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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 18, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Friday, February 18, 2005
Finding Photographs of Pelham in the Online "American Memory Collection"
of the Library of Congress
The online "American Memory Collection" of the Library of Congress is a
spectacular Web-based resource filled with maps, photographs, journals,
publications, diaries, transcripts and many other sorts of materials that
relate to American history. Much of the material in the collection
concerns issues of local interest and quite a bit of material -- including
many old photographs -- relates to Pelham and surrounding areas. One such
example is the photograph below that shows nationally-renowned architect
Electus D. Litchfield standing in the backyard of a home in Pelham Manor
that he designed in 1927. The home happens to be that of the author of
this blog. Many other photographs in the collection show the interiors and
exteriors of homes throughout Pelham. The collection is well worth
exploring if you are interested in the history of the area.

The Library of Congress American Memory Collection is available from
the Library of Congress home page located at
http://www.loc.gov/ or by going directly to the following Web address:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html.
Mining the collection to find all the Pelham-related material in it
admittedly is not an easy task. The most important consideration is that
you must be creative and thoughtful in structuring search queries that
will locate material relating to Pelham even if the bibliographic
references associated with the material do not mention the term "Pelham".
Simply searching for "Pelham" will find a lot of material, only some of
which actually relates to Pelham, NY. Such a search, however, will miss
much of the relevant material in the collection such as material relating
to the Bartow-Pell Mansion and its associated carriage house.
Consequently, as with all such research, you must give careful thought to
your search queries and must try many different queries each designed to
locate Pelham related material. For example, try searches for "Travers
Island", "Hunter Island" (rather than Hunter's Island), etc. Each
such search will turn up a wealth of additional material related to Pelham
that you simply will not find in the collection by searching for the term
"Pelham".
On the American Memory home page located at
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html you will see a search dialogue
box in the upper right corner of the page beneath the words "Search all
collections" with a button labeled "Search" next to it. As always, the
first step is to click on the "Help" button to the left (and then on
"Search Help" and "How to Format Search Terms") to learn how to structure
queries. You will learn some surprising things. For example, unlike many
Web sites, the American Memory Collection does not recognize quotation
marks around a multi-word phrase. Thus, to find material related to
Travers Island, you should type those words into the search dialogue box
rather than typing those words within quotation marks in the search
dialogue box. It is, of course, a "best practice" to review the search
help page for any Web site before you structure your first search query to
find what you are looking for.
Let's stay with our example. Go to the American Memory home page located
at
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html and type in the search box the
words Travers Island. Click on the button labeled "Search". You shortly
should see the first of four search results pages listing 73 items that
match your search query. Although not all 73 items actually relate to
Travers Island in Pelham Manor, NY, you will see that the majority of them
do. Many of the items are photographs of Travers Island taken during the
time that it was in use during World War II as the Norwegian Gunnery
School. See Bell, Blake A., Travers Island Goes to War, The
Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 38, Sept. 24, 2004, p. 10, col. 2.
Let's give the matter a little thought. Is it possible that material in
the collection may reference "Traver's Island" (note the apostrophe)
rather than "Travers Island" without an apostrophe? Perhaps. A search for
Traver's Island, however, seems to turn up the same 73 items suggesting
that the system ignores the apostrophe in the search query. A quick check
of the search help page confirms that the system does not recognize
certain characters such as apostrophes in search queries.
Are there other ways to find material relating to Travers Island in Pelham
Manor? Well, we know that the New York Athlectic Club has a clubhouse on
the island and has used the island since 1889. Let's try searches for New
York Athletic Club, NYAC and N.Y.A.C. Search results for New York Athletic
Club look promising. NYAC, however, returns no results and N.Y.A.C.
returns more than 5,000 results virtually all of which are irrelevant. A
review of the search results for the phrase New York Athletic Club reveals
that some -- though not all -- relate to the Club's facilities and
activities in New York City. Many of the results are irrelevant although a
few relate to the Travers Island facility.
A search for the word Pelham turns up 463 search results. The majority do
not relate to Pelham, NY but a very substantial number of the results do
relate to Pelham, NY. What other searches might turn up relevant results?
Pelhamville? Pelhamwood? Prospect Hill? Huguenot Heights? The collections
are so large that it is well worth the time of a serious student of local
history to search the collections carefully.
For those who would like to see a partial list -- by no means a complete
list -- of the many photographs in the Library of Congress American Memory
Collection that relate to Pelham and surrounding areas, use your browser
(e.g., Internet Explorer) to go to the following address on the
Historic Pelham Web site:
http://www.historicpelham.com/AmericanMemories.htm. At that location
you will see a list of more than 100 images relating to the history of
Pelham from the collection grouped into categories including 20 Beech Tree
Lane, Coaching to Pelham Sheet Music, Pelham Memorial High School,
Bartow-Pell Mansion, Hunter Island Mansion, Marshall House (Hawkswood),
1401 Park Lane, 205 Townsend Avenue, Mary Elizabeth Shop, 105 Wolfs Lane,
Residence of Mrs. R. C. Black, 4611 Post Road, Crosby Residence on Stellar
Place and Pelham Bay Park.
There is plenty more available in the collection. Happy hunting!
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
10:00 AM
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