Collection Development -- Multimedia CollectionPhotography and FilmThe Dodd Research Center holds approximately 800,000 photographs, including some 6,000 examples of early photographic processes, including albumen, collodion and other non-silver prints on paper, daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, glass plate negatives, lantern slides stereographs and tintypes, as well as modern negatives, positive transparencies, gelatin prints on paper, polaroids and other photographs. The earliest photographs in the archive date from the 1850s, however the bulk of the collection covers the 20th century. The Center also holds approximately 1,000 motion picture films, including 16mm, 8mm and super 8mm formats from the mid 1920s - 1980. Photographs and motion picture films appear in most of the organizational records, personal, and family papers held by the Dodd Research Center. The largest and most comprehensive collections in the archive document University of Connecticut history (from its beginnings to the present), regional railroad history (late 19th and early 20th centuries), Connecticut manufacturing and products (19th and 20th centuries), literary authors performing their work, political activities of the Connecticut Congressional Delegation and Senator Thomas J. Dodd, the life and work of the naturalist Edwin Way Teale, and South Africa and the anti-apartheid movement (1983-1999). Artistic photographs are represented by Camera Work, Ansel Adam's Parmelian Prints of the High Sierras, the Charters Collection of portraits of Beat writers and blues musicians, and various artists' portfolios. Collecting Areas:Connecticut History and Culture
Human Rights
Railroad History
History of the Medium
Video and AudioThe Dodd Research Center holds approximately 2,300 videocassettes and over 6,500 sound recordings. Formats include 16mm film, Betamax and VHS cassette tapes, wax cylinders, vinyl discs, reel to reel tapes, and audio cassettes, electronic files. The collection dates from 1908 to the present. Audiovisual materials serve as important historical records and Commercial audio and video productions are held in the areas of African American vernacular music, interdisciplinary and cross-cultural musical collaborations, and literary authors. Non-commercial audiovisual materials document the history of the University of Connecticut, political activities of Connecticut politicians, Connecticut business and industry. Oral histories are also held documenting a variety of topics. Collecting Areas:Connecticut History and Culture
Human Rights
Commercial Music Recordings
Literature
For inquiries about the collection or possible donations please contact the curator, Kristin Eshelman or (860) 486-4506. This page is maintained by K. Eshelman |