By Bob
Ratliff MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's history is closely tied to the land
-- from the era when flatboats moved the cotton harvest to
the Gulf of Mexico to the current technology revolution in
agriculture. Preserving
the stories of the people and events that have shaped the
state's rural life is the goal of a new program at
Mississippi State University. The
Consortium for the History of Agricultural and Rural
Mississippi, formed in 2002, is ensuring preservation and
access to important documents related to the individuals and
organizations that built the state's rural
heritage. CHARM
partners include the MSU Libraries, the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, the MSU
Extension Service and the College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences.
The CHARM collection is housed in MSU's Mitchell Memorial
Library. "Agriculture
and forestry have played significant roles in the
development and history of this state," said Vance H.
Watson, vice president for agriculture, forestry and
veterinary medicine. "Exploring the past through documents
like early plantation journals and vintage photographs can
help students and others understand and appreciate the
rural, agricultural roots of Mississippi and the role they
played in defining our state and its people." In just
a few months, the project has already brought together an
impressive array of documents and artifacts. "Our
manuscript materials document everything from small farms
and family-run sawmill operations to corporate agricultural
and forestry enterprises," said Mattie L. Sink, manuscripts
librarian for Special Collections. "The collection also
includes more than 300 handwritten scripts from the
television feature, 'Farm Family of the Week,' which was
broadcast by WLBT-TV in Jackson from 1954 to
1961." Photographs,
diaries, account ledgers and a host of other materials
provide glimpses into day-to-day rural life, including
concerns about the weather, the economy and the changing
face of agriculture. Another
important part of the collection is materials from the
university archives, including photographs, reports and
other MSU Extension materials. Oral histories from
individuals who have played leadership roles in Mississippi
agriculture also are being collected. "The
project establishes a single location to preserve the
materials," said Frances N. Coleman, dean of libraries. "It
makes them accessible in a setting where large collections
of other, more general information about Mississippi and its
past are already available for reference." Technology
is rapidly changing both the business of agriculture and
rural life, Watson said, making the CHARM project especially
important in preserving an accurate record of the past for
future generations. "We're
not far removed from a time when animals provided the
primary power for agriculture," he said. "Today, we're
making use of advanced technologies such as satellite-based
remote sensing to pinpoint the nutrient and other needs of a
crop." To
expand its accessibility, the consortium is digitizing
materials in the collection and making them available on the
World Wide Web at
http://library.msstate.edu/charm. The
CHARM project also can help families and individuals
preserve materials that have f1historical
significance. If the
materials are suitable, the MSU Libraries will gladly add
them to the CHARM collection, preserving and cataloging them
for access by scholars and the general public," Coleman
said. For
additional information on CHARM, contact Coleman at (662)
325-7761. Released:
March 3, 2003
Mississippi
Agricultural News
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MSU collection
preserves Mississippi's
rural past
Contact: Dr. Frances Coleman, (662) 325-7761
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:00
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