Fall/Winter 2020 Issue 15
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he past six months have presented remarkable challenges at the Newberry and well beyond. In the midst of adapting to the realities of a global pandemic, we also have witnessed troubling and sometimes violent reminders of institutionalized racism and the deep-seated inequities it produces. The pandemic and the ongoing legacies of injustice highlight both the urgent need for change and the continuing value of the humanities in making sense of our world.
MAGAZINE STAFF EDITOR Alex Teller DESIGNER Andrea Villasenor PHOTOGRAPHY Catherine Gass
After closing the building in the spring, the Newberry moved online to share our collections, showcase our staff, and build community. We’re carrying what we learned into the fall and winter, as all our programming —from adult education classes and scholarly conferences to teacher seminars and public programs — continues to be offered virtually.
The Newberry Magazine is published semiannually. Every other issue includes the annual report for the most recently concluded fiscal year. A subscription to The Newberry Magazine is a benefit of membership in the Newberry Associates. To become a member, contact Vince Firpo at (312) 255-3599 or firpov@newberry.org.
Newberry staff worked creatively and showed a deep commitment to our mission while pivoting online. They did the same while preparing to reopen the library’s doors to the public this summer. Thanks to their hard work, we’ve instituted several new safety measures and are now serving researchers in the reading rooms and welcoming visitors to our exhibition galleries and bookshop.
Unless otherwise credited, all images are from the Newberry collection or from events held at the Newberry and have been provided by the Newberry’s Digital Imaging Services Office.
Please stop by the library this fall to see two new exhibitions in our first-f loor galleries. Renaissance Invention: Stradanus’s “Nova Reperta” draws on a remarkable sixteenth-century print series to explore how advances in technology both enhance and destabilize human experience. Decision 1920: A Return to “Normalcy” looks back to the presidential election 100 years ago, as the United States was emerging from a global pandemic and remained divided by civil unrest. These exhibitions delve into vastly different areas of the Newberry’s collection to explore urgent and enduring questions — an ambition of so much of our work at the library. To advance equity at the Newberry, we also must examine troubling aspects of the library’s past. One of the stories you’ll read in this issue of The Newberry Magazine addresses restrictive covenants that the library signed on properties it owned in the 1930s. Restrictive covenants were one of many real estate practices that perpetuated residential segregation in the twentieth century. The fact that the Newberry would sign such agreements shows the limits of its commitment to inclusiveness throughout too much of its history. Confronting the past alone is not enough; the memory of this chapter in the Newberry’s history should inform our efforts to make the Newberry a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive institution. Thank you for your continued support as we strive to meet the challenges of the moment. I hope you are staying well, and I look forward to seeing you at the Newberry again soon. Sincerely,
Daniel Greene, President and Librarian
Cover image: Image detail from Johannes Stradanus’s Nova Reperta.
@newberrylibrary
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Contents FEATURES Renaissance Invention Matthew Clarke
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Debates about technological advances in the Renaissance—from the printing press to the compass—mirror our own conf licted feelings about technology today.
Conserving Ptolemy Lesa Dowd and Matthew Clarke
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Newberry conservators revive a beautiful fifteenth-century copy of a seminal geographical text that, for decades, had been inaccessible to researchers due to its extreme fragility.
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Decision 1920 Paul Durica and Alex Teller
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One hundred years ago, the presidential candidates from the two major political parties offered starkly different visions for how the country should respond to cataclysmic events.
“In Chicago, They’ve Got Covenants” Daniel Greene
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In the 1930s, the Newberry signed restrictive covenants, joining other property owners in agreeing not to rent or sell to African Americans in Chicago. Restrictive covenants helped perpetuate racial inequities that persist to this day.
DEPARTMENTS TAKE NOTE 2 NOW ON NEWBERRY.ORG
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DONOR SPOTLIGHT 25 17
IN MEMORIAM 27 RETROSPECT: Recent Events
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ANNUAL REPORT Letter from the Chair and the President 31 Collections and Library Services 35 20
Public Engagement 36 Fellowship Programs 40 Research Centers and Programming for Scholars 42 Honor Roll of Donors 50 Board of Trustees and Volunteer Committees 61 Staff 62 Summary of Financial Position 64
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TA K E N O T E
Sisiyutl House Plank Returns Home After More Than a Century For some 20 years, Newberry visitors could find a cultural object belonging to the Kwakwaka’wakw people on display in the Blatchford Reference Center on the third f loor of the library. The wooden plank, measuring almost 18 feet from end to end, originally graced the front of a traditional big house in what is now Alert Bay, British Columbia. It depicts Sisiyutl, a two-headed sea serpent who represents either death or good fortune—depending on how one encounters it. The plank was originally purchased and brought to Chicago so it could be exhibited at the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893. After appearing at the world’s fair, it spent time in various museums in the United States before arriving at the Newberry in the late twentieth century. Though the plank was officially repatriated in 1998, the Newberry housed it at the request of the U’Mista Cultural Center. In August, the Sisiyutl house plank was carefully removed from the Newberry, packed up, and shipped home to the U’Mista Cultural Center. In September it arrived, safe and sound, in Alert Bay. “It feels very good,” Bill Cranmer, board chair of the U’Mista Cultural Center, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. “It’s a very, very special part of our ceremonies.” Movers from Cadogan Tate deinstall the Sisiyutl house plank from the Newberry’s third-f loor reading room and prepare it for its journey home to the U’Mista Cultural Center.
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The Sisiyutl house plank returns to the U’Mista Cultural Center in Alert Bay, British Columbia.
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Newberry Initiative Will Examine the Age of Revolutions in the Americas The National Endowment for the Humanities has awarded the Newberry and its project partners a $150,000 grant to support a series of nine public programs exploring the connections between the American Revolution and struggles for independence in Latin America. The program series, ¡Vivan las Revoluciones! Forming More Perfect Unions Across the Americas, will provide opportunities for the public to ref lect on the complex shared histories of revolutions in the Americas during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Some of the programs will occur in conjunction with the Newberry’s spring 2021 exhibition, ¡Viva la Libertad!: The Age of Revolutions in Latin America. “The histories of the Latin American and Caribbean revolutions and independence struggles of the early nineteenth century are unknown to many Americans,” said Karen Christianson, Director of Public Engagement at the Newberry. “At the same time, people from former Spanish, Portuguese, and French colonies in the Americas rarely see themselves ref lected in stories about the American
Revolution and its impact. Our hope is that these programs will promote conversation and improve understanding of the intertwined nature of political struggle in our hemisphere during this period.” The series—beginning in the spring of 2021—will feature an array of community-based programs, including scholarly symposia, exhibition gallery tours, an interactive exploration of the practice of toasting revolutions, a writing workshop in which youth will compose their own declarations of independence, and a bike tour of Chicago public art inspired by independence struggles in Latin America. Each program will integrate humanities resources and participatory formats to encourage personal ref lection and foster public conversation. Like other recent initiatives, ¡Vivan las Revoluciones! will rely on collaborative partnerships between the Newberry and other local institutions, including the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México’s Chicago campus, the National Museum of Mexican Art, and Illinois Humanities.
Blaire Topash-Caldwell Joins the Newberry as Mellon Public Humanities Fellow The Newberry is pleased to announce that Blaire TopashCaldwell has joined the library’s staff as Mellon Public Humanities Fellow. In this role, Topash-Caldwell will contribute to a multiyear project to expand access to the Newberry’s extensive Indigenous Studies collection. Supported by a generous grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the project will align the Newberry’s institutional policies and actions with Native perspectives, cultural practices, and knowledge systems. Topash-Caldwell comes to the Newberry from the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Nation’s Department of Language and Culture, where she served as the tribe’s first archivist.
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A citizen of the Pokagon Band, Topash-Caldwell has worked to make relevant archival materials more accessible to Pokagon tribal members and collaborated with several institutions such as the National Archives in Chicago and the Eiteljorg Museum to make this possible. As part of this effort, she launched, managed, and developed content for a tribally based content management system called Wiwkwébthëgen, expanding outreach and accessibility for the many tribal members who live beyond the Pokagon Band’s service area. Dr. Topash-Caldwell recently completed her PhD in Anthropology at the University of New Mexico. Her scholarly work focuses on “Neshnabé futurisms,” tribal ecological revitalization projects that disrupt dominant narratives about climate change that erase Native people. Focusing on projects in the Great Lakes, Dr. Topash-Caldwell shows how Neshnabé futurisms guide Native ecologists, theorists, and activists as they mitigate ongoing ecological destruction in their homelands, positioning these leaders as active agents shaping their futures.
N O W O N N E W B E R R Y. O R G
“Buried in a Barrel,” National Police Gazette cartoon. New York: George W. Matsell & Co., December 26, 1868.
Walter L. Newberry Was Not in Fact Buried in a Rum Barrel In late 1885, a revolting rumor circulated around Chicago that Newberry Library founder Walter Loomis Newberry had been buried in a rum barrel in Graceland Cemetery after dying at sea in 1868. The rumor gained substance when the National Police Gazette ran a cartoon supposedly depicting the event. Was it true? Not quite, it turns out. But the story didn’t come out of the blue. For though Newberry may not have been buried in a barrel, he had in fact narrowly avoided burial at sea by being temporarily preserved in a barrel of spirits.
Walter L. Newberry’s final resting place in Graceland Cemetery in Chicago
“Mr. Harding, We’re All for You” In September 1920, Warren G. Harding quit his front porch in Marion, Ohio, (where he’d been conducting his campaign as the Republican nominee for president) for the campaign trail. In Wheeling, West Virginia, he was feted by marching bands from across the Ohio River Valley. Along with some traditional songs, the marching bands may have played “The G.O.P. Looks Good to Me” or “Mr. Harding, We’re All for You.” Both songs are traditional military marches that aligned with the Harding campaign’s theme of a “return” to the character and quality of American life at the turn of the twentieth century in response to the previous four years of profound change and transformation. Read the full stories on the Newberry’s “Source Material” blog: newberry.org/source-material. The Newberry Magazine
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Renaissance Invention
A seventeenth-century mariner’s astrolabe—on loan from the Adler Planetarium—is featured in the Newberry’s fall exhibition, Renaissance Invention.
By Matthew Clarke
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ew technologies and innovations are revolutionizing communication, transforming warfare, and—with luck — curing diseases. This may sound like a description of our world today. But these claims were equally true during the Renaissance, when multiple new inventions and discoveries reshaped people’s lives and fueled public debate about the virtues—and the social costs—of innovation. Ours is an age of technological disruption; so was the age of the Renaissance. Renaissance invention informs the Nova Reperta (New Discoveries) print series, a collection of engravings by sixteenthcentury Flemish artist Johannes Stradanus. The series comprises 20 engraved plates including a title page and 19 others that each feature a different invention, from wind power and gunpowder to compasses, cannons, and the moveable-type printing press. Most of the engravings introduce the inventions within detailed scenes of artisan workshops or public squares, making the images essential to scholars who study life and labor in early modern Europe. For this reason, countless books about the Renaissance have illustrated their pages with details from the Nova Reperta. Yet the images themselves have rarely been the focus of study or the subject of an exhibition. That has changed with Renaissance Invention: Stradanus’s “Nova Reperta,” a Newberry exhibition now on view through November 25.
Curated by Lia Markey, Director of the Center for Renaissance Studies, and Suzanne Karr Schmidt, George Amos Poole III Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts, the exhibition showcases the Newberry’s original set of impressions of Stradanus’s prints. Many complementary items—including early modern maps, military manuals, a page from the Gutenberg Bible, and artifacts on loan from Chicago museums—illuminate the work’s historical context. It is a f itting time for the exhibition, because our own debates about innovation today mirror those of the Renaissance. “From Artificial Intelligence, to self-driving cars, to social media, today’s new technologies create excitement and anxiety in equal parts,” says Markey. “Renaissance reactions to new inventions—printing and artillery, for example— were very similar.” Inventions of the Renaissance were just as revolutionary as those of our age, especially when it came to transportation, communication, and warfare.
The Renaissance Invention exhibition includes items on loan from the Art Institute, including a Renaissance-era model field cannon.
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“From Artificial Intelligence, to self-driving cars, to social media, today’s new technologies create excitement and anxiety in equal parts. Renaissance reactions to new inventions—printing and artillery, for example—were very similar.”
The title page of the Nova Reperta, the sixteenth-century print series featured in the new exhibition.
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n the Novum Organum (1620), English philosopher Francis Bacon wrote that: Printing, Gunpowder, and the Magnet…These three have changed the whole face and state of things throughout the world; whence have followed innumerable changes, insomuch that no empire, no sect, no star seems to have exerted greater power and inf luence in human affairs than these discoveries.
Bacon was right: these three innovations had a profound effect on European society. After being introduced from China, gunpowder (a mixture of carbon, sulfur, and potassium nitrate) transformed warfare in Europe. Soon the feudal armies of the medieval period were replaced with large professional armies equipped with handguns and gunpowder cannons.
Since the twelfth century, Europeans had been using the magnetic compass for navigation (the magnet being yet another import from China). During the early modern period, the compass was transformed from its crude original form—a magnetized needle f loating in water—into a portable and more reliable instrument with a needle that turned smoothly within a stable box. By Bacon’s time, the magnetic compass had quickened the pace of exploration by improving the accuracy of navigation. Though the Chinese had developed woodblock printing by 700 A.D. and moveable ceramic type by around 1040, Johannes Gutenberg introduced the new technology to Europe around 1454, adapting his printing device from a wine press and utilizing moveable pieces of cast metal type. Before Gutenberg, it took a scribe approximately six years to create a single Bible by hand. With the new press, Gutenberg produced 180 copies in two years. Soon, print
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Entitled “Pulvis Pyrius” (“Gunpowder”), Plate 4 of the Nova Reperta depicts the interior of an artillery foundry.
shops were f looding Europe with new texts. A revolution in communication was underway. Bacon wasn’t alone in believing that these inventions altered life completely. “Most commentators recognized the disruptive implications of the discoveries,” says Markey. “But just like today, people’s reactions varied widely.” Gunpowder had an obvious appeal to states, leaders, and militaries, and the new weapons that gunpowder made possible were frequently lauded—at least by those who could get their hands on them. Yet many critics were appalled at the widespread, indiscriminate carnage made possible by gunpowder and would have agreed with Don Quixote’s lament: “Happy were the blessed ages that were free of those devilish instruments of artillery, whose inventor, I feel certain, is now in Hell paying the penalty for his diabolic device.” Like gunpowder, the magnet had its detractors. While scientists, navigators, and merchants extolled its impact on natural science and exploration, others linked the seemingly mysterious powers of the new discovery to alchemy, magic, and the netherworld. Even the printing press stoked anxiety along with excitement. In an oft-told (though likely apocryphal) tale, Gutenberg’s Bibles were barely off the press before his financier, Johannes Fust, hurried to Paris to test the new product on students and scholars there. The Bibles sold out 8
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immediately, drawing the ire of members of the book guild, who, according to one account cited by the late historian Elizabeth Eisenstein, “soon shouted for the police, giving their expert opinion that such a store of valuable books could be in one man’s possession through the help of the devil himself.” Fust was forced to f lee Paris for his life. Whether or not the story is true—and whether the story of Fust gave rise to the legend of Faust, as some suggest—it does indicate the unease evoked by the printing press. All three inventions that Bacon cites are featured prominently in the Nova Reperta series, which devotes plates to gunpowder, the magnet, and the printing press. Stradanus’s engravings register the range of reactions to the new inventions. Occasionally, plates ref lect concerns about the inventions. Plate 4 depicts the interior of an artillery foundry, where artisans craft different types of artillery, from a cannon (in the center), to smaller minions and falcons (in the lower right), to a mortar (lower left). Workers appear melting broken pieces of scrap iron in a furnace, casting the liquid, shaping barrels, and engraving the final products. The view from a window shows one of the new devices in action, blasting down the walls of a fortress in a shower of fire and smoke. Even as Stradanus’s plate celebrates the new discovery, its caption channels one popular opinion about gunpowder, reading, “Thunder and Lightning made by hand. It seems to be a gift from the jealous underworld.”
More often, however, the plates unambiguously celebrate technology. Plate 3 of the Nova Reperta series is devoted to the magnet and shows a solitary scholar seated at a desk, one hand manipulating a drawing compass atop a magnetic compass and the other holding open a book. His room is cluttered with scientific instruments, from an hour glass and globe (at the center) to a three-dimensional model of the Ptolemaic cosmos known as an armillary sphere (at left). The magnetic compass’s significance for navigation is made plain by the large model ship hung from the ceiling of the scholar’s room and the view from the window, which opens onto an active port. Plate 5 (shown on page 10) of the Nova Reperta series illustrates a bustling print shop. Like the depiction of the artillery foundry, the shop is crowded with workers engaged in each stage of book production, from typesetting to printing to drying sheets to binding them together into gatherings. The plate’s caption proclaims proudly that “ just as one voice can be heard by a multitude of ears, so single writings cover a thousand sheets.” At the same time, the plates foreground another distinctive theme of Stradanus’s engravings: artisans working to craft the new inventions reshaping the world. This sort of collaboration defined work during the Renaissance, and Stradanus’s images highlight its importance. In fact, collaboration is a focal point of nearly every one of the
plates, from those depicting clock-making, distillation, and silk production, to those portraying the production of water power, sugar, olive oil, the stirrup, and even the process of engraving itself. Collaboration is also a major theme of the Newberry exhibition. From the outset, curators Markey and Karr Schmidt decided to emphasize how the engraver’s work undercuts a common misconception about the period: that invention was always the work of a solitary genius, or a “Renaissance Man.” “We still tend to subscribe to the myth of ‘individual genius’—the idea that great inventions or works of art were always created by brilliant individuals working in isolation,” Karr Schmidt explains. “They weren’t. They were more often the product of groups of artisans working together in workshops, as Stradanus’s plates show very clearly.”
Devoted to the magnet, Plate 3 of the Nova Reperta series (left) shows a seated scholar manipulating a compass. On a nearby desk sits an armillary sphere like the one included in the exhibition (above).
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“We still tend to subscribe to the myth of ‘individual genius’—the idea that great inventions or works of art were always created by brilliant individuals working in isolation. They were more often the product of groups of artisans working together in workshops, as Stradanus’s plates show very clearly.”
Plate 5 from the Nova Reperta series (left) illustrates a bustling Renaissanceera print shop. The exhibit includes several early printed works, like this leaf from a Gutenberg Bible (above).
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Collaboration is central to Renaissance Invention in another way: the exhibition results from partnerships among the Newberry and two other local institutions, the Adler Planetarium and the Art Institute of Chicago. Adler and Art Institute curators have participated in exhibition-related public programs online, and both institutions have loaned items to the Newberry for display in the exhibition, including one of the few surviving specimens of an instrument that radically transformed life in the Renaissance: the astrolabe.
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n early January of this year, Karr Schmidt and Markey visited the Adler to meet with Pedro Raposo, Curator and Director of Collections. Raposo oversees the Adler’s large collection of historical scientific instruments. Karr Schmidt and Markey were there to view one of them: an early modern Portuguese mariner’s astrolabe. In addition to featuring the item in the exhibit, Markey and Karr Schmidt were creating a short film about the item for visitors to watch in the Newberry’s galleries. The mariner’s astrolabe was developed at the end of the fifteenth century by Portuguese navigators, Raposo explained once the cameras were rolling. It consisted of a brass disc that could be suspended at waist level from the finger using an attached ring. Picking up the astrolabe, Raposo showed how it was used: a sailor would turn a central moving part, called an alidade, until sunlight or light from the Pole Star (depending on location) passed through two pinholes. The alidade’s
angular degree could then be read to determine latitude with unprecedented precision. By the time Stradanus featured one in his plates, the mariner’s astrolabe had transformed navigation and helped usher in the age of exploration. Mariner’s astrolabes like the Adler’s—which was salvaged from the wreckage of a ship that sank off the coast of Florida in 1622—are rare. “There are only around 100 mariner’s astrolabes that survive from the Renaissance era, so the Adler’s is quite valuable to historians,” explains Markey. Because it was submerged for centuries, many of the original markings have eroded, but its production date—1616—is still visible, as are many of the degree inscriptions. The generous loan indicates a close partnership between the Newberry and the Adler Planetarium, which also has loaned the library an iron clock from early modern Germany, a sixteenth-century Dutch lodestone, and a German armillary sphere. All are featured in the exhibition alongside representations of them in Stradanus’s plates. The Art Institute of Chicago has loaned the Newberry a pair of sixteenth-century German stirrups, a Renaissanceera French model field cannon and carriage, and a set of sixteenth-century Milanese armor. Like the objects borrowed from the Adler, the Art Institute loans make it possible for visitors to compare Stradanus’s engravings of these inventions with three-dimensional examples.
The exhibition includes a suit of armor on loan from the Art Institute. The Newberry Magazine
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On loan from the Adler Planetarium, this early modern iron clock is one of the many scientific inventions appearing in the exhibition.
Gallery visitors can compare Renaissance-era inventions—like these spectacles—to their depictions in printed works from the period.
The Newberry’s Renaissance Invention exhibition also inaugurates altogether new kinds of collaboration. For the first time ever, the library has worked with a local brewery, Sketchbook, to create a special-edition beer to celebrate the exhibition. A saison called “Nova Reperta” is now available at Sketchbook’s taprooms in Evanston and Skokie. “One of the inventions featured in Nova Reperta is distillation,” observes Karr Schmidt. “We recognized from the outset that distilling our own whiskey was a tall order. Instead, we’ve partnered with Sketchbook’s extraordinarily talented brewers, who in true Renaissance style have worked together to craft a phenomenal artisanal beer.” The library also teamed up with Jen Farrell, a local print-maker and co-founder of the Chicago-based Starshaped Press. In addition to appearing in a video shown in the exhibition, Farrell is leading a virtual exhibitionthemed adult education seminar for the Newberry this fall. She also designed and printed a broadsheet in honor of Renaissance Invention that is now on sale in the Newberry’s Rosenberg Bookshop. From loan items and public programs to beer and broadsheets, the cooperative efforts at the center of the new exhibition mirror the collaboration celebrated in Stradanus’s Nova Reperta. During the Renaissance, disparate groups of scholars, artists, and intellectuals converged and produced new ways of seeing, representing, and interacting with the world. For better or worse, the inventions that emerged changed the way people lived and related to one another and their surroundings. 12
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In the end, Stradanus’s Nova Reperta prints remind us that while technologies are always changing, our responses to them stay (more or less) the same. Matthew Clarke is Communications Coordinator at the Newberry. Renaissance Invention was commended by the 2019 Sotheby’s Prize for its innovation and curatorial excellence. Renaissance Invention is supported by Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Blair, Jr., Dr. Christine M. Sperling, Pam and Doug Walter, and an anonymous donor.
To access the digital resources developed as part of Renaissance Invention, including a podcast and a family activity book, visit newberry.org/renaissance-invention.
Conserving Ptolemy By Lesa Dowd and Matthew Clarke
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mong the treasures of the Newberry’s collection is Ayer MS 740, an extraordinary fifteenth-century handwritten copy of a seminal work of geography: Ptolemy’s treatise Cosmographia. The book is as beautiful as it is historic—yet few would know. For until recently, Ayer MS 740 was inaccessible to researchers due to its extreme fragility. Over the centuries, the degradation of the ink burned holes through the pages—a process known as “lacing” (right). To make matters worse, the book had been rebound too tightly by a previous binder, exacerbating the damage (below).
Because the costs of conservation were prohibitively high, Ayer MS 740 had been unavailable for decades. But in 2017, a group of donors at the Newberry’s annual Booked for the Evening event agreed to fund the repair and digitization of the manuscript. With their generous support, our conservation team (Lesa Dowd, Leith Calcote, Henry Harris, Kasie Janssen, and Virginia Meredith) was able to mend the book’s deteriorating pages and prepare the manuscript for digitization. In what follows, we take you step-by-step through the conservation process. * * * When it arrived in the Newberry’s conservation lab, Ayer MS 740 was encased in a beautiful nineteenth-century binding—but one so tight that it had restricted the opening and hastened the deterioration of the book.
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As a first step, conservators disbound the book, separating its boards, peeling away the spine leather, and scraping off its paper spine linings.
Next, they separated the book’s sections by cutting the sewing threads, removing sewing cords, and carefully detaching each gathering of pages.
Once the manuscript was entirely disbound, conservators could examine the ink on the pages. They tested the ink for solubility in water and alcohol, as well as for the presence of corrosive chemical agents.
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Conservators had begun the project hoping to use a water-based treatment to stop the destructive acids in the ink from causing any more damage. However, after examining the ink, they decided against the water-based option. Instead, they chose to stabilize the book’s pages to prevent further deterioration. To do this, they applied thin tissue paper to deteriorating pages using a custom-made adhesive. These tissue papers are designed to stabilize pages and prevent further lacing.
As a result, Newberry conservators were able to mend the pages where letters had begun to lace through the paper, while also forestalling further degradation throughout the book. Their success in repairing the damage can be seen in these images of one page before treatment (left) and after treatment (right). The Newberry Magazine
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Conservators then rebound the book, sewing individual sections on to raised cords and lining the new spine with tissue and linen. Finally, they encased the re-sewn sections in a period-appropriate, semilimp paper binding and placed the repaired book in a custom-made, clothcovered drop spine box, where it now lives in the stacks, with the rest of the Newberry collection. Lesa Dowd is Director of Conservation and Matthew Clarke is Communications Coordinator at the Newberry. Support for the conservation of Cosmographia was provided by Mark and Meg Hausberg, Victoria J. Herget and Robert K. Parsons, and Nancy and Richard Spain.
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Decision 1920
A Return to “Normalcy” By Paul Durica and Alex Teller Decision 1920: A Return to “Normalcy” runs September 15 – November 25
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n 1920, American voters (including women for the f irst time) went to the polls amid profound change and turmoil. The aftershocks of World War I and the 1918 inf luenza pandemic were still being felt, prohibition was raising questions about the government’s right to restrict individual behavior for the common good, and racial violence had erupted across the country during the “Red Summer” of 1919. Decision 1920, on view at the Newberry through November 25, puts visitors in the shoes of the voter faced with a monumental question 100 years ago: embrace change and move forward or go back to how things were at the beginning of the century? “The 1920 presidential election is notable for how it echoes in the present but also for how it differs from 2020,” says Paul Durica, Director of Exhibitions at the Newberry. “In 1920, as in 2020, the candidates offered starkly different visions for how America should respond to cataclysmic events. But race went largely unacknowledged by both parties—a silence that speaks volumes as we look back on this moment today.”
Promotional material for the Democratic ticket, James M. Cox and Franklin D. Roosevelt.
“The G.O.P. Looks Good to Me.” Boston: Suffolk Music Publishing, 1920.
Harding conducted much of his campaign from the front porch of his home in Marion, Ohio. Postcard by Curt Teich and Company, ca. 1923.
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“ In 1920, as in 2020, the candidates offered starkly different visions for how America should respond to cataclysmic events. But race went largely unacknowledged by both parties—a silence that speaks volumes as we look back on this moment today.”
Women’s suffrage extended gradually across the United States before the passage of the 19th Amendment. Illustration from Puck magazine, 1915.
This map, showing the sites of 3,436 lynchings across the United States, was published as part of the NAACP’s national campaign in support of a federal anti-lynching bill in Congress. The bill made it through the House of Representatives in 1918, but it was blocked by Southern Democrats in the Senate.
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While campaigning for president, Harding promised Americans a “return to normalcy.” As this cartoon by the Chicago Tribune’s John T. McCutcheon implies, three months into the Harding Administration, Americans were still debating what was meant by this promise.
Warren G. Harding (the Republican candidate) and James M. Cox (the Democratic candidate) agreed on most major issues. Their differences came out in their campaign strategies. Tapping into Americans’ anxieties about social change and civil unrest, Harding promised a “return to normalcy.” Cox, meanwhile, vowed to continue Woodrow Wilson’s ambitious policies that put the United States at the center of global politics. Cox and his running mate, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt, crisscrossed the country by rail to shore up support in states that Wilson had barely won in the 1916 election. Harding stayed home, giving speeches from his front porch in Marion, Ohio. But Harding’s folksy image belied the media-savvy tactics his campaign manager, Chicago advertising executive Albert Lasker, deployed on his behalf.
Lasker ensured that Harding’s nostalgia-tinted campaign would achieve national exposure through mass media such as magazines, newsreels, and phonograph recordings. In the end, Harding won the election with more than 60% of the vote—the largest margin of victory since James Monroe ran unopposed in 1820. “The exhibition highlights the candidates, the campaigns, and the issues that defined the 1920 election,” says Durica. “As visitors move through the gallery, they’ll experience a pivotal moment in American history, when the future was uncertain and the stakes were extremely high.” Paul Durica is Director of Exhibitions and Alex Teller is Director of Communications and Editorial Services at the Newberry. The Newberry Magazine
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“In Chicago, They’ve Got Covenants” By Daniel Greene
Newberry building, 1943.
Like much of the nation, Chicago is reckoning with long-standing racial inequality. Since the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many, many others, we’ve witnessed protests in the streets, including in the immediate neighborhood around the Newberry. Violent unrest in nearby Kenosha, Wisconsin, followed the police shooting there of Jacob Blake, who was raised in Evanston. These protests are more than a reaction to recent incidents of police violence; they are a response to the systemic racism that has plagued the United States for centuries. This racism has been enforced by law, discriminatory practices, and horrific violence. 20
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At the Newberry, we believe deeply that historical context should inform how we respond to contemporary crises. This includes examining the library’s own history and investigating institutional complicity in structural racism. Confronting this painful history, we hope, will help us build a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive Newberry. With this aspiration in mind, this article looks at the Newberry’s signing of restrictive covenants for properties it owned during the 1930s and 1940s.
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ometime between 1933 and 1937, the Near North Side The Association’s campaign made a difference on Property Owners Association distributed a mailer that Chicago’s Gold Coast, the neighborhood around the included a map intended to stoke fears about African Americans library; more than 1,000 property owners—individuals and moving to Chicago’s North Side. It minced no words: “The Near organizations—agreed to these covenants. The Newberry North Side Property Owners Association proposes to ask every also signed a restrictive covenant in 1941 on at least one South property owner in the district to agree to sell and rent to white Side property that it owned, at the urging of officials from the people only.” The Newberry Library received multiple copies nearby University of Chicago. of this hate-fueling propaganda, which warned that it would be These restrictive covenants, which contributed to “unthinkable” to “sit idly by and permit the great Near North institutionalizing racism across Chicago, are located in an Side District, one of the finest in the entire world, to be occupied archival folder at the Newberry with the uncomfortable title by a race alien to the men and women who have established their “Negro [sic] Restriction Agreements, 1936–1938.” Most of the homes and places of business here.” documents found there include dry legalisms, casually stated The Near North Side Property Owners Association’s and undoubtedly perceived as ordinary by most elite whites at campaign targeted residential, institutional, and commercial the time. Research in the Newberry’s institutional archives has owners. The Newberry was on the Association’s mailing list not revealed any evidence of consternation or disagreement because the library owned many properties on the North Side among the library’s entirely white leadership about signing these of Chicago and beyond. Some of this property likely dated covenants. We’ve found instead only matter-of-fact exchanges back to the estate of Walter Newberry, who died in 1868 and left a substantial sum to establish a free, public library. The Newberry Library continued to buy, sell, rent, and improve both commercial and residential properties for decades after its 1887 founding. A 1937 tax schedule, for example, shows that the Newberry held at least 33 properties in the city and three more in the suburbs, appraised in total at more than $437,000, the equivalent of more than $5.6 million in 2020. By the 1950s, the Newberry had sold most of its real estate. After emphatically warning that African Americans would “take over” the neighborhood, the Near North Side Property Owners Association assured readers that it had “already started on the work of preparing the necessary agreements” to prevent African Americans from moving into the area. These agreements, known as “restrictive covenants,” were contracts among property owners on a given street or in a given neighborhood that prohibited selling or leasing to members of a designated group of people, typically African Americans and sometimes Jewish Americans. The Newberry’s financial agent (who was neither a staff member nor a board member but acted in an official capacity on behalf of the library) authorized multiple restrictive covenants during the 1930s and early 1940s, barring African Americans from renting some Newberryowned properties. The Near North Side Property Owners Association collaborated with the Chicago Real Estate Board to make it relatively easy on the Newberry and others by providing suggested boilerplate contractual language and sometimes even paying the legal fees associated with In a f lyer from the 1930s, the Near North Side Property Owners Association referred to the presence of African Americans in the neighborhood as a “very grave situation.” executing these restrictive covenants. The Newberry Magazine
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To stoke fear among white property owners, the Near North Side Property Owners Association supplemented their racist campaign with a map showing African American residences in the neighborhood.
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A 1938 letter from a Chicago law firm summarized the terms of a restrictive covenant that the Newberry would go on to sign. Restrictive covenants were an inf luential tool that ensured Chicago’s housing remained segregated.
between the library’s financial agent and its establishment Chicago law firm, which assured the financial agent: “As a matter of law, we see no objection to your signing an agreement against colored [sic] occupancy.” This commonplace tone shines a light on the reality that systemic racism, carried out through discrimination in housing, was unremarkable to elite, white Chicagoans during the 1930s. Many white property owners who entered into these pacts with each other likely believed that promising not to sell or rent to African Americans was a form of economic and social self-protection. As historian Wendy Plotkin has written, “The Newberry Library had both institutional and fiduciary reasons for signing an agreement that would allegedly protect property values. To attract readers to its portals, it was necessary to preserve a ‘desirable’ neighborhood—and through its signing, it most likely interpreted this as synonymous with ‘white.’” Signing restrictive covenants did not violate any laws; on the contrary, the courts effectively upheld covenants after challenges from the NAACP and others. The US Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to restrictive covenants in a 1926 case, Corrigan v. Buckley, stating that 14th Amendment protections applied to actions by states, not individuals. Therefore, white
residents banding together and refusing as individuals to sell or rent property to African Americans remained legal. Owners who violated these agreements could be sued by their neighbors, and African American tenants could be evicted from properties where these covenants were in place. In 1948, the US Supreme Court ruled in Shelley v. Kraemer that restrictive covenants were unenforceable by courts, though were not illegal, per se. That important decision was not followed by f loodgates of equity opening in Chicago housing, of course. The Federal Housing Authority was slow to make sure that owners complied. Moreover, as historian Richard Rothstein has claimed, federal officials showed “contempt” for the ruling in Shelley v. Kraemer. In the Newberry’s archive, there seems only to be silence about the Supreme Court’s ruling. Restrictive covenants matter deeply for understanding the history of racism in the United States because they were one of many real estate practices that helped to powerfully enforce residential segregation during the early twentieth century. Residential segregation predated the Great Migration of African Americans to Chicago and intensified following the devastating race riot in the summer of 1919. The violence began on July 27, 1919, when George Stauber, a white man, hurled stones at Eugene Williams, an African American teenager who swam across an invisible racial boundary line in Lake Michigan. Williams drowned, and the city erupted, with whites indiscriminately attacking African American Chicagoans in their neighborhoods and homes. One week of violence left 38 people dead (23 of them African American; 15 white) and more than 500 injured. (In 2019, one hundred years after the riots, the Newberry collaborated with 13 partners across the city to sponsor programs and publish educational resources on the history and legacy of the violence in Chicago in 1919.) Well after 1919, whites in Chicago looked for ways to maintain segregation in the city’s housing and neighborhoods. As the Chicago Defender, the city’s leading African American newspaper, convincingly explained in the summer of 1939: “Restrictive covenants have replaced bombings and riots. A subtler and more difficult tactic to combat has been evolved.” Despite the Defender’s claim that riots had been “replaced” by restrictive covenants, segregation in housing continued to be enforced by standard real estate industry practices as well as through violence. White mobs led multiple riots in the late 1940s and 1950s as African Americans moved into certain neighborhoods or public housing projects. The threat of violence combined with the “ordinariness” of discrimination in real estate industry practices may have been far more inf luential than restrictive covenants. Even though covenants were often more difficult to secure (those hoping to enforce them had to go door-to-door to get owners to sign on, The Newberry Magazine
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Restrictive covenants... enabled and magnified Chicago’s racial inequities. Cultural institutions have an important role to play in helping Chicagoans understand this history.
as the Newberry’s case shows), they remained an inf luential tool that ensured Chicago’s housing would remain segregated. According to Rothstein, some “175 Chicago neighborhood associations were enforcing deeds that barred sales or rentals to African Americans” by 1943. Today, the legacies of racial restriction and violence mark Chicago’s geography and Chicagoans’ daily experiences. Restrictive covenants are part of this legacy, for they bonded white people and white institutions together in expressions of power and unity against African Americans. Homeownership has long been an important avenue for the accumulation of generational wealth. Restrictive covenants helped to deny this possibility to many African Americans in Chicago for decades, while also contributing to engrained segregation within the city. Restrictive covenants, in other words, enabled and magnified Chicago’s racial inequities. Cultural institutions have an important role to play in helping Chicagoans understand this history. The Newberry’s 2016 exhibition, Civil War to Civil Rights: African American Chicago in the Newberry Collection, explained that restrictive covenants were one of many discriminatory methods used to segregate housing in Chicago. Both a restrictive covenant and a restriction agreement from the Newberry’s archive were on display in the gallery, but the exhibition text could have addressed more directly the fact that these covenants applied to Newberry-owned property. These restrictive covenants included provisions that “no part of said premises shall in any manner be used or occupied directly or indirectly” by African Americans and that “no part of said premises shall be sold, given, conveyed, or leased” to African Americans. At the Newberry, we champion the fact that we have been free and open to the public since 1887. Yet, the conception of the public that the library serves has not always been inclusive. For more than 130 years, the Newberry has encouraged study of the humanities for its own sake. Many of us on the library’s staff also hope that by understanding the past, we might engage more effectively with current problems, and even help shape a better future. The Newberry will continue, for example, to collect evidence from social protest
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“Restrictive Covenants” by Langston Hughes, from One-Way Ticket, in 1949.
in Chicago, in the belief that preserving history demands finding ways to include the voices of those who have been marginalized or unheard. And, as we take steps to address diversity, equity, and inclusion at the library, we’ll remain committed to exploring historical truths, even when they are painful and hit close to home. In 1949, poet Langston Hughes captured these truths in a way that sounds hauntingly resonant today. His poem “Restrictive Covenants,” includes this stanza: In Chicago They’ve got covenants Restricting me— Hemmed in On the South Side, Can’t breathe free. Daniel Greene is President and Librarian at the Newberry.
DONOR S POTLIG HT
Growing up at the Newberry By Caroline Carter
Laura Edwards
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t’s the morning of September 4, 1990. Laura F. Edwards, a PhD student in her mid-twenties, is starting her first day of work at the Newberry. She’s been hired as the Administrative Assistant to Jim Grossman, Director of the Family and Community History Center. It’s a two-year termed position and, though Edwards doesn’t know it yet, the beginning of a lifelong relationship with the Newberry. “It was really formative, those two years. Jim folded me into all the projects they were doing,” she recalls. It’s August 20, 2020, and Edwards, now a distinguished professor and author, is speaking with me via Zoom. She has a fond look on her face as she recounts that first Newberry experience. “I got to sit in on all of these meetings and say things— and people listened to me, which was an experience because in graduate school nobody really listened to me.” She laughs. “I felt like I grew up at the Newberry.” That’s a running theme in our conversation—the Newberry as a place for personal and professional growth. “It helped me
“ The Newberry provided a place for somebody who might have fallen through the cracks otherwise to find a way in the world.” become who I am now,” she explains. “So, I feel a certain tie to it, which I don’t feel when I walk into other places.” Edwards has worked at institutions across the country, including the University of Chicago, the University of South Florida, UCLA, and, most recently, Duke. Her research focuses on women, gender, and law in the nineteenth century, particularly in the US South, and she is currently working on her fifth book, Only the Clothes on Her Back: Textiles, Law, and Commerce in the Nineteenth Century United States. In January 2021, she will begin work at Princeton as the Class of 1921 Bicentennial Professor of the History of American Law and Liberty. She will be the first woman to hold the prestigious title. Throughout Edwards’s career, the Newberry has remained “a home away from home.” She has returned during summers and when on sabbatical, sometimes as an independent scholar or as a fellow. In 1994 she received a Monticello College Foundation Fellowship at the Newberry, and in 2006, an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellowship. The Newberry Magazine
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“The Newberry is more than just a collection of books.... There is also a spirit of dedication to scholarship and to people. And that spirit is something invaluable because it makes the books important, and it changes people’s lives.”
In fact, her newest book was researched partly at the Newberry, during a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship Edwards received in 2019. “I wrote my first book at the Newberry when I had the Monticello College Foundation fellowship. I wrote my second book when I was there in the summers as an independent scholar. Then I wrote my third book there when I had my second fellowship. It’s a lot of work to have done in one place,” she remarks. “It’s kind of amazing actually.” In addition to the time spent conducting research and writing books, she valued the Newberry as a place to connect with other scholars who have become friends and mentors. Edwards points to two fellow historians, Janice Reiff and Michael Grossberg, as examples. Reiff, a Professor of History at UCLA, was among Edwards knows she’s not alone in her desire to give back to the first people Edwards met at the Newberry. She became a the community. “I think a lot of people have that connection mentor to Edwards, then a colleague, and now is a lifelong friend. to the Newberry because you do have these seminars, you do Grossberg, Professor Emeritus at Indiana University, met Edwards welcome graduate students in—it’s part of the culture.” while he was a fellow at the Newberry in 1991. Almost thirty As we wrap up our conversation on Zoom, I ask if there years later, he wrote one of the recommendation letters for the is anything we haven’t yet touched on that she wants readers position she received at Princeton. to know. “Sometimes I feel like people look only to the collections, “The Newberry is more than just a collection of books,” but the resources at the Newberry are also the people,” says she says after a moment. “I hope that when people are thinking Edwards. “If you get stuck in your own institution and graduate about the Newberry, it is as more than just the physical building school, you’re basically always a kid. The Newberry allows you and the physical collections. Those are important, but there is to step out of that particular kind of paternalistic relationship also at the Newberry a spirit of dedication to scholarship and to and discover yourself as a scholar on your own.” people. And that spirit is something invaluable because it makes Edwards explains that she didn’t have much family support the books important, and it changes people’s lives.” when attending graduate school, so the Newberry was an especially invaluable resource. She credits the Newberry’s Caroline Carter is Donor Relations and Communications community of fellows, donors, and staff with helping her build Coordinator at the Newberry. the career she wanted. “I am very grateful for them. None of these people had to do that, and not all of them are still connected to the Newberry, but the Newberry provided a place where it was possible for somebody who might have fallen through the cracks otherwise to find a way in the world.” This experience has inspired Edwards to donate regularly to the Newberry’s Annual Fund and become a member of the Blatchford Society, the library’s planned giving society, even as she continues to be an active member of the Newberry’s community of scholars. “It’s important to give back,” she explains, “to make sure that what happened for me can still happen for other people— especially in the times we live now, when the humanities are on the chopping block.” Working at the Family Community History Center, March 1991. 26
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THANK YOU! The Newberry Community’s Commitment on Display Like many cultural institutions, the Newberry faced an uncertain spring. With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March, the library was forced to close the doors of its building and cancel all programs and significant events. This led to a loss in revenue. In response, on April 23 the Newberry announced that a group of Trustees would match all gifts to the Annual Fund up to a total of $100,000, encouraging the library’s community to support the organization in a critical time of need. Within 24 hours of announcing the match, 70 donors contributed $11,000. By the time the Newberry closed the books on its fiscal year at the end of June, more than 500 donors had contributed $216,000 toward the match in nine short weeks—more than doubling the initial goal! “The support of our entire community, especially in this time of great unrest and uncertainty, is inspiring,” says Newberry President Daniel Greene. “We rely on the
generosity of those who love the Newberry, and their commitment was on full display when we needed it most. On behalf of everyone at the library, I sincerely thank each and every person who supports our work.” Even as the Newberry has reopened our reading rooms and exhibition galleries, the economic challenges and loss of revenue brought on by the pandemic remain. Staff at the Newberry, however, are encouraged by what they saw in the spring and are hopeful for the fiscal year ahead. “With so much uncertainty around the pandemic, the Newberry likely has a tough year ahead of it,” says Greene. “But it’s heartening to know that we can rely on the unwavering dedication of our donors to help us weather the storm. They care so deeply about the library and its staff, and we know they’ll continue to support us in all we do.” To learn more about how you can support the Newberry, please visit newberry.org/give or contact the Development office at (312) 255-3599.
IN MEMORIAM
Adele Hast The Newberry is saddened to report the passing of scholar-inresidence Adele Hast, a long-time member of the Newberry’s community, in May 2020. Dr. Hast was a research scholar, book editor, and historian, whose association with the Newberry began in 1971, when she served as a research associate for the library’s Atlas of Early American History. She continued her work here as associate director of the Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History from 1976 to 1979. The breadth of Dr. Hast’s work at the Newberry and beyond ref lects her intellectual curiosity and her varied interests as a scholar. She possessed an abiding passion for Jewish history and culture, serving on the board of the Chicago Jewish Historical Society and authoring the Chicago Jewish History Index 1977–2002. Her PhD dissertation, completed at the University of Iowa in 1979, explored British Loyalists during the time of the Revolutionary War and led to the publication Loyalism in Revolutionary Virginia: The Norfolk Area and the Eastern Shore.
She was also project director and co-editor of Women Building Chicago 1790 – 1990: A Biographical Dictionary. Dr. Hast was a dear friend of the Newberry and scholar-in-residence for over two decades, making regular research visits to the library well into her eighties. “Adele was a quintessential Newberrian,” said President Daniel Greene. “Her many contributions to our scholarly projects, her deep knowledge of our collections, her warm relationships with staff and scholars, and her generous financial support are all evidence of her deep affection for what she called ‘her research home.’ Adele will be missed.” The Newberry Magazine
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RETROSPECT
Recent Events THE DEPORTATION MACHINE On September 10, the Newberry hosted a virtual conversation between Daniel Greene, the library’s president, and Adam Goodman, a former Newberry fellow and an associate professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Goodman’s new book, The Deportation Machine, traces the troubling history of the US government’s efforts to terrorize and expel immigrants since the late nineteenth century. In their discussion, Goodman detailed the history of US immigration policy, explaining how over the last 140 years federal, state, Newberry President Daniel Greene and Adam Goodman (right) discuss Goodman’s book The Deportation and local officials have forced as many Machine: America’s Long History of Expelling Immigrants. as 57 million immigrants out of the country. These efforts often rely not on formal deportation but rather the method of “voluntary departure,” an administrative, extra-legal process in which officials coerce undocumented immigrants into agreeing to leave the country on their own. Goodman talked about the challenges in unearthing archival evidence of a practice that is designed to leave no paper trail and about the role his research at the Newberry played in the development of his book. He also described the connections between immigration policy and profit—explaining how private transportation companies in the United States have contracted with the government to expel tens of thousands of deportees—and about the ways that immigrants and advocates have fought back against deportation efforts over the years.
THE ART OF RENAISSANCE WARFARE An age of artistic dynamism and cultural transformation, the Renaissance was also an era of explosive technological growth—especially in the area of warfare. In a virtual program held on September 17, Jonathan Tavares of the Art Institute of Chicago talked with the Newberry’s Suzanne Karr Schmidt, George Amos Poole III Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts, about military innovation in the period and how the development of artillery, stirrups, and new techniques for polishing armor transformed battlefields across the continent in the sixteenth and Suzanne Karr Schmidt, curator of rare books and manuscripts at the Newberry, gives viewers a peek inside the library’s exhibition Renaissance Invention: Stradanus’s “Nova Reperta.”
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seventeenth centuries. Held in conjunction with the Newberry’s fall exhibition, Renaissance Invention, which explores technological innovation in the Renaissance through print works and artifacts, the program focused on the military technologies featured in the exhibit, which include a model canon and a suit of armor, both on loan from the Art Institute. A co-curator of the exhibition, Karr Schmidt discussed the ways new military technologies were depicted in print works from the period, while Tavares—who serves as Curator of Arms, Armor, and European Decorative Arts before 1700 at the Art Institute—traced the development of the technologies themselves and their impact on life in Renaissance-era Europe. Illustrating their conversation with images of objects from the period and items showcased in the exhibit, Karr Schmidt and Tavares illuminated the artistry and craftsmanship at work in the new military technologies of the Renaissance period. Support for Renaissance Invention public programs is provided by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.
COOKING BY THE BOOK What can cooks and writers learn from the cookbooks of the past, and how can historians and other scholars learn from the ways we cook today? On October 2, the Newberry hosted “Cooking by the Book,” a virtual conversation between chefs, authors, and scholars about food, culture, and history. Inaugurating “Food and the Book”—a virtual conference co-sponsored by the Newberry and the Folger Shakespeare Library—the program featured four panelists whose work focuses on the intersection of cooking, writing, and Clockwise from upper left: Irina Dumitrescu, David B. Goldstein, Paul Fehribach, Tamar E. Adler, and historical research: chef and writer Michael Twitty participate in a virtual conversation about how history and culture intersect in food. Tamar E. Adler, literary scholar Irina Dumitrescu, local chef and author Paul Fehribach, and culinary historian and educator Michael Twitty. Throughout the conversation, which was moderated by Shakespearean scholar David B. Goldstein, the participants shared their thoughts about how books and recipes from the past have shaped—and continue to shape—food culture and cooking to the present day. In addition to discussing the privileging of written over oral recipes and the manner in which culinary canons are constructed, the panelists talked about the challenges of recipe interpretation and the ways cooking can serve as a source of pleasure in periods of social or public health crisis like our own.
Watch recordings of these programs at youtube.com/thenewberrylibrary
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The Newberry Annual Report 2019–20
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Letter from the Chair and the President
Dear Friends and Supporters of the Newberry, The Newberry’s 133rd year began with sweeping changes in library leadership when Daniel Greene was appointed President and Librarian in August 2019. The year concluded in the midst of a global pandemic which mandated the closure of our building. As the Newberry staff adjusted to the abrupt change of working from home in mid-March, we quickly found innovative ways to continue Chair of the Board of Trustees President and Librarian engaging with our many audiences while making David C. Hilliard Daniel Greene plans to safely reopen the building. The Newberry responded both to the pandemic and to the civil unrest in Chicago and nationwide with creativity, energy, and dedication to advancing the library’s mission in a changed world. Our work at the Newberry relies on gathering people together to think deeply about the humanities. Our community — including readers, scholars, students, exhibition visitors, program attendees, volunteers, and donors — brings the library’s collection to life through research and collaboration. After in-person gatherings became impossible, we joined together in new ways, connecting with our community online. Our popular Adult Education Seminars, for example, offered a full array of classes over Zoom this summer, and our public programs also went online. In both cases, attendance skyrocketed, and we were able to signif icantly expand our geographic reach. With the Reading Rooms closed, library staff responded to more than 450 research questions over email while working from home. The Newberry’s Institute for Research and Education also pivoted quickly to meet scholars’ needs during the building’s closure. Our long-term fellows began holding their weekly seminar online, maintaining camaraderie as they concluded their fellowships at home. After our spring 2020 undergraduate seminar on Shakespeare in art, philosophy, and politics was interrupted, Newberry staff and seminar faculty helped students from DePaul, Loyola, Roosevelt, and UIC complete their projects from home and share final presentations by video. Our research centers supported scholarly networks remotely, offering virtual reading groups, professional development seminars for academics and graduate students, and a popular video series on the history of the Black Death and other medieval epidemics. Staff across the library participated regularly in an array of videos, livestreams, and social media activity promoting the Newberry’s collection to the public. Our Communications and Marketing Department gave audiences many creative opportunities to engage with Newberry collections and staff during the f irst months of the pandemic. The new “#NLfromhome” video series provided the opportunity to learn about staff members’ favorite items from the Newberry collection. “Chatting Poetic,” a new live video series on Instagram, featured staff members ref lecting on poems that resonated with them during these times of crisis.
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Perhaps the most dramatic impact of the pandemic was the skyrocketing demand for Newberry digital resources. Newberry Transcribe, an interactive site where the public can transcribe handwritten letters and diaries from our collections, saw a 243% increase in usage and more than 41,000 submissions from volunteers. Our Digital Collections for the Classroom, sets of digitized primary source materials with accompanying classroom exercises for teachers, were accessed 358,853 times last year, providing much needed digital content to teachers as they transitioned to remote learning. *** The pandemic had a signif icant impact on the library’s f inances and fundraising operations as well. With in-person gatherings cancelled, the Newberry experienced a substantial decline in revenue from our event rentals program and our bookshop; postponing our 2020 Award Dinner and cancelling the July 2020 Book Fair further compounded our losses. To offset these losses, our Board of Trustees issued a challenge to the Newberry community in April, offering to match all gifts made to our Annual Fund up to a total of $100,000. Donors acted, contributing $216,000 before June 30. This match enabled us to exceed our Annual Fund goal, raising $1,939,509 for the year. The number of new donors to the Annual Fund—more than 450 in the last year—demonstrates that our base of support in the community continues to grow. We are grateful to all of you who made a gift to the Newberry’s Annual Fund this past year. These unrestricted funds are always critically important; they have been particularly signif icant during the pandemic as we maintained our operations and supported our staff. The Annual Fund results highlighted a strong fundraising year. The Newberry raised $8,937,333 in FY20, an increase of more than $700,000 over the prior year. More than $1 million came from estate gifts, including a generous bequest from the estate of former Vice President for Research and Academic Programs, Richard H. Brown. Other notable gifts included a commitment from the National Endowment for the Humanities to fund an additional three years of our long-term fellowships program; commitments from three new major donors to support exhibitions at the library; and a new six-f igure grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to make our Indigenous studies collections more accessible to tribal communities. Operating revenues for FY20 totaled $12.46 million, with expenses of $12.37 million. On June 30, the Newberry’s investment portfolio balance stood at $76.3 million. Further details on our f inancial position can be found at the end of this report. *** Although the pandemic occupied much of our focus during the last months of the f iscal year, it is worth remembering that the Newberry operated under regular conditions from July 2019 through mid-March 2020—or nearly 70% of service days in a typical year. Statistics for the period during which the building was open to the public suggest that we were on track to have an impressive year of service. Reader registrations of at least 3,394 readers equate to 72% of last year’s registrants. We recorded 7,642 reading room visits by 3,278 unique readers, or 79% of the visits in FY19; this average of 44 readers per day was up from 39 last year. The highest Reader Services increase was in collection presentations: 209 collection presentations to 2,890 attendees, or 82% of last year’s total. Reference inquiries totaled 6,785 in FY20, or 72% of the prior year’s. The Department of Public Engagement also showed impressive audience f igures, with programs drawing nearly 10,000 in-person attendees through March 2020. Among the department’s most notable
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accomplishments was the conclusion of the year-long project Chicago 1919: Confronting the Race Riots, which was honored with the 2020 Outstanding Public History Project Award from the National Council on Public History. The series drew more than 2,700 participants to 11 public programs and generated signif icant attention from the media and from Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who spoke at the Newberry’s July 2019 Bughouse Square Debates. A resounding success, Chicago 1919 will serve as a model for future collaborative efforts at the Newberry. At the beginning of 2020, we established a new Exhibitions Department at the Newberry, in our continuing effort to diversify our audience and encourage visitors to engage with our collection. The Newberry mounted two thematic exhibitions this past year: What Is the Midwest? and Jun Fujita: American Visionary, presented in partnership with the Poetry Foundation. The pandemic forced the rescheduling of Renaissance Invention: Stradanus’s “Nova Reperta” (which you can read about in this issue of the magazine) from the spring to the fall of 2020. The Newberry’s fellowships program continues to be a core library activity and remains highly attractive to scholars across the humanities. During FY20, 12 long-term fellows conducted research on wideranging topics from journalism and democracy in twentieth-century Chicago to mapmaking in early modern Venice. The total number of short-term fellowship awards increased modestly, with 44 shortterm fellows in residence for sustained research in the collection. Our fellowships program remained among the most competitive in the nation, with an average of 8% of applicants accepted this year. The library’s broader service to scholars also continued apace, with 17 ongoing scholarly seminars and 66 scholars-in-residence at the Newberry.
FISCAL YEAR 2019–20 (70%)
FISCAL YEAR 2018–19
One of the most signif icant accomplishments of the past year in Collections and Library Services was the migration of the online catalog’s public interface and technical infrastructure to ALMA Primo VE. Within the Newberry, the project required strong leadership and substantial effort by Collection Services staff, who addressed long-standing catalog maintenance issues, and by Reader Services staff, who created online documentation and instructional videos for readers.
72%
Reader Registrations
79%
Reading Room Visits
82% 72%
Collection Presentations
Reference Inquiries
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The list of new acquisitions purchased by or donated to the Newberry is too long to detail here. Some notable highlights include a 1493 copy of Cicero’s Rhetoricae ueteris, an incunable by Troilus Zani, a printer who had not been represented in our collection; the papers of Daniel Henderson, an attorney involved in many cases on behalf of Native American tribes in the early twentieth century; materials chronicling the 1915 Eastland Disaster ship accident in Chicago; papers of Nelson Algren, Sybil Shearer, and Eve L. Ewing; and a 2019 print portfolio, Territorio y Libertad, by a collaborative group of American and Mexican printmakers, which will be prominently featured in a 2021 exhibition on Latin American revolutions. *** Although the pandemic has altered the ways we do our work, it has not prevented us from enhancing our collection, making it accessible, and using it as a basis to engage both scholars and the general public. Nor has the pandemic stopped us from looking ahead: planning is already underway for new collaborative projects on Indigenous studies and on revolutions in Latin America; for exhibitions exploring Chicago’s contributions to avant-garde art and early modern concepts of race; and for ongoing improvements to the Newberry, such as enhancing our digital infrastructure and service to the public. As we navigate our way through uncertain conditions, all of our work is guided by our shared values and institutional priorities, including: Providing free and open access Building and sustaining communities of learning Advancing and disseminating knowledge for diverse audiences Growing and preserving the collection Each of these pillars will continue to be tested during the pandemic and its aftermath. They will also guide us as we reaffirm our commitment to promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion at the Newberry. In response to the nationwide civil unrest following the death of George Floyd in May, the Newberry joined other Chicago cultural organizations to condemn systemic racism and express support for those who are mobilizing against it. We intend to back up our words with actions. In the coming months and years, we will engage in an institution-wide effort to become a more equitable institution of learning for all. To emerge as a stronger Newberry at the end of this period of uncertainty, we will have to remain creative and f lexible. We hope we can continue to rely on your support as we rise to meet the many challenges ahead. Finally, after three years as Chair of the Board of Trustees, David C. Hilliard will step down in fall 2020 and be succeeded by Burton X. Rosenberg. All of us at the Newberry appreciate David’s longstanding service and dedication to the library.
Sincerely yours,
David C. Hilliard, Chair, Board of Trustees
Daniel Greene, President and Librarian
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Collections and Library Services Summary statistics for the period July 1, 2019, through June 30, 2020.
DEVELOPING THE COLLECTION
• The Newberry received, as gifts from 167 individual donors, 1,519 titles (1,974 volumes) and 46 Modern Manuscript collections. • 944 titles ordered by subject specialists (curators and selectors). • $452,225 expended on library materials, of which $282,541 was for antiquarian materials. • $19,177 expended on electronic resources. • The Newberry subscribed to 2,350 current serials.
CATALOGING AND PROCESSING LIBRARY MATERIALS
• 3,832 titles cataloged. • 1,129 titles (1,205 volumes) from the Roger S. Baskes Collection cataloged. • The Newberry has 1,133,233 records in the statewide catalog of academic and research libraries, of which 610,885 are held only by the Newberry. • 48 Modern Manuscripts collections (226.6 linear feet) accessioned. • 18 Modern Manuscripts collections (204.6 linear feet) processed. • 25 Encoded Archival Description (EAD) online archival inventories, or finding aids; 12 EAD stub finding aid records; and 8 MARC cataloging records for Modern Manuscripts collections created.
CONSERVING THE COLLECTION
• 88 items received Level 1 treatments, which take less than 15 minutes. • 1,270 items received Level 2 treatments, which take 15-120 minutes. • 86 items received Level 3 treatments, which take over 120 minutes. • 955 phase and corrugated boxes were created by four volunteers.
• 131 items were surveyed, treated, and prepared for “From the Stacks” rotations in the Hanson gallery.
DIGITAL INITIATIVES
• 2,045,572 digital-collection items and digital resource pages viewed or downloaded. • 12% overall increase in use of digital collections at Newberry at Internet Archive, Explore Chicago collections, custom digital collection pages. • 358,853 webpages viewed by teachers and students at Digital Collections for the Classroom, an increase of 9%. • 41,032 manuscript pages transcribed by volunteers at the redesigned crowdsourcing website Newberry Transcribe. • 11,977 postcards sent, transcribed, or tagged at new crowdsourcing websites Postcard Tag and Postcard Sender. • 10 websites were launched, fully redesigned, or significantly rebuilt. • 2 Twitter accounts, @DigitalNewberry and @ctpabot, joined the Newberry’s official social media program to promote new and existing projects and interact with online users. • 94% more collection items digitized, supported by project funding for outsourcing projects.
EXHIBITIONS
Trienens Galleries What Is the Midwest?r September 20-December 31, 2019 Total attendance: 7,089 Curators: Jim Akerman, Analú López, and Matt Rutherford Jun Fujita: American Visionary January 24-March 31, 2020* Total attendance: 3,407 Curators: Katherine Litwin and Fred Sasaki, Poetry Foundation * The exhibition closed to the public on March 13, 2020. Exhibition tours Guided public tours: 52 Guided private tours: 4 Total number of tours: 56 Total attendance: 670 people Hanson Gallery From the Stacks June 11, 2019-August 29, 2019 August 30, 2019-November 18, 2019 November 20, 2019-March 9, 2020 Attendance: 37,538
SERVING OUR USERS
• 3,394 individuals registered as Newberry readers, an average of 20 registrants per day. • 20,131 items requested for use in Reading Rooms. • 3,278 unique readers made 7,642 visits to Reading Rooms. • 8,276 reference interactions took place at service desks and 1,491 answered via reference correspondence. • 3,928 participants attended Instruction and Outreach activities, including 209 collection presentations for 2,890 attendees. • 20,131 items paged for circulation to Reading Room and reserve readers.
• 280 items were surveyed, treated, prepared, and installed for What Is the Midwest? and Jun Fujita: American Visionary exhibitions in the Trienen galleries.
The Newberry Annual Report
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Public Engagement SUMMARY FOR 2019–20
Total participation: 10,956 Adult Education Seminars: 2,184 Public programs: 7,770 Teacher programs: 1,002
ADULT EDUCATION SEMINARS
Total seminar attendance: 2,184 Total seminars offered: 183 SEMINAR SUBJECT AREAS
Arts: 23 Chicago Interest: 17 Genealogy: 15 History and Social Sciences: 41
Mayor Lori Lightfoot presents the Altgeld Freedom of Speech Award to journalist Derrick Blakley at the 2019 Bughouse Square Debates.
Charles Whitaker and Natalie Moore ref lect on the legacies of the 1919 Chicago race riots.
Language: 6 Literature and Theater: 42 Music: 15 Philosophy and Religion: 2 Writing Workshops: 11 Jun Fujita: American Visionary Exhibition Series: 6 “Pandemic Perspectives” Series: 5 Programs canceled due to pandemic: Seminars: 38 Participants affected: 568
TEACHER AND STUDENT PROGRAMS
Jack Miller Center Three-Day Teacher Summer Seminar: Constitutional Rights: Their Roots and Scope
Programs canceled due to pandemic:
Organized by Svetovar Minkov, Roosevelt University; Guest Faculty: Svetozar Minkov, Roosevelt University; Nathan Tarcov, University of Chicago; and Ada Palmer, University of Chicago
NTC-Plus seminars: 2
August 7 – 9, 2019
Newberry Traveling Collections classroom visits: 5
19 attended Jack Miller Center One-Day Teacher Seminar: The 14th Amendment
Organized by Svetozar Minkov, Roosevelt University; Guest Faculty: Frank Colucci, Purdue University Northwest
Teacher seminar enrollment: 891
November 16, 2019
Total seminar attendance: 701
19 attended
Total seminars offered: 46 Total student field trips to the Newberry: 2
Newberry Teacher’s Consortium (NTC)
Total field trip attendance: 43
38 standard seminars; 600 attended
Total Newberry Traveling Collections classroom visits: 8
5 NTC Plus seminars with collection presentations; 58 attended
Total Traveling Collections visits attendance: 185
CPScholars
Other classroom visits: 3
1 seminar; 5 attended
Total other classroom visits attendance: 73 New Digital Collections for the Classroom: 8
National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution—Chicago Chapter Summer 2019 Newberry Teacher Fellow: Niamh Burke
“Tejanas: Fighting Erasure in the Borderlands”
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Fall/Winter 2020
Newberry Teacher’s Consortium standard seminars: 4 Jack Miller Center Teacher Seminar: Human Rights v. Constitutional Rights
PUBLIC PROGRAMS
Total program attendance: 7,770 Number of programs: 43 Programs affected by the pandemic: Public programs postponed: 11 Public programs canceled: 8 THE BUGHOUSE SQUARE DEBATES
Washington Square Park July 27, 2019 (attendance 972) Welcome and Introduction
Lori Lightfoot, Mayor of Chicago
Public Engagement Main Debate: The Legacies of 1919
The Language of Bronzeville: Literature and Race in Chicago
Firelines: Midwestern Prairie Restoration
Eve Ewing and Ken Warren; moderated by Liesl Olson
December 3, 2019 (attendance 62)
September 24, 2019 (attendance 218) Held at the Newberry
FLOE: Dance and Dialogue about Climate Change
Derrick Blakley, broadcast and print journalist, recently retired from CBS 2 Chicago
Policing Racial Violence: 1919 and Beyond
Carrie Hanson and Dan Vimont; dancers from The Seldoms dance company
Simon Balto, Andrew Clarno, and Robin Robinson; moderated by Nancy Villafranca
February 25, 2020 (attendance 179)
OPEN HOUSE CHICAGO
October 15, 2019 (attendance 230)
Foodways of the Midwest
Natalie Y. Moore, South Side Reporter, WBEZ Chicago Charles Whitaker, Dean and Professor, Medill School, Northwestern University John Peter Altgeld Freedom of Speech Award
October 19, 2019 (attendance 1,070) CHICAGO 1919: CONFRONTING THE RACE RIOTS
A series of event organized by the Newberry in collaboration with other Chicago cultural institutions. Reflections of Youth: Spoken Word Performance and Conversation
Louder Than a Bomb Squad performers: Penelope Alegria, Nicholas Berry, Nilah Foster, Anaya Frazier, Jerome Kelly, Sarah Kim, Taisaun Levi, Jonquil McCray, Kristal Moseley, Kyla Pereles, Derrian Samuels, and Morgan Varnado. Moderators: National Youth Poet Laureates and YCA alumnae Patricia Frazier and Kara Jackson August 12, 2019 (attendance 198)
Held at Chicago History Museum Red Summer/Winter Blues, Rough Cut Screening and Discussion
Panelists: Barbara Allen, Gail Baker, Cameron McWhirter, and Jacqueline Stewart; Musicians: Sean “SB” Butler, Ugochi Nwaogwugwu, and Reginald Robinson November 14, 2019 (attendance 133) Held at DuSable Museum of African American History WHAT IS THE MIDWEST? PROGRAMS Roundtable: What Is the Midwest?
Toby Higbie, Jon Lauck, Erik McDuffie, Jean O’Brien, and Sujey Vega October 5, 2019 (attendance 140)
Held at Harold Washington Library
Members of the Young Chicago Authors Bomb Squad give a spoken-word performance as part of the Chicago 1919 series.
Jill Metcoff and Mike Mossman
Cynthia Clampitt, Pat Doerr, Liz Garibay, Michael Innis-Jiménez, Alison Orton, Sherry Williams March 7, 2020 (attendance 162) Great Migration Music at Bronzeville’s Forum Hall
Jada-Amina Harvey, Aaisha Haykal, Bernard Loyd, Erica Ruggerio, and Karen Stafford September 26, 2019 (attendance 81) Indigenous Languages and Peoples in the Midwest: Celebrating Indigenous Peoples Day and the International Year of Indigenous Languages
Daryl Baldwin, Marcus Carriaga, Victorino Torres Nava, Michele Wellman-Teeple, and Marcus Winchester; moderator, Margaret Noodin. October 12, 2019 (attendance 60)
Dancers from The Seldoms dance company represent the effects of climate change through modern choreography. The Newberry Annual Report
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Public Engagement CONVERSATIONS AT THE NEWBERRY
SHAKESPEARE PROJECT OF CHICAGO PERFORMANCES
News in Chicago . . . Today and Tomorrow
Rick Kogan and Carol Marin October 1, 2019 (attendance 151)
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
Photographic Memory: Carlos Javier Ortiz Reflects on Fujita’s Iconic Images
October 12, 2019 (attendance 220)
Carlos Javier Ortiz, Ethan Michaeli March 10, 2020 (attendance 80)
The Midwest as Place
Kristin Hoganson and Timothy Gilfoyle December 5, 2019 (attendance 145) MEET THE AUTHOR Where the Angels Lived: One Family’s Story of Exile, Loss, and Return
Christmas Comes But Once a Year
December 14, 2019 (attendance 225) Richard III
January 11, 2020. (attendance 187)
Two Books on Policing, Violence, and Torture in Chicago
Simon Balto and Laurence Ralph October 2, 2019 (attendance 80) Southern Exposure: The Overlooked Architecture of Chicago’s South Side
Lee Bey in conversation with Amanda Williams
Imagining the End: Thoughts on Mourning, Happiness, and Radical Hope
Jonathan Lear Romeo and Juliet
February 18, 2020 (attendance 179)
February 22, 2020 (attendance 160)
Margaret McMullan August 29, 2019 (attendance 42)
DAVID L. WAGNER DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP FOR HUMANISTIC INQUIRY
CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS JUN FUJITA: AMERICAN VISIONARY EXHIBITION PROGRAMS Jun Fujita: American Visionary Curators’ Talk
Graham Lee, Katherine Litwin, and Fred Sasaki February 4, 2020 (attendance 215) The Love and Life of Jun Fujita
Drag Queen Story Hour
Miss JerFay and Miss Sutton September 14, 2019 (attendance 84) Drag Queen Story Hour
Muffy Fishbasket and Rylan Reed November 2, 2019 (attendance 41)
Takako Day, Graham Lee, and Ryan Yakota February 13, 2020 (attendance 94)
October 23, 2019 (attendance 212) Barrio America: How Latino Immigrants Saved the American City
Andrew Sandoval-Strausz November 12, 2019 (attendance 67) Books That Built Chicago: Chicago’s Architectural History in Print
Robert Bruegmann, Kim Coventry, John Ronan, and Pauline Seliga December 11, 2019 (attendance 115) A New World Begins: The History of the French Revolution
Jeremy Popkin February 6, 2020 (attendance 124)
Graham Lee and the Poetry Foundation’s Katherin Litwin and Fred Sasaki introduce the winter exhibition Jun Fujita: American Visionary, co-sponsored by the Newberry and the Poetry Foundation.
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Fall/Winter 2020
Public Engagement
Carol Marin and Rick Kogan discuss the state of journalism as part of Conversations at the Newberry.
Scholar and Newberry Trustee Jean O’Brien discusses representations of Indigenous peoples in the United States during a virtual public program.
MISCELLANEOUS PROGRAMS
Freedom Ride Opera Panel Discussion/ Performance
Sophonisba Breckinridge: Championing Women’s Activism in Modern America
The Importance of Cultural Memory: An Evening with the Newberry Library and the National Endowment for the Humanities
Tazewell Thompson and Lidiya Yankovskaya; Singers: Cornelius Johnson, Lauren Michelle, and Robert Sims
Anya Jabour in conversation with Mary Hale
Charles Bethea, Lynn Osmond, Jon Parrish Peede, David Spadafora, and Christopher Woods
January 29, 2020 (attendance 184)
June 3, 2020 (attendance 197) Monumental Mobility: The Memory Work of Massasoit
August 14, 2019 (attendance 78)
VIRTUAL PROGRAMS
Jean O’Brien and Lisa Blee in conversation with Rose Miron
Ten Days That Shook the World: Eisenstein and the Russian Revolution
The World of Juliette Kinzie: Chicago Before the Fire
June 17, 2020 (attendance 204)
Frank Biletz and Julia Denn
Ann Durkin Keating in conversation with Brad Hunt
Newberry Trivia Night
September 14, 2019 (attendance 227)
April 14, 2020 (attendance 249) Children’s and Youth Literature from the UNAM Collection
Introducing “Postcard Tag”
Erika Erdely, Gina Gamboa, Ana Elsa Pérez Martínez, and Gema Ortega
Samantha Blickhan, Ellen Handy, Jennifer Dalzin, Will Hansen, Jen Wolfe, Brad Hunt
September 17, 2019 (attendance 77)
May 7, 2020 (attendance 81)
The City-State of Boston: Refiguring Colonial American History
Troublemakers: Chicago Freedom Struggles Through the Lens of Art Shay
Colonial History Lecture Mark Peterson
Erik S. Gellman in conversation with Brad Hunt
October 26, 2019 (attendance 132)
May 14, 2020 (attendance 124)
Paul Durica and Kristin Emery June 30, 2020 (attendance 120)
Page vs. Stage: Inside Shakespeare’s First Folio
Peter Garino and Jill Gage May 20, 2020 (attendance 171)
The Newberry Annual Report
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Fellowship Programs 2019–20 FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM STATISTICS
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellow
Long-Term Fellows: 12
Elisa Garcia, Professor of History, Fluminense Federal University
Fellowship Dollars Awarded from Newberry funds: $357,000 Short-Term Fellows: 44 47 months of funding
National Endowment for the Humanities and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellow
Fellowship Dollars Awarded from Newberry funds: $122,500
Kimberly Hedlin, Contingent Faculty in Literature, UCLA
Fellowship Dollars awarded through Partners: $16,250
Rudolph Ganz Fellow
Faculty Fellows: 4 Fellowship Dollars Awarded: $5,000 Total Fellowship Dollars Awarded from the Newberry: $492,500 Publication Grant Subventions: 2 recipients
Thomas Kernan, Assistant Professor of Musicology, Roosevelt University 2019–20 SHORT-TERM FELLOWS
Arthur and Janet Holzheimer Fellow in the History of Cartography
Eleanor Coulter, PhD candidate in History, McGill University Institute for the International Education of Students Faculty Fellow
Zulima Sánchez, Senior Lecturer, Social and Political Sciences, Administrative and European Law, Salamanca University Lawrence Lipking Fellow
Ilana Larkin, PhD candidate in Literature, Northwestern University
Frances C. Allen Fellow
Midwest Modern Language Association Fellow
Total Number of Scholars supported: 62
Victoria Clark, PhD candidate in Musicology, University of Virginia
*Cynthia Smith, PhD candidate in Literature, Miami University
LONG-TERM FELLOWS
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Fellow
Newberry Consortium in American Indian Studies Faculty Fellows
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellows
*Kelly Summers, Assistant Professor of History, MacEwan University
Jennifer Denetdale, Associate Professor of American Studies, Northern Arizona University
Nicholas Abbott, Assistant Professor of History, Old Dominion University
John S. Aubrey Fellow
Karen-Edis Barzman, Professor of Art History, Binghamton University
*Victoria Jackson, PhD candidate in History, York University
Todd Carmody, Visiting Assistant Professor of Literature, Hamilton College
Lester J. Cappon Fellow in Documentary Editing
Deborah Cohen, Professor of History, Northwestern University
*Isabella Magni, Postdoctoral Associate in Italian and Digital Humanities, Rutgers University
Laura Edwards, Professor of History and Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies, Duke University
Jan and Frank Cicero Fellow
Grant Dollars Awarded: $8,000
Eugene Park, Filmmaker Audrey Lumsden-Kouvel and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellow
Charles Montgomery Gray Fellows
Heather Allen, Associate Professor of Spanish, University of Mississippi
*Claudia Catalano, Postdoctoral Scholar in Literature, University of Rome “La Sapienza”
Lloyd Lewis Fellow in American History and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellow
Tom Arnold-Forster, Postdoctoral Scholar in History, University of Cambridge Monticello College Foundation Fellow
Federica Caneparo, Postdoctoral Scholar in Literature, University of Chicago
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Fall/Winter 2020
Anca-Delia Moldovan, PhD candidate in Art History, University of Warwick Mihoko Suzuki, Professor of English, University of Miami *Kevin Windhauser, PhD candidate in Literature, Columbia University ElDante Winston, PhD candidate in Architectural History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Jacob Lee, Assistant Professor of History, Pennsylvania State University Louise Siddons, Associate Professor of Art History, Oklahoma State University Megan Tusler, Contingent Faculty of Literature, University of Chicago *Tisa Wenger, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Yale University Newberry Consortium in American Indian Studies Graduate Fellows
Neil Dodge, PhD candidate in History, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Chelsea Frazier, PhD candidate in History, University of Oklahoma Katherine Godfrey, PhD candidate in History, Pennsylvania State University *Kevin Hooper, PhD candidate in History, University of Oklahoma *Amanda Johnson, PhD student in History, Oklahoma State University *Sherri Sheu, PhD candidate in History, University of Colorado at Boulder
Fellowship Programs Newberry Library – American Musicological Society Fellow
The Renaissance Society of America/Kress Foundation Fellow
Carolyn Watts, PhD candidate in Musicology, Princeton University
Jakub Koguciuk, PhD Candidate in History of Art and Renaissance Studies, Yale University
Newberry Library – American Society for Environmental History Fellow
Anne Jacobson Schutte Fellow
*Stephen Hausmann, Assistant Professor of History, Temple University Newberry Library Center for Renaissance Studies Consortium Faculty Fellows
Sara Barker, Assistant Professor of History, University of Leeds *Daniel Nemser, Associate Professor in Literature, University of Michigan Newberry Library Center for Renaissance Studies Consortium Graduate Fellows
Erasmo Castellani, PhD candidate in History, Duke University Marlena Cravens, PhD candidate in Literature, University of Texas at Austin Newberry Library – École Nationale des Chartes Exchange Fellow
Filippo Petricca, PhD candidate in Romance Literature and Languages, University of Chicago Newberry Library – Jack Miller Center Fellows
*Justin Carroll, Associate Professor of History, Indiana University East Tessa Evans, PhD candidate in History, University of Tennessee Newberry Library Short-Term Fellows
*Joanna Cohen, PhD candidate in Musicology, University of Virginia Samantha Ege, PhD candidate in Musicology, University of York *Madison Heslop, PhD candidate in History, University of Saint Thomas *Nathan Tye, PhD candidate in History, University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana *Rachel Waxman, PhD candidate in History, Johns Hopkins University
*Kathryn Santner, Postdoctoral Scholar in Art History, University of London Society of Mayflower Descendants in the State of Illinois Fellow
Andrew Keener, Assistant Professor of Literature, Santa Clara University Arthur and Lila Weinberg Fellow
Ruth Lopez, Journalist Weiss/Brown Publication Subvention Award
Francesco Lucioli, Assistant Professor of Literature, University College Dublin Nina Rowe, Associate Professor of Art History, Fordham University
2019–20 FACULTY FELLOWS Associated Colleges of the Midwest Faculty Fellows
Elizabeth Prevost, Professor of History, Grinnell College Ralph Savarese, Professor of English, Grinnell College
Newberry Library Undergraduate Seminar Faculty Fellows
Megan Heffernan, Assistant Professor of English, DePaul University James Knapp, Professor of English, Loyola University Chicago
* Denotes a fellowship that was awarded in 2019-20 but the fellow was unable to come due to COVID-19. Fellows are able to reschedule their residencies in 2020-21.
Susan Kelly Power and Helen Hornbeck Tanner Fellow
Kathleen Whiteley, PhD candidate in History, University of Michigan The Newberry Annual Report
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Research Centers and Programming for Scholars 2019–20 NEWBERRY INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH AND EDUCATION STATISTICS
Scholarly activity by Research Centers and other units CENTER FOR RENAISSANCE STUDIES CONFERENCES, SYMPOSIA, AND LECTURES Petrarch in His Own Hand
Symposium July 16, 2019 Attendance: 45 Presenters:
Isabella Magni, Newberry Library Maddalena Signorini, Università degli Studi di Roma H. Wayne Storey, Indiana University Reading the Ministry in the Americas, 1492-Present
Michael Brown, University of Aberdeen Heather Bruegl, Stockbridge Munsee Community Band of Mohican Indians (remarks read in absentia by Rose Miron, Newberry Library)
Interactive Book Session, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries:
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Lesa Dowd, Newberry Library
Stephanie Fletcher, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries
Roger Ferlo, Bexley Seabury Seminary Federation
Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Newberry Library
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Douglas Litts, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries
Marina Garone Gravier, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Autumn Mather, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries
Megan Kelly, Newberry Library Mike Kelly, Amherst College Rose Miron, Newberry Library
Illustrating Manuscripts in the Premodern Age:
Lesa Dowd, Newberry Library Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Kenneth Sawyer, McCormick Theological Seminary Alice Schreyer, Newberry Library Collection presentation organized by Will Hansen and Analú López, Newberry Library Cosponsored by the D’Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies and the Centre for Early Modern Studies at the University of Aberdeen.
Interactive Book Session:
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Newberry Library Megan Kelly, Newberry Library Autumn Mather, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries Roundtable:
Symposium
The Art of Images in Premodern Books
October 10 – October 11, 2019
Symposium
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Organizer:
November 15, 2019
Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Newberry Library
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Attendance: 79
Douglas Litts, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries Autumn Mather, Ryerson and Burnham Libraries
Keynote Address:
Kelly Wisecup, Northwestern University Presenters:
Colin Pope Barr, University of Aberdeen
Print Demonstration, School of the Art Institute of Chicago:
Cohosted and cosponsored by the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Jeanine Coupe Ryding, School of the Art Institute of Chicago Shaurya Kumar, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
European Art Seminar participants examine books from the collection.
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Fall/Winter 2020
Demonstration of early printmaking techniques at the School of the Art Institute.
Research Centers and Programming for Scholars PROGRAMS FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS 2020 Multidisciplinary Graduate Student Conference
January 23 – January 25, 2020 Total Attendance: 68 Organizers:
Clara Biesel, University of Minnesota Katie Blankenau, Northwestern University
Miriam Wendling, KU Leuven Cella Westray, Northwestern University
Exposed to the Elements: Matter and Knowledge in Early Modern Europe
Anna Zayaruznaya, Yale University
Thursdays, January 16-April 2, 2020
Keynote Address:
Instructor:
Rob C. Wegman, Princeton University
Rebecca Zorach, Northwestern University
“Back to the Source”
Participants:
Cosponsored by the Society for Music Theory’s Early Music Analysis Interest Group and the Graduate Council at the University of Chicago.
Katherine Brown, University of Illinois at Chicago
Valentina Geri, University of Notre Dame Marcus Höhne, University of Kansas David Kemp, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Tania Kolarik, University of Wisconsin-Madison
ACADEMIC PROGRAMMING Early Modern Recipes Online Collective Transcribathon
Olivia Dill, Northwestern University LaMar Gayles, University of Illinois at Chicago Elizabeth Hunter, University of Illinois at Chicago Emily Kamm, Northwestern University Stephanie Lee, Northwestern University Juan Fernando Leon, Northwestern University
November 5, 2019
Kristin Lipkowski, University of Illinois at Chicago
Attendance: 60
Risa Puleo, Northwestern University
Hayla May, Oklahoma State University
Presenters:
Arianna Ray, Northwestern University
Kelli McQueen, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Megan Heffernan, DePaul University
Richard Reinhardt, University of Michigan
Lia Markey, Newberry Library
Michail Vlasopoulos, University of Chicago
Michal Zechariah, University of Chicago
Sarah Peters Kernan, EMROC/Newberry Library
Benjamin Weil, Northwestern University
Courtney MacPhee, Claremont Graduate University
Jen Wolfe, Newberry Library Customized Books, 1400–1700
Lecture May 29, 2020 (via Zoom) Attendance: 104 Walter S. Melion, Emory University
Organized globally by the Early Modern Recipes Online Collective and the Folger Shakespeare Library. Local event co-organized and cosponsored with the Newberry’s Department of Public Engagement.
Dissertation Seminar for Scholars of Religion and Politics
October 4, 2019; December 6, 2019; February 21, 2020; May 1, 2020 Directors:
Ellen McClure, University of Illinois at Chicago Music, Theory, and their Sources
Conference June 19 – June 30, 2020 (via Zoom) Total Attendance: 255
Ten-Week Graduate Seminars Reading Catalan for Research Purposes
Thursdays, October 3-December 5, 2019 Instructor:
Alba Girons Masot, University of Chicago
Jonathan Lyon, University of Chicago Participants:
Hayley Bowman, University of Michigan Megan Cole, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Participants:
Jorge Hernández-Lasa, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Kaitlin Browne, Northwestern University
Travis Knapp, University of Missouri
Nicole Corrigan, Emory University
David Papendorf, University of Central Michigan
Brian Forman, Northwestern University
Brendan Small, University of Chicago
Evan Campbell, SUNY-Potsdam
Kelli McQueen, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
David Douglass, The Newberry Consort (Live Presentation)
Adrian van der Velde, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Mario Antonio Cossío Olavide, University of Minnesota
Jan Volek, University of Minnesota
Patrick Fitzgibbon, University of Chicago
Adam Singh, Indiana University
Liam Hynes-Tawa, Yale University
Valentina Tikoff, DePaul University
Organizer:
Ryan Taycher, University of Massachusetts Amherst Presenters:
Kyle Adams, Indiana University Henry Burnam, Yale University
Zhenru Zhou, University of Chicago
Yujin Jang, University of Pittsburgh Megan Kaes Long, Oberlin Conservatory Brett Kostrzewski, Boston University Rachel McNellis, Library of Congress The Newberry Annual Report
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Research Centers and Programming for Scholars Research Methods Workshops
Library Services and Premodern Studies: An Introduction
Elisa Jones, Newberry Library
Exploring Digital Premodern Libraries
November 16, 2019
Natalia Maliga, Newberry Library
October 12, 2019
Director:
Virginia Meredith, Newberry Library
Director:
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Kyle Roberts, Loyola University Chicago
Participants:
Early Modern Anglo-Muslim Encounters
Participants:
Sheryll Blaschak, Wayne State University
March 6, 2020
Sheryll Blaschak, Wayne State University
Director:
MĂŠline Dumot, Northwestern University
William Edmundson, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Maxwell Gray, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Mya Frieze, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Logan Hughes, Claremont Graduate University
Yujin Jang, University of Pittsburgh
Nick Abbott, Old Dominion University
Yujin Jang, University of Pittsburgh
Luke Jennings, University of Western Ontario
Ingram Brannon, Northwestern University
Courtney MacPhee, Claremont Graduate University
Krystal Marsh, University of Pittsburgh
William Caldwell, Northwestern University
Laura Michelson, University of Iowa
Nicole Crisp, University of Arizona
Fabio Malfara, University of Western Ontario
Lino Mioni, Indiana University
Kelly Duquette, Emory University
Elizabeth Barrios Martinez, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Melissa Nunchuck, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Muhammad Farooq, Kent State University
Melissa Nunchuck, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Courtney Pollard, University of California, Davis
Megan Kelly, Newberry Library
Jyotsna Singh, Michigan State University Participants:
Madiha Ghous, Michigan State University Samantha Goodrich, University of Arizona
Austin Setter, Western Michigan University
Jerilyn Tinio, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Emily Sharrett, Loyola University Chicago
Lanson Wells, Kent State University
Hanna Khan, University of Illinois at Chicago
Kyle Smith, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Krislyn Zhorne, Loyola University Chicago
Sarah Le, Indiana University
Lanson Wells, Kent State University
Zhenru Zhou, University of Chicago
Marla Lunderber, Hope College
Guest Speakers:
Joshua Mangle, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Lauren Calcote, Newberry Library
Elizabeth Neary, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Lesa Dowd, Newberry Library
Maggie Schuster, University of Illinois at Chicago
Jill E. Gage, Newberry Library
Katie Sisneros, University of Minnesota
Jessica Grzegorski, Newberry Library
Ameer Sohrawady, Rutgers University
Henry Harris, Newberry Library
Tim Soriano, University of Illinois at Chicago
Collecting Histories: Introduction to Provenance Research
October 25, 2019 Director:
Shirin Fozi Jones, University of Pittsburgh Participants:
Ira Kazi, University of Western Ontario
Morgan Brittain, University of Iowa Lauren Cantos, Queen Mary University Erin Daly, University of Iowa MĂŠline Dumot, Northwestern University Mya Frieze, University of Wisconsin-Madison Emmaleigh Huston, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Claire Kilgore, University of Wisconsin-Madison Tania Kolarik, University of Wisconsin-Madison Nora Lambert, University of Chicago Melissa Nunchuck, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Emilee Ruhland, University of Pittsburgh Mindy Williams, Purdue University Krislyn Zhorne, Loyola University Chicago
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Fall/Winter 2020
The 2019 Mellon Italian Paleography institute participants with instructor Maddalena Signorini.
Research Centers and Programming for Scholars VIRTUAL PROGRAMMING
Virtual Coffee Klatsch
CRS Virtual Reading Group: The History of the Book
Biweekly meeting held via Zoom to share wisdom about writing, research, and teaching during the pandemic.
Organized by Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
April 21, 2020; May 5, 2020; May 19, 2020, June 2, 2020. Total attendance: 50
Session 1: Introduction to Bibliography
April 16, 2020
Work-in-Progress Colloquium
Attendance: 41 participants
Virtual program held via Zoom for panelists to receive feedback on current projects.
Expert Speaker:
Michael Johnston, Purdue University
May 21, 2020 Attendance: 23
Session 2: The Medievalness of Early Modern Books
Presenters:
April 30, 2020
Claire Taylor Jones, University of Notre Dame
Attendance: 62 participants
Silvia Z. Mitchell, Purdue University
Tato Gyulamiryan, Hope College
Expert Speaker:
Carol Symes, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Session 3: Emblems
May 14, 2020 Attendance: 41 participants
Affinity Groups
Scholars of Color (7 members) Parents and Caregivers (8 members) Scholars with Disabilities (3 members) Queer Scholars (5 members)
Expert Speaker:
Post-, Alt-, and Non-academic Scholars (5 members)
Mara Wade, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Contingent Scholars (3 members)
Session 4: Indigenous Bookmaking
Mid-Career Researchers (11 members)
May 28, 2020
Women and Femme Scholars (19 members)
Attendance: 65 participants Expert Speaker:
Claudia Brittenham, University of Chicago Session 5: Prints and Engravings
Early Career Researchers (23 members)
Accountability Partners
Two- and three-person partnerships assigned based on similarities in professional status, research interests, and discipline. 13 partnerships (36 total participants)
June 11, 2020 Attendance: 41 participants Expert Speaker:
Walter Melion, Emory University Premodern Writing Support Network
Organized by Rebecca Fall, Newberry Library April 9 – June 8, 2020 Total participants: 52
Directors of the Center for Renaissance Studies celebrate the 40th anniversary of its founding(left to right): Mary Beth Rose, Clark Hulse, Carla Zecher, Karen Christianson, and Lia Markey.
Online Video Series: “Learning from Premodern Plagues”
Organized by Lia Markey, Newberry Library “The Perils of Reopening: The Plague in Marseille, 588 CE”
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library Posted: June 2, 2020
“Plague Broadsides: Or, How a Dog Saved 17th-century Rome”
Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Newberry Library Posted: June 30, 2020 DIGITAL PROJECTS Italian Paleography
https://italian-paleography.library.utoronto.ca/ French Renaissance Paleography
http://paleography.library.utoronto.ca The Emblemata Politica In Context: Georg Rem’s Manuscript at the Newberry Library
https://publications.newberry.org/digital/ emblemata-politica/index Renaissance Invention: Stradanus’s Nova Reperta
Digital Collections for the Classroom (DCC) https://dcc.newberry.org/collections/novareperta The Making of the Bible, 1400–1700
Digital Collections for the Classroom https://dcc.newberry.org/collections/ making_bible
The Newberry Annual Report
45
Research Centers and Programming for Scholars THE D’ARCY MCNICKLE CENTER FOR AMERICAN INDIAN AND INDIGENOUS STUDIES
Tarren Andrews, University of Colorado-Boulder
CONFERENCES, SYMPOSIA, AND MAJOR LECTURES D’Arcy McNickle Annual Lecture
C.M. Downey, University of Washington
Indigenous Languages and Peoples in the Midwest
Melanie Frye, University of Oklahoma
October 12, 2019
Eman Ghanayem, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Attendance: 55
Grant Glinecki, Michigan State University
Daryl Baldwin, Myaamia Center at Miami University
Carlos Enrique Ibarra, University of New Mexico Amanda Johnson, Oklahoma State University
The Red Power Movement from Alcatraz to Standing Rock and Beyond
November 20, 2019 Attendance: 91 Presenter:
Nick Estes, University of New Mexico PROGRAMS FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS Newberry Consortium in American Indian Studies Summer Research Institute Revitalizing Indigenous Languages
Jessica Martin, University of Winnipeg Brian Neely, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Kai Pyle, University of Minnesota Breanna Leslie Skye, Cornell University
Jenny L. Davis, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Margaret Noodin, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Patrick Rochford, Newberry Library Participants:
Sarah A. Sadlier, Harvard University
Nick Estes gives the annual D’Arcy McNickle Lecture.
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Fall/Winter 2020
Marcus Carriaga, University of WisconsinMilwaukee Victorino Torres Nava, Xinachkalko Center and Anahuacalmecac School Margaret Noodin, Electa Quinney Institute and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Keely Smith, Princeton University
Michele Wellman-Teeple, Anishinaabemowin Pane Imersion Program
Newberry Consortium in American Indian Studies Graduate Student Conference
Marcus Winchester, Pokégnek Bodéwadmik Language and Culture Department
February 22, 2020 Monumental Mobility: The Memory Work of Massasoit
27 student participants
June 17, 2020
PUBLIC PROGRAMS
Attendance: 190
July 8, 2019 – July 26, 2019 Faculty:
Presenters:
First Nations Film and Video Festival
Presenters:
October 5, 2019 – March 7, 2020
Lisa Blee, Wake Forest University
Average Attendance: 28
Jean O’Brien, University of Minnesota
Presenters:
Ernest Whiteman III, First Nations Film and Video Festival Christine Diindiisi McCleave, National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition
Newberry Curator of Americana, Will Hansen presents a selection of materials related to Indigenous languages.
Research Centers and Programming for Scholars HERMON DUNLAP SMITH CENTER FOR THE HISTORY OF CARTOGRAPHY
The Twentieth Kenneth Nebenzahl, Jr., Lectures in the History of Cartography
CONFERENCES, SYMPOSIA, AND MAJOR LECTURES
“Redrawing the World: 1919 and the History of Cartography”
June 10, 2019-July 6, 2019 Co-Directors:
James Akerman, Newberry Library Peter Nekola, Luther College Participants:
Benjamin Benus, Loyola University
Matthew Kirschenbaum, University of Maryland Analú López, Newberry Library Rose Miron, Newberry Library
November 7-9, 2019 2019 Material Maps in the Digital Age
Alison Hinderliter, Newberry Library
Organizer:
Peter Nekola, Luther College Presenters:
Mirela Altic, Univesity of Zagreb Lindsay Frederick Braun, University of Oregon Daniel Foliard, University of Paris, Nanterre
Marcia Walker-McWilliams, Black Metropolis Research Consortium Participants:
Claire Arnold, Northwestern University Laura Colaneri, University of Chicago William Fitzsimons, Northwestern University
Jason Hansen, Furman University
Kwanda Ford, University of California Los Angeles
Rebecca Church, Metropolitan State University
Peter Nekola, Luther College
Jessica Friedman, Northwestern University
Manolo Estavillo, Marymount Manhattan College
William Rankin, Yale University
Johnathan Karp, Harvard University
Leslie Geddes, Tulane University
Penny Sinangolou, Wake Forest University
William Keniston, University of Illinois
Stef ka Hristova, Michigan Technical University
Hon Tze-ki, City Univeristy of Hong Kong
Juan Suárez Ontaneda, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Robert Caldwell, SOWELA Community
Micaela Kowalski, University of Virginia Alexandra Lindgren-Gibson, University of Mississippi
Eilin Rafael Pérez, University of Chicago CHICAGO STUDIES PROGRAM
Ruth Lo, Columbia University Peter Machonis, Florida International University John Pendell, University of Michigan-Flint
CONFERENCES, SYMPOSIA, AND MAJOR LECTURES
Catalina Rodríguez, University of Los Andes Robert Ryan, University of Illinois-Chicago Thais R. S. de Sant’ Ana, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Andrew Reading, MacLean Collection
The Archive: Theory, Form, Practice
Oishani Sengupta, University of Rochester
Clayton Rosati, Bowling Green State University
Faculty:
Stephanie Shiflett, Boston University
Liesl Olson, Newberry Library
Francena Turner, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Molly Taylor-Poleskey, Middle Tennessee State University
Brent Hayes Edwards, Columbia University
Erik Wenzel, University of Illinois at Chicago
William “Harry” York, Portland State University
Catherine Grandgeorge, Newberry Library
NEH seminar participants in Material Maps in the Digital Age explore the topography and ecological history of the Indiana Dunes.
Participants in Making Modernism explore the art collection at the South Side Community Art Center. The Newberry Annual Report
47
Research Centers and Programming for Scholars NEH Summer Institute – Making Modernism Faculty:
Liesl Olson, Newberry Library Lee Bey, Chicago Sun Times Jacqueline Goldsby, Yale University Adam Green, University of Chicago Walter Benn Michaels, University of Illinois Chicago Amy Mooney, Columbia College Sarah Kelly Oehler, Art Institute of Chicago Participants:
Michael Allen, Harvard University Colleen Boggs, Dartmouth College Mark Burford, Reed College Clare Callahan, University of Texas at Austin Wendy Castenell, The University of Alabama Wendy Geniusz, University of WisconsinEau Claire
Newberry Library Undergraduate Seminar 2020 students on a tour of the stacks.
Sara Gerend, Aurora University Ellen Handy, The City College of New York Almas Khan, Georgetown University Law Center
NEWBERRY INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH AND EDUCATION SCHOLARLY SEMINARS
Agnes Malinowska, University of Chicago
British History Organizers:
Deborah Cohen, Northwestern University
Liane Malinowski, University of North Texas
American Art and Visual Culture Seminar
Jake Mattox, Indiana University South Bend
Organizers:
Erin McCarthy, Columbia College Chicago
Sarah Burns, Indiana University
Brett McMillan, Columbia University
Diane Dillon, Independent Scholar
Amani Morrison, University of Delaware
Erika Doss, University of Notre Dame
Chicago: City of Commerce and Design, 1889–1990
Jenny Mueller, McKendree University
Elizabeth McGoey, Art Institute of Chicago
Organizers:
Crystal Rudds, Malcolm X College Davis Smith-Brecheisen, University of Illinois at Chicago Nicole Spigner, Northwestern University Rebekah Waalkes, Tufts University Anna Wager, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Bess Williamson, School of the Art Institute of Chicago John Young, Marshall University
Stephen Pincus, University of Chicago
Penelope Dean, University of Illinois at Chicago
Nancy Newman, University at Albany-SUNY Uraina Pack, Clarion University
Fredrik Albritton Jonsson, University of Chicago
American Literature Seminar Organizers:
Michael Golec, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Walter Benn Michaels, University of Illinois at Chicago
Eighteenth-Century Seminar
Kenneth Warren, University of Chicago
Organizers:
Timothy Campbell, University of Chicago American Political Thought Seminar Organizers:
D. Bradford Hunt, Newberry Library Andrew Trees, Roosevelt University
Lisa A. Freeman, University of Illinois at Chicago Richard Squibbs, DePaul University Helen Thompson, Northwestern University Gender and Sexuality Studies Seminar
Borderlands and Latino/a Studies Seminar Organizers:
Xóchitl Bada, University of Illinois at Chicago Gema Santamaría, Loyola University Adam Goodman, University of Illinois at Chicago
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Fall/Winter 2020
Organizers:
Elizabeth Son, Northwestern University Francesca Morgan, Northeastern Illinois University Ronak K. Kapadia, University of Illinois at Chicago
Research Centers and Programming for Scholars History of Capitalism Seminar
Premodern Seminar
Organizers:
Organizers:
Rudi Batzell, Lake Forest College
Lydia Barnett, Northwestern University
Destin Jenkins, University of Chicago
Timothy Crowley, Northern Illinois University
Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, Loyola University Chicago
Christopher Fletcher, Newberry Library
Irish Studies Seminar Organizers:
Megan Heffernan, DePaul University
ONGOING PROGRAMS Newberry Fellows Seminar
16 sessions Newberry Library Colloquia
37 sessions
Religion and Culture in the Americas Seminar Organizers:
Keelin Burke, Newberry Library
Kathy Cummings, University of Notre Dame
Bridget English, University of Illinois at Chicago
Karen Johnson, Wheaton College
Colleen English, Loyola University
Deborah Kanter, Albion College
Labor History Seminar
Malachy McCarthy, Claretian Missionaries Archives USA-Canada
Organizers:
Kevin Schultz, University of Illinois at Chicago
Peter Cole, University of Illinois at Chicago
Rima Lunin Schultz, Independent Scholar
Colleen Doody, DePaul University Liesl Orenic, Dominican University
Urban History Dissertation Group
Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, Loyola University Chicago
Organizers:
Nicholas Kryzcka, University of Chicago
American Indian and Indigenous Studies Seminar Organizer:
Rose Miron, Newberry Library Milton Seminar
UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS ASSOCIATED COLLEGES OF THE MIDWEST SEMINARS
Organizers:
Stephen Fallon, University of Notre Dame Christopher Kendrick, Loyola University Chicago
One for The Books: The Pleasures & Politics of Reading Faculty:
Paula McQuade, DePaul University
Elizabeth Prevost, Grinnell College
Regina Schwartz, Northwestern University
Ralph Savarese, Grinnell College Fall 2019, 16 undergraduate students
European Art Seminar Organizers:
Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Newberry Library Lia Markey, Newberry Library Walter Melion, Emory University
NEWBERRY LIBRARY UNDERGRADUATE SEMINAR Shakespeare’s Afterlives: Literature, Philosophy, Politics, and the Visual Arts, 1623–2020* Faculty:
Megan Heffernan, DePaul University James Knapp, Loyola University Spring 2020, 20 undergraduate students * T his program was completed virtually after the COVID-19 pandemic closed the Newberry’s building in March 2020.
The Newberry Annual Report
49
Honor Roll of Donors Ms. Celine Fitzgerald
Ms. Margarete K. Gross
Julius N. Frankel Foundation
Mrs. Mary P. Hines
Madeleine and Joe Glossberg
Mr. and Mrs. R. Stanley Johnson
Dr. Hanna H. Gray John R. Halligan Charitable Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Keiser Donor Advised Fund
Robert A. and Lorraine Holland
Laura Baskes Litwin and Stuart Litwin
ITW
Mr. and Mrs. John W. McCarter, Jr.
Professor Lawrence Lipking
Ken* and Jossy Nebenzahl
Barry MacLean
Professor and Mrs. Larrance M. O’Flaherty
PRESIDENT’S CABINET ($25,000 AND ABOVE)
Mr. Stephen A. MacLean
Dr. Diana Robin
Roger and Julie Baskes
Professor James H. Marrow and Dr. Emily Rose
Martha Roth and Bryon Rosner
Joan and William Brodsky
Mr. Andrew R. McGaan
Mr. Brian Silbernagel and Ms. Teresa Snider
Jan and Frank Cicero, Jr.
Andrew and Jeanine McNally
Carolyn and David Spadafora
The Crown Family
David E. McNeel
Jan and Bruce Tranen
The Davee Foundation
Ms. Mary Minow
Joan and Robert Feitler
Cindy and Stephen Mitchell
Ms. Carla J. Funk
Dr. Gail Kern Paster
Alice and Richard Godfrey
The Pattis Family Foundation
Mrs. Mary L. Gray
Jean E. Perkins and Leland E. Hutchinson
Mark and Meg Hausberg
Mr. John P. Rompon and Ms. Marian E. Casey
Victoria J. Herget and Robert K. Parsons
Dr. William H. Cannon, Jr. and Mr. David Narwich
John W. and Jeanne M. Rowe
Celia and David Hilliard
Holly and Bill Charles
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.
Dr. Elizabeth Amy Liebman
Nancy Raymond Corral
Adele Simmons
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Siragusa
Ms. Shawn M. Donnelley and Dr. Christopher M. Kelly
Nancy and Richard Spain
Professors Stephen and Verna Foster
Carl W. Stern and Holly Hayes
Alan and Carol Greene
Liz Stiffel
Ted and Mirja Haffner
Gail and John Ward
Adele* and Malcolm H. Hast
Yellow-crowned Foundation
Janet and Arthur Holzheimer
The Newberry Library gratefully recognizes the following donors for their generous contributions received between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2020.
THE ANNUAL FUND
The following donors generously made gifts to the Annual Fund and are recognized as members of the President’s Fellows or Newberry Associates.
Janis W. and John K. Notz, Jr. Christine and Michael Pope Roy and Irene Rettinger Foundation Sheli Z. Rosenberg and Burton X. Rosenberg Mr. and Mrs. Rudy L. Ruggles, Jr.
Robert Beasecker and Erika King Joan and John Blew
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Jiganti
Karla Scherer Harold B. Smith
PRESIDENT’S SUSTAINING FELLOWS ($2,500–$4,999)
PRESIDENT’S SENIOR FELLOWS ($5,000–$9,999)
Jay F. and Sylvia Krehbiel
Tom and Melanie Berg
Ms. Helen Marlborough and Mr. Harry J. Roper
Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Blair, Jr.
Ms. Helen McArdle
Charles H. and Bertha L. Boothroyd Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. McCamant
PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE ($10,000–$24,999)
Dr. and Mrs. Tapas K. Das Gupta
Edith Rasmussen Ahern and Patrick Ahern
Professor Jean M. O’Brien
John and Michele Donley
Mr. Gregory L. Barton
Father Peter J. Powell
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Franke
Mr. T. Kimball Brooker
Dr. James Engel Rocks
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Galvin
Buchanan Family Foundation
Sahara Enterprises, Inc.
James J. and Louise R. Glasser
Rob Carlson and Paul Gehl
Morrell M. Shoemaker*
Sue and Melvin Gray
Carton Family Fund
Mrs. Anne D. Slade
Daniel Greene and Lisa Meyerowitz
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wedgeworth, Jr.
Mr. David B. Smith, Jr. and Ms. Ilene T. Weinreich Carol Warshawsky
Mr. Lewis Collens
50
Fall/Winter 2020
Mr. and Mrs. Don H. McLucas, Jr.
* Deceased
Honor Roll of Donors Mr. Paul R. Wiggin and Mrs. Lisa Wiggin
Rosemary J. Schnell
Mr. and Ms. George R. Johnson
Thomas K. Yoder
Ms. Alice Schreyer
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Kearney
Mr. Robert J. Zarse
Stephen A. and Marilyn Scott
Jonathan and Nancy Lee Kemper
Helen Zell
Junie L. and Dorothy L. Sinson
Kovler Family Foundation
Anonymous (2)
Ms. Grace K. Stanek
The Lawlor Foundation
Christian Vinyard
Ms. Lou Levine
Diane and Richard Weinberg Robert Williams
Ms. Sonya Malunda and Dr. E. Charles Lampley
Dr. Ellen T. Baird
Nora L. Zorich and Thomas W. Filardo
Mr. Arthur M. Martin
Mr. Charles T. Cullen
Anonymous (4)
Ann and Christopher McKee
PRESIDENT’S SUPPORTING FELLOWS ($1,500–$2,499)
Greg Miller and Edith Chen
Kimberly A. Douglass Dr. Lynne E. Fisher Dr. Michael P. Fitzsimmons
SCHOLARS ($1,000–$1,499)
The Charles W. Palmer Family Foundation Joe and Jo Ann Paszczyk
The Franklin Philanthropic Foundation
Mr. James R. Akerman and Ms. Luann Hamilton
Mr. Martin A. M. Gneuhs
Ms. Lynn Barr
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Rutherford
Mr. and Mrs. William Goldberg
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Block
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Schaal
Hjordis Halvorson and John Halvorson
Ms. Andrea Bond
Seyfarth Shaw LLP
Cheryl and Hill Hammock
John* and Judy Bross
Ilene and Michael Shaw Charitable Trust
Mr. William M. Hansen and Ms. Jaime L. Danehey
Mr. and Mrs. Allan E. Bulley III
Alyce K. Sigler
Mr. and Mrs. Dean L. Buntrock
Professor Eric Slauter
Mr. Thomas B. Harris
Ms. Margaret K. Carton and Mr. Harlan Stanley
Mrs. Diane W. Smith
Pati Heestand Ms. Kay D. Hinn
The Chicago Literary Club
Ms. Elizabeth Teich
Edward C. Hirschland
Barbara and George Clark
Mr. Peter Vale
Mr. D. Bradford Hunt
Ms. Sharon P. Cole
Anonymous (4)
Jane and Don Hunt
Leigh and Doug Conant
Mr. and Mrs. Martin D. Jahn
Ronald Corthell and Laura Bartolo
Mrs. Loretta N. Julian
Mrs. Ariane Dannasch
Jared Kaplan and Maridee Quanbeck
Magdalene and Gerald Danzer
Professor Karen-Edis Barzman
Professor and Mrs. Stanley N. Katz
The Dick Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Warren L. Batts
Ann C. Bates Kittle
David and Catherine Dolan
The Benevity Community Impact Fund
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Mahoney
Nancie and Bruce Dunn
Dr. Heather E. Blair
David and Anita Meyer
Mr. Henry Eggers
Mrs. Sara Blanshard and Mr. Luke Blanshard
Jackie and Tom Morsch
Mr. Michael L. Ellingsworth
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Bliss
Mr. Charles H. Mottier and Mr. Philip J. Vidal
Dr. William E. Engel
Dea Brennan
Dr. Karole Schafer Mourek and Mr. Anthony J. Mourek
Elizabeth Fama and John Cochrane
Ms. Alice C. Brunner
Sonja and Conrad Fischer
Ms. Sara N. Paretsky
Pat and David Buisseret
Ruthie Newberry Gessinger
Ms. Laurette Petersen
Caxton Club
Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Gilford
Meredith Petrov
Mr. Henry E. Charles
Professor Elliott J. Gorn
Nancy and Alan Petrov
Dr. D. Stephen Cloyd
Donald and Jane Gralen
Ben and Nancy Randall
Dr. Walter J. Daly
Neil Harris and Teri J. Edelstein
Mr. Charles R. Rizzo
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Daniels
Mrs. Dorothy Harza
Ms. Diana L. DeBoy
Joanne C. Ruxin
Ms. Anne E. Rea and Mr. Kenneth A. Bigg
Carol S. Sonnenschein
HUMANISTS ($500–$999)
Bob and Trish Barr
The Newberry Annual Report
51
Honor Roll of Donors Ms. Nancy Dehmlow
Marjorie and Christopher Newman
Anthony and Nancy Amodeo
Mr. Gordon R. DenBoer
Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Novy
Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Anderson
Ms. Suzette Dewey
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Nowacki
Rick and Marcia Ashton
Virginia Neal Dick
Dr. Dorothy Noyes and Mr. Michael Krippendorf
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Aubrey
Mr. Kevin M. Doherty and Ms. Jane Doherty Mr. Andrew K. Dolan
Mr. and Mrs. Ben E. Oosterbaan
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Baughman
David and Susan Eblen
Chris and Virginia Orndorff
Susan and Gary Beckner
Ms. Anne E. Egger
Ms. Joan L. Pantsios
Ms. Catharine D. Bell
Richard and Carol Ekman
Mr. Joseph A. Parisi
Ms. Susan R. Benner and Mr. John M. Meeks
Eldred-Harland Charitable Fund at The Chicago Community Foundation
Mr. Michael Payette
Ms. Laura A. Bentley
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perlow
Ms. Julie Beringer
Mr. George E. Engdahl
The Queenan Foundation
Ms. Margaret Bjerklie
Mrs. Susan S. Ettelson
Dr. and Mrs. Nasim A. Rana
Peter Blatchford
Ms. Connie J. Fairbanks and Mr. Kirk Twiss
Janet Reece
Mr. David Bohan and Ms. Kathryn Kemp
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fanning
Mr. and Mrs. George Ritzlin
William and Sheila Bosron
Virginia and Gary Gerst
Dr. Jadwiga Roguska-Kyts
Dr. Jay Brigham
Dr. James Grossman and Ms. Ann Billingsley
Ms. Penelope Rosemont and Mr. Paul Sievert
Ms. Becky Brueckel
Mr. Robert Guritz
Mr. Joseph O. Rubinelli, Jr.
Mr. Todd Brueshoff
The William M. Hales Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Ruder
Ms. Lee R. Hamilton
Ms. Moira B. Buhse and Mr. Howard E. Buhse, Jr.
Stephen and Sharyl Hanna
Dr. Suzanne Karr Schmidt and Mr. Keith Schmidt
Professor and Mrs. Richard H. Helmholz
Ann and Brian Shoup
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic W. Hickman
Professor Susan Sleeper-Smith and Dr. Robert C. Smith
William O. Autry and Sarah E. Leach
Professor Rand Burnette and Mrs. Patricia B. Burnette Miss Martha M. Butler
Dr. Courtney Smotherman
Mr. Douglas R. Carlson and Mrs. Susan F. Carlson
Dr. Jane Smydo-Grover
Mr. Donald R. Chauncey
Mr. and Mrs. C. Richard Spurgin
The Chicago Chamber Music Society
Mr. John C. Stiefel and Ms. Lesa Ukman
Karen Ann Christianson and Robert Bionaz
Mr. Robert S. Kiely
Mr. Lawrence E. Strickling and Dr. Sydney L. Hans
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Claar
Ms. Heidi Heller Kiesler
Ms. Janet Surkin and Mr. Robert Stillman
Mr. Paul A. Kobasa
Dr. David Collins
Larry Viskochil
John and Barbara Kowalczyk
Jacqueline Vossler
Professors Kathleen M. Comerford and Mark Edwards
Dr. Ira D. Lawrence and Dr. Sona Kalousdian
Pam and Doug Walter
Professor and Mrs. Edward M. Cook, Jr.
Mr. David Lingo
Ms. Hedy Weinberg and Mr. Daniel Cornfield
Mr. David Copeland
Dr. Ruth F. MacKay
Dr. Edward Wheatley and Ms. Mary Mackay
Mr. John T. Cullinan and Dr. Ewa Radwanska
Mr. Craig T. Mason
Mr. Michael Winkelman
Mr. Roger M. Dahl
Mr. Alan Matsumura and Ms. Laura Erickson
Ms. Mary Witt
Ms. Laura S. de Frise and Mr. Steve Rugo
Abby McCormick O’Neil and Daniel Carroll Joynes
Anonymous (1)
Mr. and Mrs. Julian C. D’Esposito, Jr.
Clark and Carolyn Hulse Kathryn Gibbons Johnson and Bruce Johnson Ms. Tiffany Jones Mr. Paul R. Judy Mr. and Mrs. Norman O. Jung
Ms. Catherine J. Dolton
Dr. Ailsie B. McEnteggart Dr. Joellen A. Meglin and Mr. Richard C. Brodhead
LITERATI ($250–$499)
Professor Edward W. Muir, Jr.
Mr. Endre Agocs
Mrs. Susan Nagarkatti
Mrs. Bari Amadio and Dr. Peter Amadio
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Fall/Winter 2020
Mr. Mitchell Cobey and Ms. Janet L. Reali
Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Adler
Mr. Jonathan G. Don and Ms. Elizabeth Blodgett Patricia Dore, Ph.D. Mr. Robert P. Doyle Jon and Susanne Dutcher * Deceased
Honor Roll of Donors Laura F. Edwards and John P. McAllister
Mr. Bruce Kirkpatrick
Ms. Alicia Reyes
Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Egloff
Professor and Mrs. Christopher Kleinhenz
Dr. Patricia L. Richards
Dr. Marilyn Ezri
Mr. James Klies
Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Rider
Vince Firpo
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin J. Koenigs, Jr.
Tony and Amy Rieck
Kenneth and Marsha Fischl
Ms. Mary Sue Kranstover and Mr. Mark Davis
The Rigney Family
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Freehling
Professor and Mrs. Donald W. Krummel
Ms. Denise Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Freund
Mr. John D. Lawrence
Ms. Susan E. Robertson
Mr. Arthur Garwin
George Leonard and Susan Hanes-Leonard
Mr. Chauncey Robinson
Ms. Marsha W. Ginsberg and Mr. Gordon M. Sayre
Professor Carole B. Levin
Ms. Patricia M. Ronan
Professors Susan Levine and Leon Fink
Ms. Doris D. Roskin
Mrs. Mary Ann Gleason
Susan and Donald Levy
Jay and Maija Rothenberg
Mrs. Ethel C. Gofen and Mr. William H. Gofen
William and Judith Locke
Mr. T. Marshall Rousseau
Ms. Shelley Gorson and Mr. Alan Salpeter
Mr. Craig Long
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rubens
Professor Suzanne Gossett
Mrs. Dianne C. Luhmann
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ruthman
Mr. Marc B. Grayson
Mr. Jonathan Lyon
Mr. Michael J. Saxton
William H. Greer, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Madden
Brad and Melissa Seiler
D. Kendall Griffith
Mrs. Sandra Mallory
Mr. Joseph Seliga and Ms. Vanessa Vergara
Mr. Larry Grote
Father and Mrs. James R. Mather
Susan P. Sloan and Arthur D. Clarke
Mr. John Guidinger
Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. May
Mr. Dean L. Haas and Mrs. Kathleen E. Haas
Mr. John G. W. McCord, Jr.
Ms. Beth A. Smetana and Mr. Gerard C. Smetana*
Mr. and Mrs. Errol Halperin
Laura McGrady
Jane and Carl Smith
E. A. Hamill Fund
Mr. David Moes and Ms. Jani Lesko
Michael and Cindy Smith
Mr. Arthur R. Hansen
Mrs. Beverly J. Moody
Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Sopranos
Mr. James R. Hanson
Mr. and Ms. Todd L. Morning
Elaine and Wallace Stenhouse
Ms. Helen S. Harrison
Dr. Jeffrey Mueller
Professor Scott Manning Stevens
Ms. Arlene E. Hausman
Mrs. Susan T. Murphy
Marv Strasburg
Professor Randolph C. Head
Mrs. Barbara Newcomb and Dr. Richard Newcomb
Mary and Harvey Struthers Ms. Joanne C. Tremulis
Mr. Roger C. Hinman
Mr. Richard F. Nielsen and Mrs. Barbara Nielsen
Mr. Allan G. Hins
Ms. Susan O’Brien
Mr. Scott Turow and Ms. Adriane Glazier
Ms. Suzanne L. Hoffman and Ms. Rachael K. Smith
Mr. Gregory O’Leary and Ms. Patricia Kenney
Mr. and Mrs. David Turpin
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Osterberg
Mr. Frank Valadez
Mr. Robert Horowitz and Ms. Amy B. Levin
Ms. Karen Parker
Kenneth and Linda Vander Weele
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Houdek
Mr. Frederic C. Pearson
Dr. Thomas E. Veeser
Dr. Mary Houston and Mr. James Houston
Ms. Kathleen M. Perkins
Ms. Jennifer Vincent
Mr. David L. Howlett
Dr. David S. Peterson
Professor Mara R. Wade
Mr. Dennis M. Hughes and Ms. Rose Kelly
Ms. Lauren Phillips
Mr. Robert F. Ward
Ms. Cheryl Iverson
Mary and Joe Plauche
Robert and Susan Warde
Dr. Regina M. Janes
Ms. Laura Prail and Mr. John L. Cella
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Washlow
Ms. Emily Troxell Jaycox
Ms. Sarah M. Pritchard
Professor Elissa B. Weaver
Mrs. Karen S. Juvinall
Mr. Aaron Rappaport
Ms. Suzann M. Weekly
Ms. Janet Kalin and Mr. Martin Kalin
Ms. Dorothy M. Rasmussen
Mr. Edward Weil, Jr.
Miriam Kelm
Mr. Charles F. Regan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A. Weiner
Mr. James S. Heim Mr. Tom Henn
Mr. Jay Tremblay Dr. Richard M. Tresley
The Newberry Annual Report
53
Honor Roll of Donors Dr. and Mrs. Walter W. Whisler
Harold B. Smith
Jane and Don Hunt
Mr. Howard S. White
Mr. David B. Smith, Jr. and Ms. Ilene T. Weinreich
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Mahoney
Joyce C. White Ms. Mary Williams
Terra Foundation for American Art
Mrs. Iris S. Witkowsky
Anonymous (2)
Ms. Christina Woelke and Mr. John Coats Mr. Timothy Wright and Ms. Karen Ellzey Wright
$10,000–$24,999
Mrs. Debra F. Yates
Bulley & Andrews LLC
Susan Schaalman Youdovin and Charlie Shulkin
Jan and Frank Cicero, Jr.
Ms. Mary Zeltmann Ms. Sheri Zuckerman Anonymous (3)
Edith Rasmussen Ahern and Patrick Ahern
The following donors made restricted gifts to the Newberry endowment, book funds, fellowship programs, fundraising events, and other projects.
Nancy and Richard Spain Sulzer Family Foundation Jacqueline Vossler Anonymous (1)
Andrew and Jeanine McNally
$250–$1,499
David and Anita Meyer
Mr. James R. Akerman and Ms. Luann Hamilton
Cindy and Stephen Mitchell John W. and Jeanne M. Rowe Dr. Scholl Foundation The Siragusa Family Foundation
Ms. Pamela Baker Mr. Gregory L. Barton Ms. Margaret K. Carton and Mr. Harlan Stanley
Sotheby’s
Ms. Suzanne Chapple and Mr. David Andersen
Anonymous (1)
Holly and Bill Charles Chicago Calligraphy Collective
$25,000 AND ABOVE
Paul M. Angell Family Foundation
Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Illinois
Professor James H. Marrow and Dr. Emily Rose
Jean E. Perkins and Leland E. Hutchinson RESTRICTED GIFTS
National Society Daughters of the American Revolution
$5,000–$9,999
Chicago Genealogical Society
Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Blair, Jr.
Chicago Map Society
Joan and William Brodsky
Patti Selander Eylar and Charles Gardner
Mr. John Clum
Mr. T. Kimball Brooker
Ms. Celine Fitzgerald
Mr. Don Crowley
Nancy Raymond Corral
Janet and Arthur Holzheimer
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Crowley
Glasser and Rosenthal Family
Samuel H. Kress Foundation
The Danzer Family Fund
Sue and Melvin Gray
Mr. Stephen A. MacLean
Ms. Connie J. Fairbanks and Mr. Kirk Twiss
Victoria J. Herget and Robert K. Parsons
Mr. Frank McBath
The Friday Club
Celia and David Hilliard
Christine and Michael Pope
Hjordis Halvorson and John Halvorson
Robert A. and Lorraine Holland The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Society of Mayflower Descendants in the State of Illinois
Mr. William M. Hansen and Ms. Jaime L. Danehey
The Jack Miller Center
Dr. Christine M. Sperling
Mr. Bruce Kirkpatrick
Mr. John Monroe
Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Willmott
Mr. Paul A. Kobasa
Roger and Julie Baskes
Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. May
Monticello College Foundation
Ms. Helen McArdle
National Endowment for the Humanities
$1,500–$4,999
Ken* and Jossy Nebenzahl
Rob Carlson and Paul Gehl
Jerome and Elaine Nerenberg Foundation
Caxton Club
Northern Trust
Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio
Roy and Irene Rettinger Foundation
National Society of Sons of the American Colonists
General Society of Colonial Wars
Sheli Z. Rosenberg and Burton X. Rosenberg
Janis W. and John K. Notz, Jr.
Alan and Carol Greene
Col (IL) Jennifer N. Pritzker IL ARNG (Ret)
Ms. Kay D. Hinn
Pritzker Military Museum & Library
Hoellen Family Foundation
Mr. Richard W. Renner
Karla Scherer Rosemary J. Schnell
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Fall/Winter 2020
Ms. Patrice Michaels and Mr. James Ginsburg Mr. Ronald S. Miller
* Deceased
Honor Roll of Donors Ms. Pat Sabosik
Professor James H. Marrow and Dr. Emily Rose
Mr. and Mrs. Vince Furman
Professor Eric Slauter
Ken* and Jossy Nebenzahl
Lyle Gillman
Pam and Doug Walter Robert Williams
PARGELLIS SOCIETY
Louise R. Glasser HERITAGE AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
The following lineage and genealogical organizations made gifts to help the Newberry preserve our cultural heritage for future generations. General Society of Colonial Wars
Bulley & Andrews LLC
National Society Daughters of the American Revolution
Northern Trust Sahara Enterprises, Inc. Anonymous (1)
Margarete Gross Dr. Gary G. Gunderson Hjordis Halvorson and John Halvorson
The following corporations contributed $2,500 or more to the Newberry.
ITW
Mr. Donald J. Gralen
Professor Neil Harris and Ms. Teri J. Edelstein Adele Hast*
Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Illinois
Mark and Meg Hausberg
Society of Mayflower Descendants in the State of Illinois
Celia and David Hilliard
Trudy and Paul Hawley Robert A. and Lorraine Holland Mrs. Judith H. Hollander
CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION MATCHING GIFTS
Through their matching gift programs, the following corporations and foundations generously augmented gifts from individuals. Bank of America Foundation Battelle Best Buy Employee Giving Program Capital Group Caterpillar Foundation
BLATCHFORD SOCIETY
The following individuals have included the Newberry in their estate plans or life-income arrangements. The Newberry recognizes them for their continued legacy to the humanities. Mrs. L. W. Alberts Mr. Adrian Alexander Rick and Marcia Ashton Dr. David M. and Mrs. Susan Lindenmeyer Barron
Janet and Arthur Holzheimer Louise D. Howe Mary P. Hughes Kathryn Gibbons Johnson Ms. Marcia Slater Johnston Dr. Victoria Kirkham Ann C. Bates Kittle Karen Krishack George Leonard and Susan Hanes-Leonard Larry Lesperance
Roger Baskes
Professor Carole B. Levin
Peter Blatchford
Joseph A. Like
John C. Blew
Professor Lawrence Lipking
Michelle Miller Burns and Gary W. Burns
Mr. and Mrs. William Locke
Johnson & Johnson The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Dr. William H. Cannon
Nancy J. Lynn
Rob Carlson
Mr. Stephen A. MacLean
Reverend Dr. Robert B. Clarke
Carmelita Melissa Madison
Mrs. David L. Conlan
Mrs. Suzette Mahneke
SOCIETY OF COLLECTORS
Mr. Charles T. Cullen
Dr. Debra N. Mancoff
The following donors contributed $5,000 or more for the acquisition of materials for the Newberry’s collection.
Magdalene and Gerald Danzer
Dr. Guy A. Marco
Mr. Gordon R. DenBoer
Heidi Massa
Mr. Andrew K. Dolan
Ms. Valerie S. Mathes
Roger and Julie Baskes
Susan and Otto D’Olivo
Mary Morony
Rob Carlson and Paul Gehl
Donna Margaret Eaton*
Mrs. Susan T. Murphy
Nancy Raymond Corral
Laura F. Edwards
Mrs. Milo M. Naeve
Celia and David Hilliard
Mr. George E. Engdahl
Ms. Shanti Nagarkatti
Janet and Arthur Holzheimer
Ms. Carla J. Funk
Ken* and Jossy Nebenzahl
ExxonMobil Foundation Fitch Ratings Matching Gifts Program ITW
Anonymous (1)
Dr. Audrey Lumsden-Kouvel
The Newberry Annual Report
55
Honor Roll of Donors Ms. Audrey A. Niffenegger and Mr. Eddie Campbell Janis W. Notz
ESTATE GIFTS
In honor of Dan Fay
The Newberry acknowledges gifts received from the estates of the following individuals.
Ms. Elizabeth Cavendish
Joan L. Pantsios Joe and Jo Ann Paszczyk
Constance Barbantini
Jean E. Perkins
Dr. Richard H. Brown
Ken Perlow
Mrs. Alison C. de Frise
Christine and Michael Pope
Dr. Muriel S. Friedman
Dominick S. Renga, M.D.
Mr. Stuart Kane
Mr. T. Marshall Rousseau
Stephen A. and Marilyn Scott
TRIBUTE GIFTS
The Newberry recognizes the following gifts made in tribute.
G. Shiman Mr. Morrell M. Shoemaker* Alyce K. Sigler Dr. Ira Singer Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Siragusa Susan Sleeper-Smith Harold B. Smith Rebecca Gray Smith Zella Kay Soich Carolyn and David Spadafora Mr. Angelo L. and Mrs. Virginia A. Spoto Joyce L. Steffel Tom and Nancy Swanstrom Don and Marianne Tadish Mrs. Sara D. Taylor Tracey Tomashpol and Farron Brougher
Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Willmott Drs. Richard and Mary Woods Lucia Woods Lindley Mrs. Erika Wright James and Mary Wyly Anonymous (12)
56
Fall/Winter 2020
Mr. Robert H. Berry In honor of Daniel Greene Mr. and Mrs. Peter Marks Rosemary J. Schnell Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Washlow
In honor of Mrs. L. W. Alberts
In honor of Henry Harris
Nicholas Adams and Laurie Nussdorfer
Michael and Cindy Smith
In honor of Anya Bertolet
In honor of Rebecca Haynes
Professor Carole B. Levin
Mr. David Reidy
In honor of Brenda Brdar
In honor of Joan Frances Hertzberg
Ms. Lois I. Barliant
Ms. Barbara Francis
In honor of John Brewster Hattendorf
In honor of Michael Hillbruner
Dr. John William Graves
Anonymous (1)
In honor of Martha Briggs
In honor of Alison Hinderliter
Ms. Suzette Dewey
Dr. Joellen A. Meglin and Mr. Richard C. Brodhead
Ms. Catherine J. Dolton In honor of Holly and Bill Charles Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fogle Ann and Brian Shoup In honor of Barbara Ann Cooper In honor of the D’Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies
Robert Williams
In honor of Carol H. Graham
Professor Ralph J. Savarese
Mr. J. Thomas Touchton
Willard E. White
Professor Cynthia Wall
HONOR GIFTS
Ms. Mary Lewis
Diane Weinberg
Ms. Miriam B. Scott
In honor of William M. Hansen
Jim and Josie Tomes Professor Sue Sheridan Walker
Mr. Paul A. Kobasa
Dr. Amy Lippert
Rosemary J. Schnell Helen M. Schultz
In honor of Paul Gehl
Professor Katy L. Chiles In honor of Grace Dumelle Mrs. Shirley Ann Barham Bob and Trish Barr Professor Sheldon S. Cohen and Mrs. Kayla S. Cohen Mr. John L. Esp Mr. Bruce Niemann In honor of Natalie Edwards Ms. Deborah Brown
Ms. Barbara S. Stanton The Winnetka Fortnightly In honor of Edward C. Hirschland Mrs. Shirley Holbrook and Mr. Richard M. Holbrook In honor of Gary and Jeni Houston Susan and David Kilgore In honor of Mr. D. Bradford Hunt Ms. Susan O’Brien Lyons and Mr. Douglas Wechsler Lyons Professor Ralph J. Savarese In honor of Jean Johnson and Thomas Carey Mr. Dennis Conroy In honor of Daniel Carroll Joynes Ms. Nancy C. Lighthill In honor of Dr. Suzanne Karr Schmidt Mr. and Mrs. R. Stanley Johnson
* Deceased
Honor Roll of Donors In honor of Robert C. Ketterer
In honor of Emily Richardson
MEMORIAL GIFTS
Dr. Andrew Ketterer
Ms. Barbara S. Stanton
In memory of Paul N. Banks
In honor of Mr. Paul A. Kobasa
In honor of Sheli Z. Rosenberg and Burton X. Rosenberg
Ms. Mary Ellen Cunningham-Kruppa
Rob Carlson and Paul Gehl In honor of Sheila Krippner
Ben and Nancy Randall
Robert and Susan Warde
Professor James Krippner
In honor of Pilar V. Rotella
In memory of Patricia Barnes
In honor of Elia Levy
Ms. Brenda Berkman
Caxton Club
Dr. Galya Ben-Arieh
Mr. and Mrs. Emil R. Johnson
In memory of Bob Begay
In honor of Professor Michael Lieb
In honor of Matthew Rutherford
Mr. Les Begay
Dr. Jeffrey S. Gore
Ms. Suzanne L. Hoffman and Ms. Rachael K. Smith
In memory of David M. Bevington
In honor of Emma Lipkin Mrs. Jan McKenzie In honor of Robert N. McCreary Mr. and Mrs. James G. Barnes In honor of George and Andrew McKillop Mrs. Ella B. McKillop In honor of the Monastery of the Holy Cross Ms. Celia J. Berveiler In honor of Harland Nelson Professor Sarah Nelson In honor of Newberry Adult Education Seminar Participants
Ms. Catherine A. Stewart In honor of Ms. Alice Schreyer Mrs. Iris S. Witkowsky In honor of Jenny Schwartzberg George and Mimi Kaufman Ms. Ann Millman In honor of Jan Silverstein Professor Michael B. Chesson In honor of David Spadafora Miss Ann Lousin Mr. Jerome C. Yanoff
Mr. William J. Savage, Jr.
In honor of Nancy Spain
In honor of Newberry Fellows, 2019–20
Kathryn Gibbons Johnson and Bruce Johnson
Dr. Kim Hedlin In honor of Newberry Library Staff Ms. Jaime L. Danehey Mr. Luke Hanley Ms. Patricia Hefter Mr. Steve Heimerle Dr. Alfred E. Lemmon
In honor of Ingrid Stanley Dr. Donald E. Stanley In honor of Professor Scott Manning Stevens Professor Mary B. Campbell In honor of Stuart Sweet, Jr. Ms. Martha Wehrenberg
In memory of Mr. W. Lloyd Barber
Ronald Corthell and Laura Bartolo In memory of Hayward Blake Ms. Martha S. Chiplis David and Anita Meyer Jacqueline Vossler In memory of Lee Braude Mrs. Norma M. Braude In memory of Dr. Richard H. Brown Anthony and Nancy Amodeo Robert and Susan Warde In memory of Charlotte Byrd Mr. Thomas J. Byrd In memory of Walter Camryn Ms. Patricia Pippert and Mr. Steven Redfield In memory of JoAnn Castagna Mr. Dan Campion In memory of Eric Cochrane Professor Constantin Fasolt In memory of Carmella Corthell Dr. Debra N. Mancoff
Ms. Laura McVey
In honor of Rick Tamdone and Kevin Harty
Edwina U. Powel
Dr. Debra N. Mancoff
Mr. Guy Johnson
Anonymous (1)
In memory of Elinor Dahmer
In honor of Janis W. Notz
In honor of Raymond, Barry, and Dean Thompson
Liz Stiffel
Ms. Anne M. Thompson
In memory of Jacob Dumelle
In honor of Otto Penn
In honor of Diane Weinberg
Mrs. Dorothy J. Dumelle
Mr. Frederick B. Penn
Ms. Lynn Barr
In memory of Nicole Condit Duncan
In honor of Father Peter J. Powell
In honor of Robert Williams
Mr. and Mrs. George R. Johnson
Anthony and Nancy Amodeo
Rob Carlson and Paul Gehl
Mr. Peter Kupferberg
In memory of Thomas M. Costley
Ms. Patricia Hefter
In honor of Brie and Jessie Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Mages
Mr. John Reid
Roger and Betsy Mandel Mr. John C. Stiefel and Ms. Lesa Ukman
The Newberry Annual Report
57
Honor Roll of Donors In memory of Carolyn A. Edie
In memory of Richard Mallette
In memory of John Nygro
Ms. Elizabeth McCutcheon
Ms. Thomasine Rosenthal
Ms. Wilda W. Morris
In memory of Rita Fitzgerald
In memory of Nancy F. Marino
Ms. Enid Rieser
Ms. Andrea Bond
Mr. Frank McBath
Anonymous (1)
Ms. Emily Troxell Jaycox
In memory of Michael McMechan
In memory of Lois Pearson
In memory of Raymond D. Fogelson
Ms. Lucy Saunders
Ms. Bonita Bryant
William O. Autry and Sarah E. Leach
In memory of Irene and Mac McMahon
In memory of Bill Petersen
In memory of Darl Hall
Mrs. Margot McMahon
Houston Area Postcard Club
Mrs. Marilyn Hall
In memory of Henry P. Miller
In memory of Edward and Zika Petersen
In memory of Arthur Halperin
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jacob
Ms. Laurin Mack
Susan and Stephen Schell
In memory of Marion S. Miller
In memory of Mary Bridget Hanley
Vince Firpo
In memory of George Amos Poole III and Ellen Stuart Poole
Mr. Luke Hanley
In memory of Milo M. Naeve
Edwina U. Powel
In memory of Richard Hansen
Mrs. Milo M. Naeve
In memory of Matt Rizzo
Ms. Nancy K. Stewart
In memory of Kenneth Nebenzahl
Mr. Charles R. Rizzo
In memory of Helen Hanson
In memory of Norma B. Rubovits
Ms. Mary Minow
Ms. Mary Beth Adelman and Mr. Stanley J. Adelman
In memory of Adele Hast
The Anthony Family
In memory of Paul Ruxin
Caxton Club
Pat and David Buisseret
Mr. Michael Bartels
Mr. and Mrs. Hal Rosenbaum
Mr. David Copeland
In memory of Harriette Anne Melion Helmer
Amy Deutsch
In memory of Maximillian Schlund, Special Collections
Dr. Suzanne Karr Schmidt and Mr. Keith Schmidt
Mr. Andrew Deutsch
Ms. Ida Wilson
Joan and Robert Feitler
In memory of Frank Schober
In memory of Lois Rita Walker Henn
Mr. Peter Foreman
Mr. Gerald Schmidt
Mr. Tom Henn
Mrs. Irwin Frish and Family
In memory of Allison Sherman
In memory of Blanche Hersh
Professor Karen-edis Barzman
Ms. Joan Hersh
The Goodman Family, Patty and Ken Pell, and Margie and Vince Conroy
In memory of Elle “Tina” Howe
Mrs. Nancy R. Greenebaum
Ms. Corinne A. Shotliff
Mrs. Carolyn M. Short
Mrs. Marie Harris
In memory of Kerry Slocum
In memory of John Jaskop
Mrs. Dorothy Harza
Dr. Leonard G. Ramirez
Dr. Debra N. Mancoff
Barbara Schamberg Herst
In memory of James Edward Smith
In memory of Roger B. Johnston
Robert and Sara Leopold
Ms. Marcia Slater Johnston
Dr. Henry Loeb
Professor Susan Sleeper-Smith and Dr. Robert C. Smith
In memory of Richard Juvinall
Mr. and Mrs. John W. McCarter, Jr.
In memory of Dr. Thomas J. Stafford
Mrs. Karen S. Juvinall
Ms. Barbara D. Nathan
Mrs. Thomas J. Stafford
In memory of Kathleen Karr
Lorna and Butch Pfaelzer
In memory of Dean Storey
Dr. Suzanne Karr Schmidt and Mr. Keith Schmidt
Mr. and Mrs. George Ritzlin
Ms. Carol Bryant
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rubens
In memory of Peggy Sullivan
In memory of George Kelm
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Swartchild, Jr.
Caxton Club
Miriam Kelm
Mrs. Joellyn Schwartz
Mr. G. Kevin Davis
In memory of C. Frederick Kittle
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Uhlmann
Vince Firpo
Mr. Jon L. Lellenberg
Ms. Gina Uhlmann
Jacqueline Vossler
In memory of Dr. Rita Kucera
Mr. Edward Weil, Jr.
Randi Rubovits-Seitz
In memory of Gisele H. Shotliff
Dr. Ann E. Kuzdale
58
Fall/Winter 2020
* Deceased
Honor Roll of Donors In memory of Helen Hornbeck Tanner
J&L Catering
Pat and David Buisseret
Dr. Cathleen Cahill
Jewell Events Catering
Scott Burgh
Mary Janzen Quinn
The Joffrey Ballet
Alfred L. Bush
In memory of David Thackery
Jordan’s Food of Distinction
Brooke Cameron
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Brady
Le Pain Quotidien
In memory of Virginia C. Vale
Limelight Catering
Ms. Margaret K. Carton and Mr. Harlan Stanley
Mr. Peter Vale
Lookingglass Theatre Company
François Casati-Brochier
In memory of Arthur and Lila Weinberg
Lou Malnati’s
Edwin Chapman
Ms. Hedy Weinberg and Mr. Daniel Cornfield
Lula Cafe
Chicago Genealogical Society
Murnane Paper
The Chicago Literary Club
In memory of Christian K. Zacher
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
City of Lake Forest
Dr. Dorothy Noyes and Mr. Michael Krippendorf
Occasions Chicago
Mr. Stephan P. Clarke
Original Pancake House
John Contiguglia
Paper Source
Richard Contiguglia
Paramount Events
Whitney J. Coombs
Poetry Foundation
Jeri L. Corbitt
Porchlight Music Theater
Ms. Kim L. Coventry
Potash Brothers Supermarket
David Cressy
Ravinia Festival
Gianfranco Crupi
Securitas Security Services
Melissa Cubitt, The Lady Ashcombe
The Talbott Hotel
John Culp
3rd Coast Café
TimeLine Theatre Company
Christine Corporon Cushman
ABM Janitorial
Trader Joe’s
Ms. Patricia B. Daley
About Face Theatre
Victory Gardens Theater
Magdalene and Gerald Danzer
Alliant Employee Benefits
Walton Street Kitchen
Ms. Jayne Davis
Baci Amore
Yoga Now
Mr. Patrick Del Percio
Bulley & Andrews LLC
Ms. Elizabeth J. Zurawski and Mr. Gregory Longhini
Martin Deppe
In memory of Milly Zysman Dr. Jadwiga Roguska-Kyts Stephen A. and Marilyn Scott
GIFTS IN KIND
The Newberry thanks those who contributed goods and services.
Caffé Baci
Stephan Donovan
Chicago Opera Theater Ms. Nancy J. Claar and Mr. Christopher N. Skey The Claridge Hotel Connie’s Pizza
JoEllen Dickie Doris Humphrey Society
GIFTS OF LIBRARY MATERIALS
The Newberry appreciates the generosity of the following donors who contributed books, manuscripts, and other materials to enhance the library’s collection.
D’Absolute Events & Catering
Grace Dumelle Eastland Disaster Historical Society Mr. Michael Ehrmann Debra Essenburg
DJ OneFiftyOne
Rolf Achilles
Mrs. Loretta L. Evans
Doc B’s Fresh Kitchen
Jeanette Almada
Evanston History Center
First Point Mechanical
Asad Bakir
Eve L. Ewing
Food Evolution
Mr. Gregory L. Barton
Executives’ Club of Chicago
Formula Fitness Club - Gold Coast
Roger Baskes
Charles Fanning
Goodman Theatre
Dewaine Beard
Jennifer Farrell
Hallett Movers
Richard P. Bessette
Daniel Foley
Hendrickx Belgian Bread Crafter
James D. Birchfield
Roy A. Frack
House of Glunz
Mr. LeRoy F. Blommaert
Heather Francek-Galloucis
The Newberry Annual Report
59
Honor Roll of Donors Daniel Friedman
Elliot Levin
Joseph Winterbotham Shaw
Friends of the Town of Esopus Library
Harold L. Lucas
Dick W. Simpson
Tiago Garcia
Nancy Lyons
Diane Sleger
Michael H. Graham
George M. McCorry
Claude Clayton Smith
Mr. Robert N. Grant
Judith McGuire
Ms. Louise K. Smith
Mr. Graham Greer
Katie McMahon
Tamara Smith and James Mireles
Jennifer Gunn
Mr. Mark L. Madsen
Lucien Spittael
John Hallwas
Rickey Mallory
David Stam
Bert Hansen
Linda Marszalek
Keith M. Stolte
Joe Hansen
Heidi Massa
Professor Mihoko Suzuki
Jim Hanson
Nancy Mattei
Leonard Szaltis
El-Jay and Hans Hansson
Professor Andrew Mattison
R. J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation
Mark and Meg Hausberg
Lucia Mauro
Temple University Libraries
William Hauslein
Louis D. Melnick
Robert Teska
Scott Heerman
Donald Metcoff
Dave Trippel
William Heine
Ms. Patrice Michaels and Mr. James Ginsburg
Bill Tuttle
Tom Henn
Mr. John Monroe
Sister Romana Hertel
Ms. Wilda W. Morris
University of Minnesota, American Indian Learning Resource Center
Jessica Hierbaum
Morrison-Shearer Foundation
Rick Valicenti
Hotchkiss Family Association
Mount Prospect Public Library
Professor Dale K. Van Kley
Professor and Mrs. Frederick E. Hoxie
National Society Descendants of Early Quakers
Petros Voutsanesis
Hubbell Museum & Library
Joe Nemec
Gregory P. Wegner
Mr. D. Bradford Hunt
Juanita Nicholson and Beth Duda Hansen
Virginia Weimer
Barbara L. Hunter
W. W. Norton & Company
Ginger Wheeler
B. Darrell Jackson
Larry Olson
Dr. T. Bradford Willis
Laura Jannicka
Cindy and Ted Palmer
Wilmette Family History Center
Meredith Johnson
Esther Pasztory
Lee Anne Mordy Wilson
Henry Z. Jones, Jr.
Frank Pinkerton
Scott C. Jorgensen
Mr. Leslie Pollock
Dean N. Yannias and Katherine Rowland Thrower
Michael I. Kelly
Mr. Jeremy D. Popkin
Mr. Bruce Kirkpatrick
Brian Potratz
Knightsbridge Genealogy Services
Evan Potratz
Carol A. Knowles
Marilynn Quatrano
Murray Jackson Knowles
Susan Rider
William J. Krause
Josie and Rodney Rothstein
Evelyn M. Krawczky
Judy Royko
Ms. Edith Kyriazopoulos
Joseph Anthony Rulli
Gary Landman
Jacquie Shattner
Jerome Leach
Schaumburg Township Public Library
Salvador LeaĂąos Flores
Robert R. Schenck
Jacob Lee
Mr. Wayne H. Schulz
Dr. Erin-Marie Legacey
Dr. Tatiana Seijas
John A. Leppman
Bonnie Serra
60
Fall/Winter 2020
Dr. James L. Zychowicz Anonymous (2) The Newberry makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of our honor roll of donors and we sincerely apologize if we have made any errors. Please notify Vince Firpo, Director of Individual Giving, at (312) 255-3599 or firpov@newberry.org regarding any changes, corrections, or omissions. Thank you.
* Deceased
Board of Trustees and Volunteer Committees BOARD OF TRUSTEES
LIFE TRUSTEES
David C. Hilliard, Chair
Roger Baskes
BOOKED FOR THE EVENING HOST COMMITTEE
David E. McNeel, Vice Chair
T. Kimball Brooker
October 3, 2019
Cynthia Mitchell, Vice Chair
Anthony Dean
Michael A. Pope, Vice Chair
Hanna Gray
Peter S. Willmott, Vice Chair
Neil Harris
David B. Smith, Jr., Treasurer
Stanley N. Katz
Bob Wedgeworth, Jr., Secretary
Barry MacLean
Edith Rasmussen Ahern
Kenneth Nebenzahl*
Gregory Barton
Alyce Sigler
Joan Brodsky
Richard D. Siragusa
Frank Cicero, Jr.
Carol Warshawsky
Roger and Julie Baskes Rob Carlson and Paul Gehl Celine Fitzgerald Celia and David Hilliard Robert A. and Lorraine Holland Dr. Rowena McClinton Jacqueline Vossler
Lewis Collens Celine Fitzgerald Richard Godfrey Louise R. Glasser
The Newberry gratefully recognizes the following individuals for their leadership in planning and promoting events held between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2020.
Madeleine Condit Glossberg Mark Hausberg
BOOK FAIR COMMITTEE
Victoria J. Herget
July 25 – July 28, 2019
Robert A. Holland Robert H. Jackson Lawrence Lipking Sonya Malunda James H. Marrow Andrew McGaan Andrew McNally IV Mary Minow
Bill Charles, Co-chair Janet Lerman-Graff, Co-chair Penelope Bingham Jenny Bissell Claudia Hueser Martha J. Jantho Mary Morony
Cynthia E. Mitchell Janis W. Notz
BUGHOUSE SQUARE DEBATES COMMITTEE
Jean O’Brien
July 27, 2019
Lisa Pattis Gail Kern Paster
Karen Christianson
Jean E. Perkins
Elizabeth Cummings
John P. Rompon
Paul Durica
Burton X. Rosenberg
Will Hansen
Martha T. Roth
Marcos Herrera
Rudy L. Ruggles, Jr.
Cate Harriman
Karla Scherer
Mary Kennedy
Thomas C. Sheffield, Jr.
Alex Teller
Harold B. Smith
Georgina Valverde
Nancy Spain
Karen Williams
Carl W. Stern
The Newberry Annual Report
61
Staff OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT AND LIBRARIAN
Cataloging Section
Modern Manuscripts and Archives Department
• Daniel Greene, President and Librarian
• Jessica Grzegorski, Principal Cataloging Librarian
• Alison Hinderliter, Lloyd Lewis Curator of Modern Manuscripts and Archives
• Patrick A. Morris, Map Cataloging Librarian
• Catherine Grandgeorge, Manuscripts and Archives Librarian
• Kristin Emery, Manager of Governance and Assistant to the President
• Cheryl Wegner, Cataloging Librarian Communications and Marketing
• Alex Teller, Director of Communications and Editorial Services • Matthew Clarke, Communications Coordinator • Mary Kennedy, Graphic Designer • Andrea Villasenor, Senior Graphic Designer COLLECTIONS. LIBRARY SERVICES, AND EXHIBITIONS
• Alice D. Schreyer, Roger and Julie Baskes Vice President for Collections and Library Services • Claire Dapkiewicz, Senior Program Assistant
• Ashley Wolfe, Collection Services Assistant Cataloging Projects Section
• Megan Kelly, Cataloging Projects Manager • Lindsey O’Brien, Cataloging Project Librarian • Tina Saenz, Project Cataloging Assistant Conservation Services Department
• Lesa Dowd, Director • Lauren Calcote, Collections Conservator • Henry Harris, Conservation Services Assistant • Natalia Maliga, Conservator
• Emily Richardson, Project Archivist • Samantha Smith, Project Archivist Reader Services Department
• Will Hansen, Director General Collections Services Section
• Margaret Cusick, General Collections Services Librarian • Stuart Fraser, General Collections Library Assistant • Jane Kanter, General Collections Library Assistant
• Virginia Meredith, Conservation Technician
• Emma Lipkin, General Collections Library Assistant
• Jo Ellen McKillop Dickie, Selector for Reference
Digital Initiatives and Services Department
• Andy Risley, General Collections Library Assistant
• Jill Gage, Custodian of the John M. Wing Foundation on the History of Printing and Bibliographer for British Literature and History
• Nicolas White, Digital Initiatives Web Developer and Librarian
Reference and Genealogy Services Section
Digital Imaging Services Section
• Jo Ellen McKillop Dickie, Reference Services Librarian
Collection Development
• James R. Akerman, Curator of Maps
• Will Hansen, Curator of Americana • Alison Hinderliter, Lloyd Lewis Curator of Modern Manuscripts and Selector for Modern Music • Suzanne Karr Schmidt, George Amos Poole III Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts • Alan Leopold, Selector for Library Science • Matthew Rutherford, Curator of Genealogy and Local History Collection Services Department
• Alan Leopold, Director Acquisitions Section
• Emma Morris, Acquisitions Manager • Linda M. Chan, Serials Librarian • Jenny Schwartzberg, Acquisitions and Collection Development Assistant
• Jennifer Thom Dalzin, Director
• John Powell, Digital Services Manager • Catherine Gass, Photographer/Digitization Specialist • Alexandra McGee, Digitization Technician • Juan Molina Hernández, Digitization Technician Digital Initiatives Services Section
• Jennifer Wolfe, Digital Initiatives Manager • Ryan Hageman, Digital Projects Assistant
• Graham Greer, Reference Librarian • Analú López, Ayer Librarian • Becky Lowery, Reference Librarian • Matthew Rutherford, Curator of Genealogy and Local History Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections Services
• Lisa Schoblasky, Special Collections Services Librarian
• Paul Durica, Director
• Chris Cialdella, Stacks Coordinator
• Amanda Cacich, Assistant Registrar and Exhibition Specialist
• Allison DeArcangelis, Special Collections Library Assistant
Maps
• Allison Huff, Special Collections Library Assistant
• Patrick A. Morris, Map Cataloging and Reference Librarian
Fall/Winter 2020
• Grace Dumelle, Genealogy and Local History Library Assistant
Exhibitions
• James R. Akerman, Curator of Maps
62
• Katy Darr, Reference Librarian
• Michael ( John) Martino, Special Collections Library Assistant
Staff NEWBERRY INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH AND EDUCATION
• Keelin Burke, Director of Fellowships and Academic Programs • Mary Hale, Program Manager, Scholarly and Undergraduate Programs
DEVELOPMENT
Office of Events
• Meredith Petrov, Vice President for Development
• Chayla Bevers Ellison, Director
• Caroline Carter, Donor Relations and Communications Coordinator
• Sophia Soluri, Events Administrative Assistant
• Martina Schenone, Associate Director
• Dan Crawford, Book Fair Manager
• Madeline Crispell, Program Coordinator
• Adele Dillon, Development Operations Manager
Center for Renaissance Studies
• Natalie Edwards, Director of Major and Planned Giving
• Lia Markey, Director
• Vince Firpo, Director of Individual Giving
• Rebecca Fall, Program Manager, Opeerations
• Rebecca Haynes, Manager of Volunteers
• Christopher Fletcher, Program Manager, Outreach
• Jo Anne Moore, Associate Director of Development Events
• Elisa Jones, Early Career Postdoctoral Fellow FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION Hermon Dunlap Smith Center for the History of Cartography
• Laura McGrady, Vice President for Finance and Administration
• James R. Akerman, Director • Madeline Crispell, Program Coordinator
Bookshop
• Jennifer Fastwolf, Manager The D’Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies
• Melinda Rooney, Bookstore Sales Associate
• Rose Miron, Director
Business Office
• Sarah Jimenez, Program Coordinator
• Toni Matthews, Controller
Chicago Studies Program
• Cheryl L. Tunstill, Staff Accountant
• Liesl Olson, Director
Facilities Management
Department of Public Engagement
• Michael Mitchell, Facilities Manager and Chief Security Officer
• Karen Christianson, Director
• Verkista Burruss-Walker, Facilities Coordinator
Adult Seminars
• Chris Cermak, Sr. Building Maintenance Worker
• Katie Dyson, Seminars Manager • Sarah Wilson, Program Coordinator Teacher and Student Programs
• Kara Johnson, Manager • Sophia Croll, Teacher and Student Programs Intern • Cate Harriman, Program Coordinator
• Pete Diernberger, Building Maintenance Worker Human Resources
• Judy Rayborn, Director • Nancy Claar, Payroll Manager Information Technology
Public Programs
• Kamila Farshchi, Director
• Elizabeth Cummings, Public Programs Manager
• Erik Esquivel, IT Support Technician • John Tallon, Systems Administrator
• Sarah Wilson, Program Coordinator Internal Services
• Jason Ulane, Internal Services Coordinator
The Newberry Annual Report
63
Summary of Financial Position
For the year ended June 30, 2020, and for the year ended June 30, 2019 (000s omitted).
2020
2019
Assets
Cash and receivables $ 4,872 Investments 76,322 Land, buildings, equipment 17,918 Other assets 780 Total assets
$ 2,716 76,784 18,734 733 $ 99,892 $ 98,967
Liabilities and net assets
Accounts payable and accrued expenses $ 1,050 Other liabilities 236 Contract liabilities 585 Paycheck Protection Program Loan 1,269 Bonds payable 2,254 Line of credit 4,400
Total liabilities 9,794 8,962
Net assets
Total liabilities and net assets
64
Fall/Winter 2020
$ 1,994 250 421 – 2,547 3,750
90,098 90,005 $ 99,892 $ 98,967
Summary of Activities
For the year ended June 30, 2020, and for the year ended June 30, 2019 (000s omitted).
2020
2019
Revenues
Gifts and grants for operations $ 6,561 Gifts to endowment 1,163 Investment gain (loss) 3,058 Other revenues 1,681
Total revenues and other gains
$ 6,639 452 4,040 1,979 12,463 13,110
Expenditures
Library and collection services 5,200 Research and academic programs 3,066 Management and general 3,137 Development 967
5,079 3,405 3,165 1,236
Total expenditures
12,370 12,885
Change in net assets
$ 93 $ 225
The Newberry Annual Report
65
Non-Profit Organization
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