Rural Experience in Northwestern Pennsylvania
Series
Identifier: Series 1
Scope and Contents
This series contains various information regarding John L. Marsh's "The Rural Experience in Northwestern PA: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow." The information includes: the proposals, general correspondence, notes on the farms of yesterday, today, and the future, photographs, and publicity. Dr. Marsh and Karl Nordberg, who was responsible for the photographs and visual materials, collaborated on this project.
In the proposal, Marsh explained the Rural Experience was divided into two stages. First, there was a detailed study of the Goodell Farm. In Marsh's point of view, the farm was the area's finest example of late Victorian agriculture. From the information collected, a three cassette-filmstrips series was produced on how a representative farm family might have looked and lived in Northwestern Pennsylvania 1876-1946. The second stage was a public forum. The public forum was divided into three parts. First, the Goodell farm material was presented. Second, three area farmers discussed their view of farming from their own experiences. Finally, an agricultural specialist discussed the future of the farms.
In the general correspondence information, the proposal for the project was essential rejected by The National Endowment for Humanities for lack of national appeal. In the letter, it was recommended that the proposal be sent to another division for grant consideration. The Public Committee for Humanities in Pennsylvania approved a grant for this project. Other correspondence included the general application and instructions as well as an agreement for the museums and historical organization program, letters he sent out regarding the approval of the grant, the Edinboro Review (1979) discussed the grant in its issue, the financial summaries of the project, the evaluations of the program done by the audience in attendance, and letters from other organizations supporting the project. (Also, there are two packets in regards to writing a proposal and basic principles in grant-making. Note: These were not official program guidelines.)
There was various information taken on farming of yesterday, today and the future. Some of the information collected included: journal articles, letters regarding specific knowledge about each time period, a 1977 Pennsylvania Dairy Farm Business Analysis, interviews along with the questions that were asked to certain individual (e.g. Goodell) area farmers. Also, there was a newspaper article pertaining to the current state of farming at the time.
Additionally, there are 24 photographs along with 18 slides and one sheet of negatives. About half of the photos were unidentified. The other half has either John Marsh or Karl Norberg pictured. Also, there is one picture of Todd Goodell. The slides have generic descriptions on them (e.g. farm, cow, road). Also, many of the photos are undated. An estimated date range would be from 1900-1979.
Finally, there was some publicity for the program and workshop. There were many newspaper articles and pictures on the Rural Experience lecture and workshop. These articles were found in The Independent and Enterprise News(1979). The Erie-Times News featured the program in the calendar of events section of the paper as well as running a small article about the project. Lastly, the ESC Alumni News (1979) wrote a short article on the project and how the grant was given.
Dates
- 1900-1991
- 1978-1979
Conditions Governing Access
Available to researchers for use in the university archive.
Extent
From the Collection: 0.50 Linear Feet
Repository Details
Part of the Edinboro University Archives Repository
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