Grant to put Kheel Center railroad collections online

railroad
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Spanning the 19th and 20th centuries, the Kheel Center’s collections document the rise and fall of railroads, as well as the emergent and declining power of the unions that kept the railroads running and the American economy growing.

The story of the railroad is the story of America. Rail lines transformed the towns they passed through, hastened the growth of cities, and changed the course of immigration, labor and technological innovation.

Now, through a grant from the National Historical Publications & Records Commission (NHPRC), 65 railroad collections held by the Cornell University Library’s Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives in the ILR School will be organized and made freely available online, adding rich detail and new depth to that uniquely American tale.

“When completed, the online guides will provide wide access to the Kheel Center’s rich holdings in this area, and the photographs will add to the growing digital presentation of trains, routes and rail yards posted by academic archives, historical societies and enthusiasts,” said Cheryl Beredo, director of the Kheel Center. “The labor records contained here document the moments of cooperation and conflict in the emergence, dominance and eventual decline of American railroads in the 20th century.”

railroad
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Through a grant 65 railroad collections held by the Cornell University Library’s Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives in the ILR School will be organized and made freely available online.

The 18-month grant, worth $126,064, will pay for an archivist to organize more than 300 boxes of material and digitize around 1,600 photographs, including images of specific locomotives, rail yards, depots and train parts.

Spanning the 19th and 20th centuries, the Kheel Center’s collections document the rise and fall of railroads, as well as the emergent and declining power of the unions that kept the railroads running and the American economy growing. The collections include the records of companies, unions and associations; rulebooks and payrolls; reports and photographs from commissions; and transcripts of oral histories with major industry figures.

The materials are detailed and wide-ranging. Railroad companies’ records reveal important information about legislation, unionization efforts, discipline and discrimination. Papers from individual unions offer in-depth studies of specific cities and communities. Files documenting efforts to support family members will interest students of gender roles, families and work-life issues, while railroad advertising and train design memorabilia could aid those studying visual arts, architecture and urban planning.

The digital archive will be a major resource for historians of everything from locomotive technology to commercial photography to capitalism, as well as railroad enthusiasts.

The NHPRC, affiliated with the National Archives and Records Administration, supports activities to preserve, publish and encourage the use of documentary sources, created in every medium ranging from quill pen to computer, relating to the history of the United States.

Melanie Lefkowitz is a staff writer and editor at Cornell University Library.

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