Archive for July, 2014
Posted in Uncategorized on July 29, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Robert Curry
Posted in Uncategorized on July 25, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Basketball jump circa 1954 in the Armory
Posted in Uncategorized on July 25, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Vermillion Community Artists’ Series
Posted in Archives and Special Collections, Richardson Collection on July 22, 2014| Leave a Comment »
During the 1940s to the 1960s, Vermillion hosted a vibrant set of concerts sponsored by the Vermillion Community Artists’ Series. The following description is from one of its programs:
“The annual concert program was inaugurated in 1947 when Arthur H. Whittemore and Jack Lowe, duo-pianists, presented a concert to establish the A. H. Whittemore Memorial fund. This fund has contributed to the financial support of the series.”
“The concerts each year have been made possible and will continue to be made possible by subscriptions of sponsors, season memberships by University students and residents of Vermillion and this area who recognize, appreciate, and enjoy fine music.”
Programs for this series are in the Edward Charles Ehrensperger papers. Please contact the Archives and Special Collections if you would like a list of the programs. The picture of Whittemore and Lowe is from the 1949 Coyote yearbook.
Some Beautiful Photos
Posted in Uncategorized on July 22, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Creative old photographs, “Hate State.”
Posted in Uncategorized on July 21, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Photographs from Inman Field
Posted in Athletics, Inman Field, Summer negative scanning 2014, USD Photograph Collection on July 16, 2014| 2 Comments »
Selections from the USD Photograph Collection housed in sub-zero storage, Series 10. For more information, please contact the Archives and Special Collections, University Libraries.
Posted in Uncategorized on July 15, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Track and field
Posted in Athletics, Inman Field, Summer negative scanning 2014, USD Photograph Collection on July 15, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Happy Birthday, America!
Posted in A&SC student employees, Archives and Special Collections, University Libraries, USD Archives, tagged American history, American music history, Cowboy Fiddler, Mahoney Music Collection, Maud Powell on July 3, 2014| 2 Comments »
American History in the
Mahoney Music Collection
This week we celebrate the birth of our nation, with this Friday marking the 238th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Throughout those two centuries, music has played a key role in shaping our American culture, and the Mahoney Music Collection is lucky to hold some of the best of our American music history. I poured through records, combed the stacks – and even got caught in the back room during a power outage! – to compile this feature on American music from the Mahoney Music Collection.
Beginners’ method book containing small exercises, music theory basics, and simple, two-part tunes. It gives information about the instrument’s construction, great violinists, playing in groups, and using the violin for teaching vocal music. Also has a supplement of Jacob Augustus Otto’s treatise.

One Hundred and Fifty Years of Music Publishing in the United States, William Arms Fisher (1933)
Fisher traces music printing in the U.S. from through the centuries. The very first book of music, though “crudely-printed”, was 9th edition of The Bay Psalm Book in 1698 Massachusetts (previous versions only contained text). Included are stories of prominent publishers such as Schirmer, Lyon & Healy, and Witmark, plus numerous maps, portraits, and other illustrations.

A Treasury of American Folklore, B. A. Botkin (1944)
With a forward by Carl Sandburg and almost a thousand pages of tales, this book is really a gem of Americana. It covers everything from Pecos Bill and Paul Bunyan to nursery tales and ghost stories. The reason it is part of the Mahoney collection is the large section of ballads and songs, arranged into chapters with titles like “Songs of Sailormen and Rivermen”, “Cowboy Songs”, and “Hobo and Jailhouse Songs”. Each individual song has a verse and chorus written out on the staff, then printed lyrics for the (abundant) remaining verses. Some even have a brief history of the tune. I didn’t recognize many of the titles, but just sight-reading some them was fun.

Ten Years a Cowboy, Tex Bender, the Cowboy Fiddler (1886)

Cowboy Fiddler, Frankie McWhorter & John R. Erickson (1992)
These two volumes are amazingly not about the same person. I was stunned to find Ten Years a Cowboy and learn about the legendary Tex Bender, and was even more excited to come across Cowboy Fiddler. Actually, there are four books in the collection about fiddling cowboys! Apparently there is an American tradition of cowboys playing the violin. Harmonica? – sure, they’re rather portable. But violin…? Cowboy Fiddler is the memoir of Frankie McWhorter, a cowboy who played in Bob Wills’s band. The other, Ten Years a Cowboy, is more mysterious. I couldn’t track down who this legendary fiddler was, or how he got his nickname, but this is another beautiful example of Americana. Fantastic illustrations accompany “the story, romance and adventures of a life on the plains with the varied experiences as cow-boy, stock-owner, rancher”.

Maud Powell, Pioneer American Violinist; Karen A. Schaffer and Neva Garner Greenwood (1988)
Among all our musician biographies, I felt I had to include Maud Powell in this salute-to-America post. For, not only was she “America’s first great master of the violin” when much of classical music was imported from Europe, but she was also a woman. Even today, there is a huge gender disparity in professional orchestras. At the turn of the 20th century, there was an even larger bias toward women performers. Maud Powell is a chapter in American history not only about music but also about feminism. She broke barriers to bring American musicians on par with European, and to bring female musicians on par with the men. One of my heroes.
. . . . and FYI, the United States shares its birthday with Charles Burney’s first history of music, A General History Of Music From The Earliest Ages To The Present Period.
ACS