Utah Digital Newspapers

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This site includes digitized versions of 28 Utah newspapers as part of the Utah Digital Newspapers project. Currently, the site contains more than 600,000 pages. Researchers using this digital archive may browse each individual newspaper by issue, or elect to search by keyword, article title, weddings, deaths, and births.

The site also features a map that users can scroll over to determine which counties in Utah had newspapers that are currently archived in this database, and the dates covered.

The collections begin in 1879, and feature PDF versions of the newspapers.

TUPPERWARE!

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This site explores the invention and rise of Tupperware products in the 1950s, as well as its impact on women's issues, and its connection to the 20th-century consumer culture revolution. The site focuses on Earl Tupper, the inventor of Tupperware, and Brownie Wise, the woman who created the Tupperware party concept and built a Tupperware empire. Included are short (500-word) biographies of each.

In the Gallery, visitors can see 12 of Tupper's invention notebooks to examine some of his inventions that were not as successful as Tupperware, like his no-drip ice cream cone and his necktie shaper.

The Teacher's Guide offers two learning activities in each of four academic areas: civics, economics, geography, and history. A timeline spans from the 1850s to 2003 and includes events such as the invention of plastic.

Primary Sources includes transcripts of interviews with Tupper and Wise, six video clips from the late 1950s and early 1960s (documenting the annual Tupperware Homecoming Jubilees, which were large gatherings of Tupperware dealers), as well as excerpts from the first Tupperware handbook. Also included are six documents, including a 1960s training manual, How to Sell Tupperware, and a collection of Wise's Aphorisms.

Visitors can share their experiences with Tupperware, either as consumers or as Tupperware dealers, in the Share Your Story section.

Finally, the site features an interview with a noted historian of women's issues who discusses the realities of married women's employment in the 1950s, as well as the impact Tupperware had on women's opportunities.

WRA Photographs of Japanese-American Evacuation and Resettlement

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This site contains 6,834 digital images related to Japanese American internment during World War II. The War Relocation Authority exhibited these photographs to present the camps in a positive light.

Users can view the site three ways: "Standard" provides a collection summary; "Entire Finding Aid" lists the series descriptions in more detail; "Online Items" lists all 6,834 images complete with a thumbnail and brief description for each image.

Visitors can also search by keyword, though the search works differently depending on which view is being used. The easiest way to use the search is to choose the "Online Items" view, in which a search for "school" will list images with "school" in the description.

Images in the collection come from a number of relocation centers throughout the country, including ones in Colorado, Arizona, Wyoming, and Arkansas.

"Scope and Content" is a 250-word explanation of the site's contents with a brief paragraph about the historical significance of the photographs.

Voices from the Days of Slavery: Former Slaves Tell Their Stories

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This site captures the recollections of 23 former slaves, born between 1823 and the early 1860s. Several of the people interviewed were more than 100 years old. In the recordings, subjects discuss their entire lives, not just their lives as slaves, but they provide an important glimpse of what life was like for slaves and freedmen. They discuss how they felt about slavery, slaveholders, how slaves were coerced, their families, and, of course, freedom.

Each of the 23 subjects' testimony is presented in four formats: Real Audio sound, MP3, Windows WAV, and transcription. Many of the subjects sang as part of their testimony; those songs are collected here, as well.

Visitors should not miss the Faces and Voices from the Presentation section, where photographs and short biographies are posted for seven of the subjects. The father and grandfather of one of the subjects, George Johnson, were owned by Confederate president Jefferson Davis. Johnson shares his recollections of Davis.

This site contains extraordinary primary sources, and is a tremendous resource for research into slavery and Reconstruction.

The Story of Virginia

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This attractive website offers a presentation on the history of Virginia from prehistoric times to the present with essays, images, and teaching resources. There are 10 chapters: the first Virginians; the settlement of colonial Virginia; Virginia's society before 1775; Virginians in the American Revolution; Virginians as Southerners, Confederates, and New Southerners; Virginians in the 20th century; the struggles of African American and female Virginians for equality; and a final chapter on images of Virginia in popular culture. Each chapter has an essay featuring images of relevant items in the collections of the Virginia Historical Society.

The "resource bank" collects all 95 images from the chapters of people, documents, places, and objects. Additionally, the site offers a teacher's guide for each chapter listing the standards of learning, a summary of key points, classroom activities and lesson plans, links to related websites, and information on tours, outreach programs, and hands-on-history programs.

An excellent introduction to the history of Virginia and its people with useful resources for class projects and classroom instruction.

Creative Memo on Lay's Products

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Image Credits
  • Ad*Access
  • Chicago Tribune
  • Gallery of Design Graphics
  • Hagley Digital Archives
  • IPC Media
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Plan59
  • Washington Post
Video Overview

Historian Roger Horowitz analyzes a 1957 market research report on the public perception of potato chips. In these videos, Horowitz models several historical thinking skills:

  • (1) drawing on prior knowledge of consumer culture in the 1950s;
  • (2) close reading of the report to learn about the study of consumer behavior;
  • (3) highlighting source information, such as report date and author; and
  • (4) placing the report within a larger context of advertising history and postwar culture.
Video Clip Name
RHSegment1.mov
RHSegment2.mov
RHSegment3.mov
Video Clip Title
Looking at the Document
Reading Between the Lines
Teaching Strategies
Video Clip Duration
3:33
2:32
1:43
Transcript Text

These research reports are a way of understanding some of the products that are coming into the market, and the advertising and marketing strategies that are being employed, and with that, it's also an insight into the attitudes and aspirations of many people in the '40s and '50s, who had not had anything as children, had been poor, and suddenly find themselves in the situation of relative affluence. So, it's a view, it offers insight into, of course, the changing marketplace, but I think more profoundly, into the changing desires and horizons of consumption that become possible for Americans, you know, after the end of World War II, and with the beginning of the post-war prosperity.

The document I've brought here today is a study. It’s called "Creative Memo on Lay's Products," and it was prepared by Ernest Dichter of the Institute for Motivational Research. Mr. Dichter, or Dr. Dichter, was the leading market research psychologist of the 1950s and the 1960s, and this research report is one of 2,000 that's in the collection of the Hagley Museum and Library. This report is a very important report. It recommends advertising policy to Lay's potato chips in the 1950s, and recommends how they should expand their sales. And it reflects the wide range of materials that Mr. Dichter has in his collection about all industries in the United States, from baked goods to cars to toys, to all sorts of areas in which he uses market research to tell producers how to sell their goods to the public.

And in this report he uses in-depth research interviews with consumers, observational techniques, to figure out why Lay's can't sell more potato chips. And the problem, he discovers, is that people view potato chips as a snack food, as a food that's probably unhealthy, as a food which is a luxury; therefore, it acts as a restraint on sales. And so he recommends a series of steps for the Lay's company to address this.

The preeminent one is to portray potato chips as a real food by having it placed in settings such as school lunches and institutional cafeterias and restaurants, as a side dish. And the idea behind that is that if you receive potato chips as part of a meal, you're not going to think about them as a snack. You're not going to think about them as unhealthy. You're going to think about them as food. And if you think about that as food, you're more likely to purchase them to have in the house on an ongoing basis.

And, of course, Lay's then takes this and does a wide range of marketing and approaching restaurants and other places to put potato chips in regular meals, and in so doing transformed the way consumers think about potato chips as a food item. It's a very significant report, because it's obviously very successful in the kind of consumption that we have of potato chips.

And, I brought it here because it reflects the use of market research in the 1950s and the 1960s, to expand consumption and to influence the attitudes of consumers.

It's also very useful to understand the consumer marketplace. His use of interviews, and his derivation of the results, allows you to understand not just what companies were trying to do, but what consumers thought.

And in these reports, this one as many others, there are extended quotes from consumers, there's data, there's all sorts of information about consumer attitudes to various products, towards various things. And that information can be used for many other purposes, not just studying potato chips.

But, for understanding attitudes towards children's consumption, there's a lot in this report about children, about all sorts of other topics. So, these reports are useful for both understanding it as a business source, how firms expanded their products, but also to get at a topic which is very hard to get at. What did people think? What were their attitudes? What were their underlying assumptions about goods in the marketplace?

He advises that what advertising has to do for the firms is turn chips into a mealtime food, quote, "As an acceptable food, a real food." Or an another example, this is again Dichter's advice, "Potato chips must be taken out of the category of foods which must be fought against." In other words, changing consumer ideas.

Here is another case where he is referring to the fear that consumers have that potato chips are bad. One person says, "I love them, but I don't like to have them around as they're so fattening. You can't stop eating them once you start." Now, this is interpreted by him as creating two problems. One is that people don't want to have them, you know, in the house. Instead, they're likely to buy them on impulse for snacking. That's a problem. But, the other is, what he would interpret from a Freudian sense, as this person feeling that somehow they're seductive, somehow they are a temptation to be resisted. And that's why he advises, "Make it a regular food."

So rather than treating them as a luxury, as sort of a—as like chocolate, you don't want them to be chocolate, you want them to be potato—like French-fried potatoes, like carrots. Something that you add to your food so that—as a conventional food, so you don't have this sort of fear that, quote, "You can't stop eating them once you start."

Well, to suggest this off the top of my head, I would do a survey of the class first, asking them their attitudes towards potato chips, and I would do a little market research myself, before they ever read this. And I would structure that report just to engage with some of the issues that Dr. Dichter has in here. "Is it healthy? You know, when do you have it? When do you eat potato chips? What is your parents' attitudes towards them?" etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. Then I would give them the report, and then I would ask them to either discuss, or perhaps answer some questions, about how they think the report has influenced their attitudes, and then have a discussion about that. I mean, that way they could see the way that what they do has been influenced, or perhaps not influenced, you know, by this orientation that Dichter suggested. In a classroom setting, you could ask students also to interview their parents about their attitudes towards potato chips. So, you could have structured into a class, both assessment as to what extent this report influenced the way people eat potato chips, and to what extent it is fantasy, to what extent that Dichter has ideas that he can transform attitudes, that he's unable to do so. You could ask students to do some research in different periodicals to see what the themes were of Lay's potato chips advertising, or other kinds of advertising—and that could teach them how to interpret the ads and to see the intent, you know, behind them.

Rare Map Collection

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A collection of more than 800 maps dating from 1544 to 1939 of mostly North American locations, with an emphasis on 19th-century Georgia. Organized into nine chronological and topical divisions—New World; Colonial America; Revolutionary America; Revolutionary Georgia; Union and Expansion; American Civil War; Frontier to New South; Savannah and the Coast; and Transportation.

Includes maps of battles, American Indian nations, railroads, and roads. Useful especially for those studying military history and the development of the South.

Washington As It Was: Photographs by Theodor Horydczak, 1923-1959

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Presents approximately 14,350 photographs by Theodor Horydczak (1890-1971), most of which document the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area between the 1920s and 1950s. Subjects include the architecture and interiors of government, commercial, and residential buildings; views of streets and neighborhoods; images of work and leisure; and events such as the 1932 Bonus March and the 1933 World Series. Also includes a limited number of shots taken in other U.S. locations and in Canada and a background essay, "Discovering Theodor Horydczak's Washington." Provides visual documentation of official and everyday life in the nation's capital and its environs.

Photographs from the Fred Hulstrand and F. A. Pazandak Photograph Collections

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Furnishes approximately 900 photographs from two collections at the Institute for Regional Studies at North Dakota State University. A professional photographer from northeastern North Dakota who sought to document the settlement of the Great Plains produced the "Fred Hulstrand History in Pictures Collection." The "F. A. Pazandak Photography Collection" includes photographs taken by a southeastern North Dakota farmer as mechanization began to change his family farm. Images portray everyday rural and small town life, mostly from 1880-1920, and include shots of farmers, farm machinery, children, one-room schools, and workshops. The site also provides a historical overview of North Dakota, a 300-word history of farm machinery companies, and presentations entitled "Implements Used on the Farm," "Schooling," "Women," "Sod Homes," "Immigrants," "Steam Engines and Tractors," "Hired Hands," and "Golden Age of Agriculture." An annotated bibliography of 61 titles provides a guide for further research. This site includes important visual documentation on changes in rural communities and farming practices during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Doris Ulmann Photograph Collection

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This collection of more than 1,700 photographs by Doris Ulmann (1882-1934) documents the rural people of the South, in particular the people of Appalachia and the Georgia-Carolina Sea Islands. "Ulmann's photographs represent important primary source material for historical and ethnographic studies of Appalachian and Gullah culture as well the subject of folk arts and craft traditions." Of particularly interest in the collection are the images of Appalachian craftspeople performing their crafts, such as quilting, whittling, weaving, hooking rugs, spinning, and making baskets and ceramic ware.

The visitor can browse all the images in the collection or search the collection by keyword. An advanced search by numerous categories including subject, title, date, place, and name is also available. Each image is accompanied by full bibliographic information. This collection is a useful resource both for those teaching or researching Appalachian or Sea Islands folk culture and for those with a broader interest in the social and cultural history of the South in the early 20th century.