Nancy Richey will continue to add all our postcards to KenCat, while Sue Lynn McDaniel adds ephemera to this online catalog, but we anticipate wider usage and visibility of our primary sources through this TopScholar gateway. Enjoying exhibit cases are limited by schedules and the viewers’ ability to travel to the destination. For more visual collections, search TopScholar or KenCat or contact Special Collections at 27 or case exhibit provides a hint of all the sources now in the Selected Works Gallery.īut most exciting for us this year is our new opportunity to go beyond our doors by opening the Library Special Collections’ Worth A Thousand Words gallery “Leap Year Postcards and Ephemera.” This site functions as searchable permanent sources for users not necessarily OPAC friendly. Photographs from albums documenting World War I era service and stereo cards that were produced by the Keystone View Company show the events and tragedy of World War I. One of the highlights of the collection is a rare poster featuring Presidents George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson with accompanying text: “Washington gave us freedom,” “Lincoln kept us united,” and “Wilson fights for America and all humanity.” These are primary sources, the raw materials of history, and they bring the first great worldwide conflict of the twentieth century to us in direct, unfiltered ways. In the holdings of the Kentucky Library Research Collections are photographs, real photo postcards, and other materials. In Warren County, the citizens of our area responded quickly with about 1000 serving in the war four received Distinguished Services Crosses two were awarded the Croix de Guerre 49 gave their lives during the war. The war affected South Central, Kentucky as it did the whole country.
The first’s years commemoration occurred in November 1919 as President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed: “To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations….” The war however would not officially end until the signing of the Treaty of Versailles several months later. The cessation of hostilities between the Allied nations and Germany occurred on Novemso the 100th anniversary will soon be commemorated. World War 1, this was it, this was going to be the “the war to end all wars.” Sadly, as we all know, this did not happen.