![]() ![]() The Society of American Archivists’ Dictionary of Terminology defines a scrapbook as “a blank book, often with a simple string binding, used to store a variety of memorabilia, such as newspaper clippings, awards, menus, and photographs.” Anyone who owns an heirloom, such as a family scrapbook, knows that they have much greater intrinsic value than this definition may suggest. This year, why not also spend some time thinking about and planning how to preserve these homemade historical treasures for future generations? This blog will introduce you to scrapbooks, some of the problems scrapbooks present, provide basic examples of preservation tactics and guidance on handling, and offer basic tips if creating your own scrapbook. Scrapbooks can be full of surprises, tell great stories, preserve memories, or just be a collection of stuff-interesting stuff to the collector but a puzzle to the eventual owner.The holiday season is a great time to look through old scrapbooks and share their stories and memories with family and friends. The scrapbook ends with the information about his death during the war. Eventually the scrapbook has a number of letters saved in their envelopes and one can tell they are from the young man who is now a service man in World War II. There are a number of names on the many different items and the items are from a wide range of dates and geographic places.Īnother scrapbook tells a sad story in that a young couple appears in a number of photographs and their names and their friends are included in other items. Fitts.” It is not known who compiled this scrapbook. The one surprise is a piece of fabric with a note telling that it is a “Piece of plush covering of a sofa brought from France by Joseph Bonaparte-Ex-King of Spain & Italy - in 1815 - To Col. For some reason we have a scrapbook that contains a number of different items, from newspaper clippings to invitations to birth announcements, ranging from about 1808 through the 1920s. For family historians this type of scrapbook kept by a family member will give information on friends and other family members.Īnd some scrapbooks contains real surprises. These give us a look at the social life for teens of the various eras. There are number of scrapbooks that were kept while one was in high school. We do have an alphabetic index to the clippings in these two collections so they are quite useable. This person must have saved the clippings and arranged them or kept them alphabetically as they were clipped and then at the close of the war pasted them into the scrapbooks. Undoubtedly this person clipped and pasted on a continuous basis during the war while the other collection is roughly alphabetically arranged. One collection is roughly chronologically arranged. The Post-Journal published many photos of soldiers and sailors, as they left for service or if they were promoted or were deployed to another area. We have two collections of scrapbooks of the newspaper clippings of service men of World War II. But at the same time the different sizes and the acidic paper and covers of the scrapbooks make it difficult to preserve and use these. One does not then have to look through microfilm of the newspapers or the newspapers if they are available in hard copy. These are a great help for someone who is researching the fire department or looking for information on a certain fire. The other collection of eleven volumes covers the 1920s through about 1980. One collection has five scrapbooks that cover earlier years from about 1904 to 1920. ![]() The Research Center has two collections of scrapbooks that cover the Jamestown Fire Department and fires. If family historians find such a scrapbook that was saved by a family member, there are many clues to friends and family in them by just what was kept. Other scrapbooks contained newspaper clippings-often poetry from newspapers interspersed with obituaries and announcements of weddings. These were arranged however wanted on a page and glued. Many scrapbooks from the Victorian era were books of “scraps.” These were often highly colored, glossy and sometimes embossed “pictures” of flowers, pets, children and other topics. Older scrapbooks have very acidic papers or even sticky areas or lines of glue dots that could be moistened and hold the items in the scrapbook. Today’s scrapbooking activities emphasize acid-free materials and the easily obtained copies of precious photographs that can then be shared in more than one scrapbook. ![]()
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