by Nancy McCammon-Hansen
When you are a historical society with well over 26,000 artifacts that have been collected in your 92 year history, finding means to easily archive and display everything in your collection can be a challenge. But new software at the History Center is being utilized to alleviate some of the challenges faced in this process.
When you are a historical society with well over 26,000 artifacts that have been collected in your 92 year history, finding means to easily archive and display everything in your collection can be a challenge. But new software at the History Center is being utilized to alleviate some of the challenges faced in this process.
Over the winter
and spring, textiles and shoes in the History Center’s
collection have been photographed and entered into the new database. In the
process of this work, employees rediscovered a seldom-seen artifact dating from
the 1850s.
One side of a
banner is on display in the museum’s first floor gallery exhibit on local
education. But the back side has been in storage for over three decades and is
an example of the kinds of artifacts that aren’t on display due to lack of
space for properly displaying them. But the new database and accompanying
photos will provide researchers with an opportunity to view more of the History Center’s collection via computer.
According to the
item description, likely originally written by a volunteer of the historical
society in its early days, this banner “was carried in a procession celebrating
the opening of the first free Public School in Fort Wayne in 1853. The Banner was made by Mrs. A.S. Hulburd, who
with her husband, presided over the school. The procession wound up in a picnic
at Ewing’s Grove. Mr. Hulburd preserved the
banner, and many years after, Amos Richey Sr, visiting in New York City, met him, Mr. Hulburd then
being a resident of the Metropolis. While calling at the Hulburd’s home, Mr. H.
brought out the old banner and recalled the old celebration. Said he, ‘You are
the boy who carried this banner, Mr. Richey, and as I shall soon pass on, I
think it appropriate that the banner should go into your keeping.’ The banner
was subsequently treasured by the Richey’s until after the death of Mrs.
Richey, (who was many years a widow), in 1927, when her daughter, Mrs. Arthur
Hadley, presented it to the Historical
Society Museum,
in June, 1928.”
After the
Historical Society acquired the banner, it was mounted between two pieces of
glass and installed in the door of one of the book cases in the Reading Room of
the society’s museum, which was at that time in the Old Swinney Homestead.
The banner is
“white china silk” and on the side that is currently on exhibit, the wording
reads “Knowledge is power….Our march is onward”. The side of the banner that is
in storage reads “Republicanism” at the top with a painting of a young woman
standing on a platform labeled “Education” and “Virtue”.
As photographing
and re-cataloging of the historical society’s artifacts continues, more stories
such as this will begin appearing on the History Center’s blog.
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