evolved into, our journey delves into the transformative impact of oil on our world.

The American Heritage Center’s holdings include more than 200 collections related to various aspect of the industry.  The collections include Wyoming, the West, the U.S., and even elsewhere in the world, individuals and corporations, and variety of time periods with the strongest emphasis on 20th century. A few highlights of this collecting area can be found at https://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/by-subject/geology.html.

With so many petroleum collections to choose from, here are just a few examples.

Oil Gusher and Overflow, Carbon County, Wyoming, 1920. Frank Meyers Collection

Oil Gusher and Overflow, Carbon County, Wyoming, 1920. Frank Meyers Collection.

Frank J. Meyers (1890-1973) was a photographer who lived in Rawlins, Wyoming where he ran a photography business for 50 years until his death. The collection contains photographs and negatives, some postcards, and photograph albums.   More than 900 images from his photo albums, including images of petroleum work in WY are digitized and available online, https://digitalcollections.uwyo.edu/luna/servlet/uwydbuwy~17~17.

Dave’s Standard Gas Station, Rawlins, WY, ca. 1914. Frank Meyers Collection, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Dave’s Standard Gas Station, Rawlins, WY, ca. 1914. Frank Meyers Collection.

M. King Hubbert teaching, ca. 1935

M. King Hubbert teaching, ca. 1935

AHC collections go beyond Wyoming’s borders, too. Geophysicist M. King Hubbert, is best-known for being the first scientist to articulate a model for depletion of energy resources, a theory that came to be known as “peak oil,” or “Hubbert’s curve.”    He taught at Columbia University primarily in the 1930s,  served as senior analyst of world mineral resources on the Board of Economic Warfare during World War II, worked for Shell Oil, and as a research geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey.  Hubbert’s papers contain 61 boxes of correspondence  with colleagues on his research interests and teaching; lectures and class notes on physics and geology; publications; research notes and subject files; glass negatives; maps and charts. You’ll find the collection guide here.

And, just for fun, let’s provide just one example of corporate records from the collections.

Ethyl Corporation Records, 1823-1983

Ethyl Corporation Records, 1823-1983

The Ethyl Corporation originated from the research efforts of scientists and chemical engineers Kettering and Midgley who discovered an anti-knock agent for automobile engines which they named “Ethyl” gasoline.  Midgley and Kettering founded the General Motors Chemical Company to provide distribution of the new product. Standard Oil Company of New Jersey joined General Motors Chemical in its manufacturing to create Ethyl Corporation in 1924.

The 25 box collection, 1823-1983, contains mainly historical materials for the history of the petroleum industry and gathered by James Boudreau, who served as vice-president and director of public relations.  The collection includes account books, stock certificates, newspapers and maps, advertisements, and other materials. Also included in the collection is a set of Thomas Midgley’s papers.

With hundreds of collections to choose from, these examples are just a start!

-Ginny Kilander, Reference Department Head and Acquisitions Archivist for Economic Geology

Posted in Economic Geology, energy resources, Petroleum history | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Sports, Recreation, and Leisure: Exploring Collections at the AHC

Sports, recreation, and leisure are so entwined with life in American and the human experience itself, it should not be surprising that many of the collections held at the American Heritage Center contain at least some information related to these endeavors.

Though Sports, Recreation, and Leisure represent one of the center’s smaller collecting areas, the AHC holds about 500 collections that contain significant amounts of material related to these topics. Our main areas of focus include mountaineering, rodeo, dude ranching, national parks recreation, adventure travel and sports writers, and, not surprisingly, University of Wyoming athletics.

By far the most popular sport-related interest is with the University of Wyoming Intercollegiate Athletics Records. Fans, former athletes and their families, sports writers and filmmakers often request copies of game footage especially for memorable games such as the 2007 WNIT Championship where the women’s basketball team knocked off Wisconsin, and the football team’s 1958 victory over Hardin Simmons in the Sun Bowl and their 1968 Sugar Bowl appearance against LSU. The collection contains films dating back to the 1930s. Let’s not forget the men’s basketball team’s crowning as national champions in 1943!—in fact, recently two independent documentary film teams have visited the AHC for prospective programs on this amazing feat.  Indeed, the most popular aspect of UW sports, recently, has been Kenny Sailors, the inventor of the jump shot and member of the 1943 championship team.  The AHC is pleased to announce that recently 90 films from the University of Wyoming Intercollegiate Athletics Records were digitized and are now available online.

Film still of 1943 NCAA National Basketball Championship Team (University of Wyoming vs. St. John’s). University of Wyoming Intercollegiate Athletics Records, #515001, Boxes 266-267.

Film still of 1943 NCAA National Basketball Championship Team (University of Wyoming vs. St. John’s). University of Wyoming Intercollegiate Athletics Records, #515001, Boxes 266-267.

UW sports material can be found in a variety of contexts.  Milward Simpson’s collection of papers consists of more than 600 boxes of material mostly related to his political career. However, amidst all of those political files, is a box containing a small amount of material related to his time as a three-sport athlete at the University of Wyoming.

For those patrons who prefer a bit more dirt and mud, the AHC holds numerous prominent rodeo collections including Abe Morris, a UW African-American student who was one of the Professional Rodeo Cowboy Association’s (PRCA) premier bull riders in the 1980s and 1990s, and the J.S. Palen Collection that contains rodeo history of numerous western rodeos including Cheyenne Frontier Days– posters, photos, correspondence, scrapbooks, publications, schedules, and much more—from the 1890s to the 21st century.

Cheyenne Frontier Days parade, early 20th century.  J.S. Palen papers, #10472, Box 24, Folder 1. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Cheyenne Frontier Days parade, early 20th century. J.S. Palen papers, #10472, Box 24, Folder 1. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

For those who wish for a bit more peace and quiet, the many dude ranch collections and national park collections contain material to help slow the soul. Dude Ranch holdings range from individual ranches including Eatons’ Ranch, often referred to as the nation’s first dude ranch, located in the Big Horn Mountains near Sheridan as well as organizational records including the Dude Ranchers Association Collection. National Park collections range from the personal collections of park rangers like Karl Allan who worked in numerous Western parks including Yellowstone and Grand Teton, to park concessioners like Howard Hays who operated camps sites and a stagecoach line in Yellowstone.

If one wishes to venture beyond the comfort of the dude ranch nestled in the foothills and aspires to reach lofty heights, the AHC holds more than 50 mountaineering-related collections.  Some climbing documentation is found in unsuspected places. Charles Coutant was a Cheyenne newspaper editor and author of an 1899 history of Wyoming. His small collection of papers contains five letters by Nathaniel P. Langford to Coutant regarding Langford’s exploration of the Teton and Yellowstone areas in 1870, including Langford’s ascent of the Grant Teton. Much more prominent is a collection from Betsy Cowles Partridge who was among the earliest women and Americans to attempt Mount Everest in 1950. Her collection includes diaries and photo albums of her many climbing expeditions. In the past few years a biography of her was published, as well as a few articles.

For those who enjoy learning more about sports and outdoor recreation from reading about it in the comfort of the recliner, the AHC has numerous collections from writers including Warren Page who was an editor of Field & Stream Magazine as well as a world-class big-game hunter, and Murray Olderman who was a prolific sports writer including writing scripts for ABC Sports Radio. The Center holds numerous travel and adventure writers’ paper including Buddy Mays whose writing ranged from whitewater rafting adventures to sight-seeing in the Desert Southwest.

Barnstorming?  We have at least half a dozen collections documenting this sport, including the papers of Roscoe Turner, who liked to perform stunts with his pet lion (yes, lion) accompanying him in the plane.  We also have the collection of Roger Williams, now essentially unknown, but a pilot in both world wars.  Roger Quincy Williams (1894-1976) became a barnstormer and stunt flyer during the 1920s. In 1929 he became the second flyer to cross the Atlantic, flying from New York to Rome.

Roscoe Turner and Gilmore the Lion sitting on plane. Roscoe Turner papers, #5267, Box 113, Folder 7. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Roscoe Turner and Gilmore the Lion sitting on plane. Roscoe Turner papers, #5267, Box 113, Folder 7. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

We’ll close with materials relating to sports journalists, from both print and broadcast venues.  Take, for instance, Barbara J. Brown who was a journalist who covered the American rodeo circuit. She had articles in such periodicals as World of Rodeo, Pro Rodeo Sports News, Rodeo Times, Western Sportsman, Hoof and Horn, and Western Horseman. Or take Henry E. Bradshaw (d. 1981), an outdoor journalist who, throughout his long career, contributed to Field & Stream, Outdoor Life, and Sports Afield among other publications. Bradshaw, along with his wife, Vera Foss Bradshaw, wrote more than 3,000 outdoor and travel articles.  We also hold the papers of legendary sports television broadcaster Heywood Hale Broun, as well as collections by radio sports commentators and even illustrators.

When it comes to the history of sports, recreation, and leisure, the American Heritage Center holds something for everybody.

-John Waggener, Reference Archivist

Posted in Athletics, aviation history, Journalism, Recreation, Sports and Recreation, University of Wyoming history | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

History in Flight at the American Heritage Center

On May 21st, 1927 Charles Lindbergh landed his plane in Paris and gained instant fame for being the first to fly across the Atlantic solo.  In honor of this day in aviation history the American Heritage Center is excited to highlight some of its aviation collections.

Richard Leferink learned to fly during World War I. When the war ended he eventually settled in Wyoming and started an air cargo business throughout Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, South Dakota, and even Canada.  Leferink’s collection includes scrapbooks and correspondence kept through his aeronautical career.

Aviation scene from Richard Leferink scrapbook, 1923-1944. Richard Leferink Scrapbook, #8979, Box 1, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Aviation scene from Richard Leferink scrapbook, 1923-1944. Richard Leferink Scrapbook, #8979, Box 1, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Martin Jensen was an innovator in aviation history by researching and designing new aircraft as well building a place in the business of aviation, including the establishment of his own company.  Jensen was also a seasoned stunt pilot, and participated in the 1927 James D. Dole Derby Trans-Pacific Air Race.  Jensen’s collection includes photographs, scrapbooks, and correspondence about his aeronautic developments.

Jensen’s collection is not the only aviation collection featuring aviation developments and business.  The Manufacturers Aircraft Association encouraged and aided aeronautical development.  The association’s records contain information about different companies, designs and patents, expositions, and competitions.  Trans World Airlines contain records regarding not only the company but aircraft vendors as well, including Boeing and Lockheed.

American Heritage Center aviation collections also go beyond U.S. history.  For example  Wolfgang Klemperer’s papers (an aeronautical engineer who did eventually come to the U.S.) contain visuals of German aviation during World War I.

Aircraft type Lohnergroβflugzeug [10], 1915. Wolfgang Klemperer papers, #10955, Box 2, Folder 6. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

Aircraft type Lohnergroβflugzeug [10], 1915. Wolfgang Klemperer papers, #10955, Box 2, Folder 6. University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center.

 For more information regarding the American Heritage Center’s aviation and other transportation records collection guides are available online. In addition, some photos and other material from aeronautical collections have been digitized and are accessible through our digital collections site.

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World War II Films Digitized: Paul J. Halloran

The American Heritage Center has digitized and made accessible online 30 films from the Paul J. Halloran papers #4832. Paul J. Halloran was a prominent naval officer and civil engineer during the twentieth century. He oversaw construction of Pacific airbases used for bombing raids on Japan in WWII. The collection includes naval records, photographs, and 16 mm films from Halloran’s time in the navy, with the majority stemming from his work on the Norfolk naval base and his time in the Pacific Theater.

Tinian (Northern Mariana Islands), Paul J. Halloran papers, #4832, Box 20, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center

Film still of Tinian (Northern Mariana Islands), Paul J. Halloran papers, #4832, Box 20, University of Wyoming, American Heritage Center

Links to digitized items and additional information about the Paul J. Halloran papers can be found in the online collection inventory or directly through the digital collections website at: https://digitalcollections.uwyo.edu/luna/servlet/uwydbuwy~127~127

Please direct any questions to Jamie Greene at jgreene@uwyo.edu or 307-766-6508.

Posted in Archival Film, Digital collections, military history, newly digitized collections, World War II | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment