This evening marks your last chance for a free tour of The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: When the World Came to Campus, led by exhibit curator, Carla Rickerson. No RSVP or pre-registration is necessary for this one-hour event. Just show up at 6:00 pm in the Suzzallo Library Exhibition Room 102 (just inside the main entrance to the building).
Final AYPE Exhibit Tour Tonight
14 10 2009Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, ayp100
Categories : AYPE Centennial, Exhibits
Race and Empire at the Fair Symposium at UW Libraries
8 10 2009A culminating Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition centennial symposium to be held at the University of Washington Libraries poses the following question:
How did the AYP reflect, reproduce, and perhaps challenge prevailing notions of race and empire?
The Race and Empire at the Fair Symposium, co-sponsored by the Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest and the University of Washington Libraries, will take place on October 16, 2009 (the day on which the exposition officially closed), 1:30-4:30 pm. The symposium will feature a variety of speakers on two distinct panels, “Indigenous roles and representations” and “Local and transpacific imperial roots and routes.” This event is open to the public, but requires an e-mail rsvp. For full details and schedule, click here.
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Tags: Alaska, ayp100, Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest
Categories : AYPE Centennial, Announcements
Seattle’s Forgotten World’s Fair?
7 10 2009Not around here, I think.
Amidst a final flurry of activity accompanying the winding down of Seattle’s celebrations of the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition centennial, an announcement for a documentary to be shown on KCTS 9 definitely caught our eye:
In collaboration with local historical gems such as the Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI), The Burke Museum, Chinese in NW American Research Committee, the University of Washington and combined with thousands of historical images, rare archival footage, contemporary interviews and narration by Tom Skerritt, Seattle’s Forgotten World’s Fair, will take the viewer on an hour-long magical journey into a nearly forgotten chapter of the burgeoning city’s history.
The perfect nightcap to Home Movie Day 2009? But more about that later. If you can’t watch it on October 17th, check the KCTS schedule for other showings of this documentary.
Image credit: University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections ID# PAM0192.
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Tags: Alaska, ayp100
Categories : AYPE Centennial, Announcements
Book Signing Tonight
21 09 2009If you are looking for something to do this evening, why not head over to the University Bookstore? At 7:00 pm, the Special Collections Division’s own Nicolette Bromberg will be on hand to discuss and sign copies of her new book, Picturing the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. This lavish volume features the Visual Materials Curator’s own selection of documentary photographs by AYPE official photographer, Frank Nowell, as well as recent photographs from a project led by John Stamets in which University of Washington students rephotographed various sites of the 1909 exposition on the current UW campus.
You also can see some of Nowell’s images for yourselves at the previously mentioned installations in the University of Washington Libraries and in glorious large-scale format at Picturing the Fair, the exhibition at the Museum of History and Industry.
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Tags: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, ayp100, Frank Nowell, MOHAI, Photographs
Categories : AYPE Centennial, Announcements, What's New?
UW AYPE Exhibit Tours
7 07 2009A reminder that the first of three free public tours of the exhibit, “The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: When the World Came to the Campus,” led by Carla Rickerson, Head of Public Services, will take place this Wednesday evening, July 8, from 6:00-7:00 pm in Suzzallo 102.
Additional tours are scheduled for August 12 and October 14 — same time, same location.
No RSVP or pre-registration is required. For more information about the exhibit, go to http://uwnews.org/uweek/article.aspx?visitsource=uwkmail&id=50023
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Tags: Tours
Categories : AYPE Centennial, Announcements, Exhibits
Alonzo at the Fair
26 06 2009
Portrait of Alonzo Wardall
Looking for information on one topic frequently yields some unexpected discoveries. I was recently trying to finish up the catalog record for a manuscript collection, Alonzo and Elizabeth Wardall diaries, account books and other materials (Manuscript collection 118). A Civil War veteran and an activist in the cooperative movement, Wardall led a long and peripatetic existence, turning up in a number of different places before spending the last fifteen years or so of his life in Seattle.
I enlisted Edna’s assistance in trying to sort out a few biographical details. We also spent one morning in the reading room having a look at some of the actual diaries in order to confirm whether or not those volumes truly contained substantial entries (or if they were more along the lines of appointment books). They were indeed diaries! Alonzo Wardall proved to be a highly disciplined diarist, if not much of a literary stylist (sadly, far fewer of Elizabeth’s diaries survive). As we excitedly examined a sampling of journals from various years, I think it suddenly occurred to us almost simultaneously to check out the one for 1909 just to see…
And there it was — proof that everyone in Seattle (even utopianists with beards) went to the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition — an entry recording Alonzo and Elizabeth Wardall’s trip to the opening day of the fair! Here is a transcription from that diary:
Tuesday June 1, 1909
Seattle
At A.Y.P. Fair
Fine — cool — cloudy. Rain again. The great A.Y.P. Fair opened today & wife & I spent the day there — seeing the sights. It is certainly a grand affair & most creditable in every way & in almost complete condition. A great crowd out — said to be 82,219 [annotated above the line "official"]. The day was perfect & the grounds very beautiful. We spent most of our time strolling about, admiring the buildings and the beautiful floral arrangements & looking at the people. The Pay Streak was swarming with fun loving crowds. Hard rain at dark & all night spoiling the plows forever. Ray & Josephine were caught out in it.

Opening day crowd at the Pay Streak, Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition
Could Alonzo be out there as part of this opening day crowd (from an image in the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition Postcard Collection, PH Coll 777, Digital Collection Order Number AYP641)? Alonzo and Elizabeth Wardall not only participated in the opening day festivities, but returned frequently to the fair (both together and separately) throughout the summer and fall months. Alonzo attended Swedish Day, Norwegian Day, Children’s Day, and Prince Edward Island Day, and also dined at the Roast Beef Pavilion on occasion. Stay tuned for some possible further adventures!
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Categories : AYPE Centennial, Interesting Finds
AYPE centennial exhibits throughout Suzzallo/Allen libraries
10 06 2009In celebration of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition held on the UW campus in 1909, there are three stunning exhibitions in Suzzallo and Allen Libraries.

Admission tickets for the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Seattle, Washington, 1909. Photograph by Frank H. Nowell.
The biggest display is The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: When the World Came to Campus, in the Suzzallo Exhibit Room, 102. This exhibit was curated by Carla Rickerson, Head of Public Services in Special Collections. The unique photographs, ephemera, and documents, as well as the blow-ups of AYPE buildings mounted on the walls give viewers a sense of the beauty and bombast of the 1909 event.
Another exhibition, Women’s Work at the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, is located in the lobby outside Special Collections in the south Allen basement. Michelle Dent, a visiting curator from New York University, examines the role of women at the exposition, and features items from the Burke Museum which were originally on display at the AYPE.
Finally, the third exhibition, Capturing the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: Frank H. Nowell, Exposition Photographer, is located on the balcony above Allen North lobby. Nicolette Bromberg, visual materials curator in Special Collections, co-curated the exhibit with Rickerson.
Additional photographs of the AYPE by Nowell are mounted in Special Collections on the wall behind the reception desk. Also, soon to be on display in Special Collections is a newly restored print of the AYPE bird’s-eye-view.
Come by and see the exhibitions! Feel welcome to ask Special Collections curators and staff about the AYPE. Challenge us!
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Categories : AYPE Centennial, Announcements, Exhibits
AYP or AYPE?
14 05 2009As the anticipation builds for the official launch of the A-Y-P Centennial celebration at next weekend’s Northwest Folklife Festival, we ponder which really is the “correct” acronym.

Sheet music cover for AYP March
Personally, I prefer the latter and I must admit that I have used that form as an abbreviation in many of the free text notes I have added to catalog records without giving it too much thought. Contemporary usage (certainly among boosters of the fair) appears to come down slightly in favor of “AYP,” although there are plenty of examples of “AYPE” as well (as below).

Cover of General history, Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition
I recently was reminded of the issue, however, when I was having another look at how one of “my” records was displaying in UW WorldCat (yes, this is what I do in my downtime) and was truly startled to see that one user (jcputman) actually had added that item to a list he or she had created and named “ayp.” I was especially curious because this was the first time I had ever seen any of the “social” features in WorldCat (which include lists, tagging, and reviews) implemented. I searched the lists again and found that another user (kmrcnw) had created a (slightly longer) list called “aype.” Maybe the two of them will want to compare notes now (or maybe not). But what I also found intriguing during the search process was the discovery of yet another list, “NCLB and AYP,” which clearly had nothing at all to do with the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition. I was able to figure out from the items listed that “NCLB” referred to the No Child Left Behind Act, but it took a Google search to discover that “AYP” here meant “Adequate Yearly Progress.” Just further proof that context is everything in description and that controlled vocabularies can be useful?
Image credits:
1. A.Y.P. March score, Ashford Collection, Music Library. University of Washington
2. Vulcan Iron Works promotional booklet, Museum of History & Industry
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Tags: Northwest Folklife Festival
Categories : AYPE Centennial, From the Cataloger
A.Y.P.E. Walking Tour on Campus
8 04 2009It would be an understatement to say that there is a plethora of events going on associated with the centennial of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. In fact, there is a handy community Web site available where you can keep track of the numerous activities that will be taking place in the Seattle area over the coming months. This month, however, features a free event that is taking place right here on campus.
On Saturday, April 25, 2009 at 10:00 AM, the first in a series of end-of-the-month walking tours sponsored by the Friends of Seattle’s Olmsted Parks will kick off at historic Cunningham Hall. Although this event is free, you must register. Full information is available here.
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Tags: Friends of Seattle's Olmsted Parks, Walking tours
Categories : AYPE Centennial, Announcements
All over but the shouting
3 04 2009No, I’m not referring to the Replacements or any other ’80s band, but to the fact that the cataloging of all of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition materials held by Special Collections finally seems to be finished. Many thanks to the Mendery for liberating several of these publications from a previously “bound together” state and for everyone involved in getting them shelf ready and able to be requested in the reading room.

Contents list and cover from publications formerly bound together
Not that it is something that is necessarily worth getting all that sentimental about, but I cannot help feeling some mixture of chagrin and amusement whenever I am in the position of revising work done by prior hands. Binding these publications together and describing them briefly all in one record may seem a little questionable now, but it did serve its purpose well enough for many years. In an information world where everything is evolving so rapidly, how soon will it be before someone questions the decision to catalog these individual publications separately (and in far more detail) and finds that approach a bit dated?
But enough philosophizing, as, drunk with power, I prepare to delete this record from our local catalog.

Screen shot of catalog record to be deleted
Ciao!
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Tags: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
Categories : AYPE Centennial, From the Cataloger



