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About the Project: History of the Project
The
Adirondack Museum
Located in Blue
Mountain Lake, the Adirondack Museum is a nationally recognized
institution dedicated to documenting and interpreting for
the public the history of travel, recreation, and work within
the Adirondack region.
The museum's Research
Library collects, preserves, and makes available for research
published and archival material that documents the social,
economic, and natural history of the region. The Research
Library also holds 65,000 photographs, 15,000 pieces of ephemera,
and 230 oral history recordings that document Adirondack life
and a large collection of 18th, 19th, and 20th century maps.
In addition, it maintains the world's largest single collection
of published works concerning the Adirondack region. Among
its 600 linear feet of manuscript holdings are: personal papers
of clergyman William Henry Harrison Murray (1840–1904), whose
1869 monograph Adventures in the Wilderness led
to the explosive growth of Adirondack tourism; business records
of the Emporium Forestry Company, the MacIntyre Iron Company,
and other area businesses; organizational records of the Association
for the Protection of the Adirondacks, the Citizens' Northway
Committee, and other conservation and environmental groups.
Cornell
University Libraries, Division of Rare and Manuscripts Collections
A research repository
of national significance, the Division of Rare and Manuscripts
Collections unit holds more than seventy million manuscripts
and one million graphic images documenting a wide array of
topics. The history of New York State is one of its collecting
concentrations.
Among the holdings
relevant to this project include: personal papers of forestry
educator and federal forestry official Bernard Eduard Fernow;
photographs documenting faculty and student research activities;
forestry management practices including application of European
forestry practices in New York; documents relating to the
Cornell “Adirondack Experiment,” the controversial clear cutting
of land that led to the removal of the College of Forestry
from Cornell; and records of the Empire State Forest Products
Association and the Mid–Hudson Forest Products Cooperative.
The
New York State Archives
Founded in 1971,
the New York State Archives (NYSA) leads efforts, on behalf
of all New Yorkers, to preserve and make accessible the recorded
evidence – past, present, and future – that documents the
history, governments, events and peoples of our State. Virtually
every aspect and era of New York State history – including
the Dutch and British colonial period; the Revolutionary War;
Erie Canal and westward expansion; industrial development;
labor law and programs; rise of the modern social welfare
system; education and environmental affairs; World Wars I
and II; and diverse communities including Native Americans,
African–Americans, Latinos, and other groups – is revealed
in the over 71,335 cubic feet (over 130 million documents)
in over 3,677 records series. Formats include parchment, paper,
still photographs, audio/videotape, maps, microform, and electronic
records.
Among the records
relevant to this project include: maps, photographs and documents
produced by the Department of Environmental Conservation;
the Adirondack Park Agency; Bureau of Real Property; and Department
of State, all of which document the acquisition and management
of the parks.
New
York State Library, Manuscripts and Special Collections
Established in 1881,
the Manuscripts and Special Collections unit acquires, preserves,
and makes available for research material that documents the
history of New York State from the 17 th century to the present
day.
Manuscript holdings
relevant to this project include: the personal papers of Franklin
B. Hough (1822–1885), who spearheaded New York State and federal
efforts to conserve forest land, and noted conservationist
and radical journalist Robert F. Hall (1906–1993); and organizational
records of the Citizens' Committee on the Preservation of
the Adirondacks, the Adirondack League Club, and other conservation
and environmental groups. It also holds a large number of
images, including approximately 300 photographs of Adirondack
camps and hotels, steamboats, tuberculosis sanitariums, and
outdoor activities taken by noted conservationist and innovative
photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard (1844–1917) and has a voluminous
collection of published and unpublished maps produced from
the 16 th century to the present day.
State University
of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry,
F. Franklin Moon Library, Terence
J. Hoverter College Archives and Special Collections
Established in 1911
as the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University
and incorporated into the State University of New York system
in 1948, the College of Environmental Science and Forestry
(CESF) is an internationally recognized center for research
concerning the management of natural resources and the structure
and functioning of ecosystems. The Terence J. Hoverter College
Archives and Special Collections unit holds almost 300 cubic
feet of manuscript material documenting the institution's
operations and teaching and research activities.
Highlights from
collection in this project include: recordings and transcripts
of educational radio and television broadcasts (1942–1962)
produced by the college's Department of Forest Extension and
records, publications and ephemera documenting research activities
at the college's Adirondack Ecological Center and Roosevelt
Wildlife Experiment Station.
Ulster
County (N.Y.) Clerk Archives
Established in 1987,
the Archives arranges, preserves, and makes available to researchers
the records of permanent importance created by thirty–three
county government departments. A large portion of Ulster County
lies within the boundaries of the Catskill Park.
Holdings of relevance
to this project include: maps documenting land use; property
boundaries; property seizures; effects from the construction
of reservoirs and aqueducts belonging to the New York City
water supply system; and transcripts and other court records
concerning compensation claims for land New York City acquired
through power of eminent domain.
Warren
County (N.Y.) Records Storage Center and Archives
Established in 1963,
the Record Storage Center and Archives arranges, preserves,
and makes available for research a wide array of records of
permanent importance created by the government of Warren County.
Ninety percent of Warren County lies within the boundaries
of the Adirondack Park. As such the records generated by the
county shed light on how the government, citizens, and visitors
have dealt with the management and use of the Park.
Holdings of relevance
to this project include maps, photographs, and records documenting
highway construction, property boundary disputes, seizure
of land, land use classification, and forest fire fighting.
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