Special Collections Highlights

UMaine History Resources Available Online

While not nearly everything in the University Archive is online, during this period when so many are working from a distance, we wanted to mention that many items related to the University’s history are available digitally. These include historic photographs, catalogs, Maine Campus newspaper, Prism yearbooks, Maine Alumni Magazine, and many other UMaine related publications […]

Read more

Maine Statehood Conference Videos Online

All of the sessions from last summer’s Maine Statehood and Bicentennial Conference were captured on video and are available for viewing at https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/me200/program/. Whether you weren’t able to make it to Orono last summer, or would like to see them again, this is a great opportunity to access scholarly, in-depth content on Maine’s statehood. For […]

Read more

Special Collections Featured in MAINE Alumni Magazine

Fogler Library’s Special Collections Department is highlighted in the Winter 2020 issue of MAINE Alumni Magazine in an article by Brad Beauregard, “All Things Maine: Fogler Library’s Special Collections is a treasure trove for both serious scholars and the casually curious.”  Special thanks to the University of Maine Alumni Association and to the researchers who […]

Read more

History Professors Interviewed by News Center Maine in Special Collections

UMaine History Professors Liam Riordan and Mary Freeman were interviewed in Special Collections by Don Carrigan of News Center Maine as part of a special series, Maine Turns 200.  Items from Special Collections and several other archives from around the state were featured in Carrigan’s segment, “In January 1820, Maine petitioned Congress for statehood.”  Carrigan, […]

Read more

Classes Welcome in Special Collections

Each semester, several classes visit Special Collection for an introduction to the department and a chance to explore what’s available.  It is often built into the course that students will return on their own for further, in-depth research.  While classes in history are our most frequent visitors, courses in political science, literature, women’s studies, higher […]

Read more

Nearly 700 Boxes Accessed This Year

So far during 2019, researchers have accessed 689 boxes of manuscript material in the Special Collections & Archives Department of Fogler Library.  The highest use month was February, when 36 different researchers accessed 146 boxes during that month alone.  Projects that lead researchers into the archives include work on class projects, theses, books (both fiction […]

Read more

Remnants of Our Lives Collection Available Online

The entire Remnants of Our Lives collection is now available online, with links to materials gathered in 47 interviews — a total of 1,020 digital items — including audio, transcripts, and photographs. “Remnants of Our Lives: Maine Women and Traditional Textile Arts” was an exhibition, sponsored and curated by the Northeast Archives of Folklore and […]

Read more

Maine Bicentennial Materials in DigitalCommons@UMaine

As Maine’s Bicentennial approaches, institutions, scholars, students and residents are once again looking to examine the events that culminated in Maine’s statehood. To support these efforts, we have gathered from our collections items that we hope will be of particular relevance and will provide a variety of perspectives on sensitive topics related to political, economic, […]

Read more

Online Presence Growing for Northeast Archives of Folklore and Oral History

More than 1,500 files are now available as digital objects through the Northeast Archives of Folklore and Oral History section of the library’s ArchivesSpace database.  Recent additions include items on the Airline Road, Argyle Boom, and the Maine Women and Traditional Textile Arts Project Remnants of Our Lives.  A list of collections now available online […]

Read more

New Ivy Day Webpage

Special thanks to our intern, Rachael Murphy, who created this webpage of information about Ivy Day, a 19th Century campus tradition. Several marble plaques featuring ivy leaves can still be found on campus buildings today. These pages explain why.

Read more