April 10, 2007

Library Week

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National Library Week

Valley Rotunda Construction.jpg

In 1880, the Adelphian Literary Society acquired the Corvallis Library Association’s Library; ten years later, that 605-volume library was transferred to Oregon Agricultural College. By 1899, when the first full-time, nonstudent librarian, Arthur Stimpson, was appointed, the collection had grown to 3000 volumes and 500 pamphlets & bulletins. The first professional librarian, Ida A. Kidder, was appointed in 1908.

Initially housed in the Administration Building (now Benton Hall), a new building for the library was constructed in 1918 with funds from the Oregon Legislative Assembly. The library was named Kidder Hall, in honor of Ida Kidder; in 1954, the library was re-named for William Jasper Kerr, president of OSU from 1907-1932 and first chancellor of the State System of Higher Education.

Although an additional west wing was added to the library building in 1941, as the collection and library staff expanded, space was tight. In the late 1950s, once again the university began planning for a new library building. It was completed in 1963, and expanded in 1971.

Predictably, the demand for space increased again the late 1980s. In 1993, the Legislative Assembly approved funds for further expansion and renovation of the library building. Owing to the success of a fundraising campaign to raise private money to match state funds, expansion efforts began in 1996 and were completed in 1999. The Kerr Library was renamed the Valley Library in 1995 in honor of the Wayne and Gladys Valley Family, whose foundation donated $10 million to library expansion efforts.

To find out more about the Library, click here to check out the collection guide for RG 009.

April 6, 2007

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Celebrate National Reading a Road Map Week!

Students Map of Campus.jpg

While this isn’t a road map, “A student’s map of OSC campus,” from photographic collection 83, is a fun drawing from the perspective of a 1934 student!

April 5, 2007

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It’s National Bake Week!

Corvallis Bakery.jpg

To celebrate, we thought it would be good to go back in time, to 1870, with a great picture of the Corvallis Bakery, A. Hodes and Co.

This is an albumen print from the John H. Gallagher Sr. Collection (P 32). The Gallagher collection consists of nearly 450 photographic prints and negative collected by Gallagher and his son, also named John. Primarily, you’ll find aerial views of the Willamette River landscape in southern Corvallis; many document the facilities and operations of the Corvallis Sand & Gravel Company, a family business established by Gallagher and located on the south Corvallis bank of the river. Included are images of river dredging and street paving, taken from both ground level and the air, and wonderful panoramic ground views of the Sand & Gravel Company– joined together by tape! Also found in this collection aerial views of the general Corvallis region during the 1964 flood. Visit the Rising Flood Waters: 1964 Corvallis for more images from the Gallagher collection on the flood.

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