Welcome to Upright and Acid Free: the Adelphi University
Archives and Special Collections blog.
It seems appropriate that the first post of our newly launched
blog should speak to the roots of the department and acknowledge some of the
foundational figures central to the development of UASC and its collections—figures
such as Owen and Marion Groves, the dedicated husband and wife who served as
Adelphi’s first University Archivists.
1926 Oracle yearbook portrait of Owen Groves |
Marion Groves (1896-1976), who also taught in the English Department at Adelphi, succeeded her husband as University Archivist after his death in 1972. With years of experience as a New York City high school teacher/ librarian, and master’s degrees in Latin from Mount Holyoke and Library Science from C.W. Post (which she completed at age 72), Mrs. Groves brought a professional perspective to what became a paid, but still part-time, position.
The Life and Adventures of Peter Porcupine by William Cobbett, Philadelphia, 1796 |
As University Archivist she worked to help form a University Archives Committee and implement archival standards of preservation and access. She was also a founder and active member of the Friends of the Adelphi Library, serving as the group’s president for many years. Reading her letters, and the many warm tributes occasioned by her death in 1976, one gets a sense of a curious, committed, and exceptionally energetic women held in great esteem by her colleagues and former students.
The
enduring legacy of the Groves includes their essential contribution to the
establishment and development of the William Cobbett Collection—one of the jewels
of Adelphi Special Collections. It was Owen
Groves who had the initial idea for Adelphi to collect Cobbett’s work; a
felicitous undertaking, he believed, considering Cobbett’s association with
Long Island [1]. Marion Groves, in her capacity as president of the Friends of the
Adelphi Library, played an instrumental role in the expansion of the collection,
beginning with the Friends’ purchase, in 1948, of Cobbett’s The Life and Adventures of Peter Porcupine
and building over subsequent decades, including a major Friends’ purchase, in
1964, of more than thirty Cobbett letters. Today the collection consists of roughly 500 volumes and
significant holdings of manuscripts, pamphlets and anti-Cobbett literature.
[1] In 1817, fearing
arrest on sedition charges, Cobbett (1763-1835) fled to the United States and
for two years lived and wrote on a rented farm on Long Island.
--by Brian McDonald
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