Special Collections and Archives Archives - Library /library/tag/special-collections-and-archives/ Creating the template to be used for other sites Mon, 08 Jun 2026 18:17:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://149.4.100.129?v=1.0 /library/wp-content/uploads/sites/127/2023/02/cropped-qc-favicon-32x32.jpg Special Collections and Archives Archives - Library /library/tag/special-collections-and-archives/ 32 32 Undergraduate Archival Explorers: Historical Memory and Representation in the Archives /library/2026/06/08/undergraduate-archival-explorers-historical-memory-and-representation-in-the-archives/ Mon, 08 Jun 2026 14:09:46 +0000 /library/?p=16310 My decision to research WWII-era Queens in the 黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives was due to both the ingrained cultural mythos surrounding the time and my volunteer experience with the Elmhurst History and Cemeteries Preservation Society.

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Spring view of Benjamin S. Rosenthal Library

By: HebatAllah Basala, 黑料专区 Undergraduate Student

My archival research began with a question that was deeply personal to me. In a previous senior seminar course, I conducted archival research on Edwards Said and his significance in shaping modern Arab intellectual and cultural identity. As an Arab student, that project made me more aware of questions surrounding representation, historical memory, and whose voices are represented in institutional spaces. Entering the Queen’s College Archives, I wanted to explore a related question closer to home: If Arab students and other underrepresented communities have long been present on campus, how have they been represented or omitted within the history of 黑料专区 itself? More specifically, I wanted to trace how demographic shifts at 黑料专区 influenced campus culture, curriculum, and institutional priorities over time.

1941 white student organizations

Over the course of approximately 10 hours of research conducted in the 黑料专区 Archives, I examined , , Phoenix , , student handbooks, and administrative records spanning from the 1940s through the 1980s. Working directly with original archive materials gave the research a uniquely immersive quality. Personally, the tactile nature of the research made the past feel alive and present in the moment. This was my favorite part of my research in the archives, as I felt privileged enough to be able to handle these delicate documents that provide such important insights and are a representation of previous students who attended this college.

1968 Demands

One of the most significant discoveries was the dramatic demographic and political transformation visible through the decades. The 1941 yearbook portrayed an overwhelmingly white student body, faculty, administration, and campus leadership. By contrast, materials from the 1970s and 1980s; revealed a campus in transition, one that is shaped by the implementation of open admissions across CUNY, the activism of SEEK students, and the growing presence of Black, Puerto Rican, Caribbean, and immigrant student organizations. Student newspapers documented protests against apartheid, debates over Israel and Jewish identity, activism surrounding affirmative action, and increasing demands for institutional representation in faculty. These records showed that changing demographics did not only diversify the campus numerically, but they also fundamentally altered the political and intellectual life of 黑料专区.

 

Seek memo and critique of admin

However, perhaps the most meaningful realization of my research was not what I found in the archives, but what appeared absent from them. As I continued my work, I began questioning the archives itself. Although archives are often treated as neutral factual documents of history, I came to understand that they are curated spaces. Someone decides what is preserved, what is categorized as historically valuable, and what is ultimately excluded. This realization especially was appearant as I examined archival materials such as the 1968 student demands document and the Campus Views section of the Phoenix student newspaper, both of which highlighted how student perspectives were document and preserved within the institutional record. In this way, archival research, began to feel surprisingly similar to present day social media, where both our systems of selective preservation and visibility that shape public narratives through what they choose to amplify and display to the general public.

This realization transformed my project. What began as an investigation into demographic and curricular change became a broader reflection on historical memory and narrative construction. I left the archives not with a definite conclusion, but with more questions than when I entered: Which communities remain underrepresented in institutional memory? Which voices had been omitted from Queen’s College historical narrative? And what responsibilities do researchers have in identifying those silences?

Diverse Commencement

Fortunately, this project has made me want to continue researching beyond the scope of this course. The archive did not simply provide answers. On the contrary, it revealed the politics behind who and what gets remembered, and who does not.

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Undergraduate Archival Explorers: Researching World War II-era 黑料专区 /library/2026/06/08/undergraduate-archival-explorers-researching-world-war-ii-era-queens-college/ Mon, 08 Jun 2026 13:51:22 +0000 /library/?p=16282 My decision to research WWII-era Queens in the 黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives was due to both the ingrained cultural mythos surrounding the time and my volunteer experience with the Elmhurst History and Cemeteries Preservation Society.

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Spring view of Benjamin S. Rosenthal Library

By: Tyler Rivera, 黑料专区 Undergraduate Student

My decision to research WWII-era Queens in the 黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives was due to both the ingrained cultural mythos surrounding the time and my volunteer experience with the Elmhurst History and Cemeteries Preservation Society. Having used the finding aids to request texts, I spent 14 hours sitting in the archival office. The research naturally fell into searching through the , the , and the 鈥淚n Their Shoes鈥 Oral History by the with their shared focus of the late 1930s and 1940s. Their shared connection of the war hid a variety of perspectives I am happy to have read.

Dr. Shaftel

Touching genuine, albeit delicate artifacts demystifies history which in this case were sketches, ship newsletters, digitized newspapers, mail and transcriptions, allowing for a sense of tangible humanity that classes and secondary reading materials always lack. My exposure to the period is reduced to mostly books and films, and the generation that saw it has left us. In this way they still speak, and to hear them all I needed to do was follow the Archive鈥檚 handling protocol and gently coax 80-year-old paper. In the WWII Collection鈥檚 artwork of R.W. Hill (obscure; he was at least a military serviceman) you can see the pressure of the pencil in his political cartoons, plane sketches, and figures (presumably of friends). His drawings show his personal priorities: that of victory, service, and home. I enclose the drawing, 鈥淭he Miner鈥檚 Dream of Home鈥 to support that assumption, which shows a reclined soldier pining for his girlfriend. I can only imagine Mr. Hill identifying himself with his sketched figure whilst stationed abroad. Occurrences of Oscar H. Shaftel exceed his collection in the Archives. He is called both a 鈥楧octor鈥 and 鈥楥orporal鈥 in The Crown Newspaper and both 鈥楽oldier鈥 and 鈥楶rivate鈥 in his letters. A person by the name of Emmanuel Peabody Halpern (鈥業O鈥) called him 鈥淥skie鈥. I was able to find quotes from Dr. Shaftel within the newspaper, keeping me from speaking of him apophatically, which was something I was afraid of due to a lack of his own writing in his collection. An article titled 鈥淩evenge as War Aim Not Adequate, Corp. Shaftel Says鈥 records him imploring the student body to seek not revenge but rather intellectual and communal preservation. A digital clipping of this attestation is included in this post.

Miner’s Dream of Home

The most touching of the 鈥淚n Their Shoes鈥 Oral History entries, which collates the written testimony of the Asian American community during the war, is the transcript of Larry Kern. He details how his American father and Japanese mother met, fell in love, and surmounted obstacles that tried to counter that love. The most captivating fact is the assertion that Mr. Kern鈥檚 father successfully petitioned Eleanor Roosevelt and, consequently, members of Congress into passing the McCarran-Walters Act, legalizing their union.

In combining every account, there is a consistent plea for persistence amid strife and a calling for rationalism over emotionalism. Like our predecessors, we may be greatly scandalized by the many geopolitical issues that have captured our campus, but we cannot forget the fellowship in being 黑料专区 students.

 

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Barbara Rosenthal Papers are Open for Research /library/2026/04/27/barbara-rosenthal-papers-are-open-for-research/ Mon, 27 Apr 2026 10:00:36 +0000 /library/?p=15434 黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives (SCA) is thrilled to announce that the Barbara Rosenthal Papers are now open for research. Rosenthal, who transferred her papers to 黑料专区 in phases between 2021-2025, is an avant-garde interdisciplinary artist, writer, and performer. She explores existential themes through her multimedia artworks, which often take the form of photography, video, text, and performance. Rosenthal attended graduate school at 黑料专区 in the 1970s, receiving her MFA in painting in 1975.

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By: Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collections & Archives, and Olivia Zisman, Project Archivist

黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives (SCA) is thrilled to announce that the are now open for research. Rosenthal, who transferred her papers to 黑料专区 in phases between 2021-2025, is an avant-garde interdisciplinary artist, writer, and performer. She explores existential themes through her multimedia artworks, which often take the form of photography, video, text, and performance. Rosenthal attended graduate school at 黑料专区 in the 1970s, receiving her MFA in painting in 1975.

The collection documents Rosenthal鈥檚 personal and professional life, spanning from the early 1940s through 2025. It consists of materials related to her career as an artist, and professional activities related to her studio practice and business endeavors, as well as her career as an educator (largely in higher education in New York). It also contains Rosenthal鈥檚 journals, family heirlooms, student papers, correspondence, and ephemera.

Thanks to Rosenthal鈥檚 multi-hyphenate career encompassing many forms of art and literary production, and her penchant for accumulating and saving object of special meaning, it is one of the most in-depth and eclectic collections stewarded by SCA. Comprised of 137 linear feet of boxed material, plus additional textiles and oversized items, the collection provides insight into the art making process from inspiration through exhibition, review, and revision, and documents the relationship between art and artist. It is SCA鈥檚 premier collection of papers from an alumni visual artist.

The collection is rich in possibility for scholarship, teaching, and creativity. Just to name a few examples, one can peruse 90 numbered volumes of Rosenthal鈥檚 journals starting at the age of 11; explore multiple drafts and editions of her artists鈥 books; review exhibition posters and business records; or examine 鈥渟acred objects鈥 derived from Rosenthal鈥檚 life. Depending on the box, one might find a sabretooth tiger tusk, a silk baby pillowcase, or a handmade beaded G-string, a bundle of letters, or doodles on scrap paper. The archive is a delight for the mind and the senses, unspooling the layers of the artist鈥檚 life and work.

Barbara Rosenthal Papers storage boxes. Barbara Rosenthal journal open to show two pages. Open box showing objects from Barbara Rosenthal collection Side view of sixteen binders stacked in two groups of eight from the Barbara Rosenthal collection.

Portions of the Rosenthal collection were first preserved, arranged, and described by students in the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies class LBSCI 790.3: Advanced Archival Practicum during the Summer 2022 semester, instructed by Caitlin Waldron. In September 2025, thanks to generous funding from the Mellon Foundation, SCA hired Project Archivist Olivia Zisman to complete the project. Zisman processed accruals and created a holistic arrangement that encompassed all collection elements (see the for details).

Headshot of Barbara Rosenthal Headshot of Olivia Zisman

To make an appointment to view the Rosenthal collection or arrange a class visit, please email qc.archives@qc.cuny.edu. We look forward to hearing from you!

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Students Curate Collective Memory with the QC Archive /library/2026/03/30/students-curate-collective-memory/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 17:04:56 +0000 /library/?p=15143 This spring, Professor Lee Norton brought his three English 110 classes to the library to visit Special Collections and Archives (SCA).

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Students Curate Collective Memory with the QC Archive

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By: Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collections & Archives

This spring, Professor Lee Norton brought his three English 110 classes to the library to visit Special Collections and Archives (SCA). As Norton explains in his syllabus, the theme of the course is to 鈥渋nvestigate the manifold workings of collective memory: the places, practices, and stories that bind groups together through shared understandings of common past and present purpose.鈥 Given this mission, a visit to a real-world archive is a key part of the curriculum, complementing readings and discussions that focus on sites of memory.

During the class sessions, the instructors (Archivists Annie Tummino and Olivia Zisman) used lecture, , and discussion to introduce students to archival concepts and questions, including:

  • What do archivists do?
  • What ends up in an archive? Who decides?
  • What is missing?
  • What stories do archives tell?
  • How do archives shape history?

Next, we introduced students to the , a diverse collection of photographic prints (25 boxes) produced by the 黑料专区 publicity office from the founding of the college in 1937 to the early 2000s. 听These images were used in brochures, course bulletins, leaflets, and other advertisements during a time when most marketing occurred in print. Many items contain visible evidence of their past function and use, such as handwritten captions, marginalia, and cropping instructions.

Hands on Activity

For the hands-on activity, we divided students into teams of 3-4 people and provided a single folder from the Creative Services Collection to examine in detail. Donning cotton gloves, the students carefully browsed the contents of their folder, typically comprised of 25-50 photographs, with subjects ranging from athletics to student protests to hanging on the quad. We asked students to hone their powers of observation. What activities did they see in the pictures? What clothes were people wearing? Could they identify the location of the picture? What could they infer about student life from the images?

Next, we asked the students to move from observation to curation. Each team was tasked with selecting a set of 4-8 images chronicling campus life, keeping in mind questions introduced earlier: Who is represented? Why? What narrative is conveyed? This allowed the students to exercise their creative muscles and curate their own stories. During the last part of class, students shared their selections with their classmates, leading to a lively show and tell. Overall, the archive visit and activity fit seamlessly in Norton鈥檚 syllabus, serving as a warm-up for the students鈥 next big English 110 assignment: creating a virtual exhibition, including writing introductory text and wall panels.

 

Students sharing their findings during class.

Students share their findings during class in the Tanenbaum Room

The creativity displayed by the students in class was impressive, deserving public access. Therefore, archives staff agreed to scan the images for posting. We are happy to announce that the image sets are now in the process of being shared ! 听Please follow our account to check out the students鈥 work and for more updates from SCA. If you would like to peruse more photographs documenting QC history, check out the 鈥淟ife at 黑料专区鈥 .

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CUNY Archives Q & A /library/2025/10/16/cuny-archives-qa/ Thu, 16 Oct 2025 16:38:38 +0000 /library/?p=14347 The post CUNY Archives Q & A appeared first on Library.

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By: Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collections & Archives

Sponsored by the History Club, History Department, and Rosenthal Library

Wednesday, October 22 from 12:15-1:30

Powdermaker Hall Room 351

Free Pizza! Join us for a panel with

    • Learn about the once in a generation project taking place in CUNY鈥檚 archives
    • Learn about archiving as a career path
    • Learn how you can use CUNY archives to achieve your research goals
    • Check out some archival material from 黑料专区鈥檚 own Special Collections and Archives

Pre-registration is not necessary. See you there!

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Processing the Political Posters Collection /library/2025/06/12/processing-the-political-posters-collection/ Thu, 12 Jun 2025 19:06:12 +0000 /library/?p=13374 Working in Special Collections and Archives as a graduate fellow over the past academic year, I鈥檝e been processing a unique collection of political posters, and am thrilled to share the finding aid here. The collection is now open for research or use in class.

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Processing the Political Posters Collection

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By: Olivia Zisman,听Shirley Klein Rare Book and Manuscript Fellow

Working in Special Collections and Archives as a graduate fellow over the past academic year, I鈥檝e been processing a unique collection of political posters, and am thrilled to share the here. The collection is now open for research or use in class.

The posters are printed in a range of printmaking techniques including screen printing, block printing, lithography, and other offset printing techniques, inviting the viewer in with vibrant colors, crisp graphics, and bold text. One of the joys of processing this collection was getting to spend time with these eye-catching, inspiring materials and learn from the items themselves.听

听 听 听 听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听

Delving briefly into the history of political posters, the function of political posters has been to communicate quickly and directly. Displayed impermanently in public spaces, political posters meld words and images to poignantly convey their messages. By World War II, governments, political parties, and unions were using political posters as a dominant form of communication. Post war, the political poster transformed into a communication method used in political protest by much smaller political entities, collectives, and individuals across the globe. Used as tools for community organizing, to express political and social discontent, and fight for social change, political posters offer unique insights into histories of struggles that may not have been permanently documented in any other way.

 

The majority of the items in the collection were produced in the 1960s-1970s and fall under the broad category of social issue posters, although several bumper stickers, circulars, and postcards are also included in the collection. You can get a sense of the wide range of subjects covered in the collection by the images included in this blog post! In the process of arranging this diverse group of materials, I was particularly drawn to one bumper sticker bearing the United Farmworkers logo and the slogan 鈥淏OYCOTT GRAPES鈥. Using the information on the bumper sticker itself as a jumping off point for my brief research, I discovered the 1965-1970 Delano Grape Strike and Boycott and its place in the history of labor organizing. I would invite anyone interested to dive into the collection and discover their own research interests via our (it should be noted that only a small portion of the political posters collection is available digitally), or by emailing qc.archives@qc.cuny.edu to make an appointment to visit the collection in person.

Processing this collection has been a wonderful learning experience and a true pleasure and I want to give a big thank you to QC SCA and the QC Library for their support throughout my fellowship.

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Ask An Archivist Day 2024! /library/2024/11/19/ask-an-archivist-day-2024/ Tue, 19 Nov 2024 17:39:42 +0000 https://library.qc.cuny.edu/?p=9700 We think archives are important all year round, but every October we take time to advocate for archives, archivists, our work, and the many, many collections that exist in our repositories during Archives Awareness Month in the United States. Archivists in all kinds of archives across the country talk directly to people who use (or will use!) archives about what exactly it is we do as archivists, what exists in our collections, and how you can access them.

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Ask An Archivist Day 2024!

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By: Caitlin Colban-Waldron, Archivist and Special Collections Specialist

Ask An ArchivistWe think archives are important all year round, but every October we take time to advocate for archives, archivists, our work, and the many, many collections that exist in our repositories during Archives Awareness Month in the United States. Archivists in all kinds of archives across the country talk directly to people who use (or will use!) archives about what exactly it is we do as archivists, what exists in our collections, and how you can access them.

The Society of American Archivists traditionally designates one day each Archives Awareness Month to , a public initiative where archivists solicit questions from the curious, usually through social media, and answer through the same channels. Questions run the gamut, from advice on preserving your family’s old materials, clarifying when you can visit the archives, highlighting specific collecting areas, explaining how we decide what to keep, or just giving the archivists an excuse to be silly.

馃幍 A-R-C-H-I-V-E, send your questions all to me! 馃幎 have a question about archives, archivists, 黑料专区, or CUNY? day is TOMORROW!

This year, 黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives participated once again across our Instagram and TikTok channels. Catch up on what you missed below, and be sure to subscribe throughout the year to see what we’re up to!

Asked from instagram: What events were going on at QC and CUNY during 1969? A pivotal year, 1969 was a hotbed of student activism in two major directives: anti-Vietnam War protest and SEEK uprising and rebellion. Our Campus Unrest Collection, Student Publications, and photographs show evidence of student power and how they prevailed. Remember: these were QC students, just like you. 鈾 For What It’s Worth – Buffalo Springfield

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The Helen Marshal Papers: A Virtual Show and Tell /library/2024/11/12/the-helen-marshal-papers-a-virtual-show-and-tell/ Tue, 12 Nov 2024 20:17:57 +0000 https://library.qc.cuny.edu/?p=9688 In this virtual show and tell held on Sept 19, 2024, archivists shared unique items from the Helen Marshall Papers documenting her celebrated career in politics. Marshall (1929鈥2017) was the second woman and first African American Borough President of Queens, elected to three four-year terms starting in 2001.

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The Helen Marshal Papers: A Virtual Show and Tell

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By: Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collections & Archives

Helen Marshall Family

Helen Marshall as a child, and family

In this virtual show and tell held on Sept 19, 2024, archivists shared unique items from the Helen Marshall Papers documenting her celebrated career in politics. Marshall (1929鈥2017) was the second woman and first African American Borough President of Queens, elected to three four-year terms starting in 2001. Earlier, she served on the New York City Council, in the New York State Assembly, and as a co-founder of the Langston Hughes Library in Corona, Queens. Prior to her political career, Marshall earned a Bachelor of Arts in education from 黑料专区 and served as a teacher, later making education reform one of her main goals as an elected official. The Helen Marshall Papers were donated to the college by Donald E. Marshall Jr. in 2017.

The collection was recently processed due to a generous grant from the New York State Archives Documentary Heritage Program.

Presenters:听

  • Gianna N. Fraccalvieri, Project Archivist for the Helen Marshall Papers
  • Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collections and Archives

This event was part of the “At Home with 黑料专区” series sponsored by the Office of Institutional Advancement

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SEEK History Now Online /library/2024/10/07/seek-history-now-online/ Mon, 07 Oct 2024 13:43:41 +0000 https://library.qc.cuny.edu/?p=9630 This past spring, Special Collections and Archives mounted an exhibit in the Rosenthal Library celebrating the history of the QC SEEK Program, from its origins in the Civil Rights Movement to its emergence as a national model for higher education opportunity programs across the country. The exhibit featured items from the SEEK Collection, such as brochures, handbooks, newsletters, photographs, clippings, and fliers, demonstrating the incredible innovation, resilience, and impact of the program over its 58-year history.听

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SEEK History Now Online

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By: Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collections & Archives

This past spring, Special Collections and Archives mounted an exhibit in the Rosenthal Library celebrating the history of the , from its origins in the Civil Rights Movement to its emergence as a national model for higher education opportunity programs across the country. The exhibit featured items from , such as brochures, handbooks, newsletters, photographs, clippings, and fliers, demonstrating the incredible innovation, resilience, and impact of the program over its 58-year history.

Now, Special Collections and Archives is proud to announce that the majority of items featured in the exhibit, plus a number of others, have been scanned and are available through ! This online access will benefit researchers around the world as well as our local community here at 黑料专区. The collection currently has 71 entries, but we hope to add hundreds more as resources allow.

黑料专区 SEEK Program

黑料专区 SEEK Program

Please enjoy browsing the collection, as well as using JSTOR鈥檚 tools for downloading, citing, saving, and sharing items of interest. If you have any questions about the SEEK collection or how to use JSTOR, please email qc.archives@qc.cuny.edu.

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Helen Marshall Papers Open for Research /library/2024/07/03/helen-marshall-papers-open-for-research/ Wed, 03 Jul 2024 21:39:13 +0000 /library/?p=12950 As a current student in the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies, working in the 黑料专区 Library to process the Helen Marshall Papers over the past 5 months has been an invaluable learning experience for which I am incredibly grateful. Helen Marie Marshall (1929鈥2017) was an American politician and community organizer who served in the various elected positions of New York State Assemblymember, New York City Councilmember, and Queens Borough President between the 1980s and mid-2010s.

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Helen Marshall Papers Open for Research

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By: Gianna Fraccalvieri, Project Archivist

As a current student in the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies, working in the 黑料专区 Library to process the Helen Marshall Papers over the past 5 months has been an invaluable learning experience for which I am incredibly grateful. Helen Marie Marshall (1929鈥2017) was an American politician and community organizer who served in the various elected positions of New York State Assemblymember, New York City Councilmember, and Queens Borough President between the 1980s and mid-2010s.

This collection has proven to be robust in scope and diverse in content, covering a wide range of historical events, social issues, and political eras throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. While the magnitude of this project posed practical challenges of adequately preserving, arranging, and describing the records, its vastness also provided amazing opportunities to view these archival traces of Marshall鈥檚 life and legacy from a variety of angles.

I am honored to share the completed听听for the Helen Marshall Papers with the 黑料专区 community and beyond. The collection can be accessed by emailing Special Collections and Archives at听QC.archives@qc.cuny.edu听to schedule an appointment. You can also learn more about the collection by registering for the听听taking place online on September 19 from 4-5pm.

Young Helen Marshall Young Helen Marshall

Composed of 35.75 linear feet of records produced between the 1920s and 2014, the Helen Marshall Papers document Marshall鈥檚 role as a community activist and elected official in New York City and State politics. The collection includes correspondence, project files, subject files, certificates, campaign ephemera, photographs, and audiovisual reels. Additionally, the Helen Marshall Papers include personal materials that chronicle the immigration story of Marshall鈥檚 Guyanese family. Overall, this collection reflects Marshall鈥檚 principal concerns of racial justice, women鈥檚 rights, public libraries and parks, health care, and senior citizens.

Helen Marshall Passport

Helen Marshall’s Mother’s British Guiana Passport

 

Amid the ongoing social injustice of municipal budget cuts to libraries and universities, Marshall鈥檚 legacy of activism in defense of institutions that provide public access to information and education inspires hope and resilience for the present-day struggle. As a co-founder and first director of the Langston Hughes Library in 1969 prior to her political career, Marshall was a strong advocate for public libraries throughout her life. This collection contains project files, correspondence, and photographs related to Marshall鈥檚 role in securing more funding for public libraries to enhance access to community resources in Queens and New York City at large. Similarly, this collection reflects Marshall鈥檚 career-long crusade to increase funding, equity, and inclusion among CUNY institutions. Marshall鈥檚 background as a public school teacher and 黑料专区 alumna with a B.A. in education made supporting higher education through CUNY one of her top priorities.

Helen Marshall Notebook

Helen Marshall’s 黑料专区 notebook

 

It has been a privilege to gain hands-on archival processing experience under the supervision of Annie Tummino, Head of Special Collection and Archives at 黑料专区 Library (QCL). I would like to thank Annie for the time and expert guidance she shared with me to help complete this project, as well as archives staff members Caitlin Colban-Waldron and Reign McConnell for their advice and encouragement. I also extend my appreciation to the Documentary Heritage and Preservation Services for New York (DHPSNY) for providing the generous grant that allowed me to complete this project, as well as the entire staff and administration of QCL for their support of my professional development.


GIANNA N. FRACCALVIERI听is a current graduate student pursuing a dual degree in Library Science and History with an Advanced Certificate in Archives at the 黑料专区 Graduate School of Library and Information Studies (GSLIS). From January to June 2024, Gianna processed the Helen Marshall Papers as a Project Archivist at 黑料专区 Special Collections and Archives. Gianna has been working in public and academic libraries across Queens and Long Island since 2021, and she aspires to work in archives full-time after graduating in the spring.


This project (Arranging and Describing the Helen Marshall Papers) was made possible in part by a grant from the听Documentary Heritage Program of the New York State Archives, a program of the State Education Department.

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