UGA Logo UGA Office of Public Affairs top bar image UGA Home
Columns faculty staff newspaper News Service
Contact Us
Text-Only
top bar image
SEARCH
  Columns   UGA    
 
  JANUARY 24, 2005
  In this issue
  News
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Family portrait
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Around Academe
  Worth Repeating
  Go Figure
  Digest
  UGA Guide
  Kudos
  Newsmakers
  Campus Closeup
  Faculty Profile
  Administrative Changes
  Retirees
  Update: Private Giving
  Forum
  Questions&Answers
  Weekly Reader
  Cybersights
  Bulletin Board
 
  Back Issues
  Publication Dates
  Contact Us
University’s original charter on display following restoration, conservation work
The original charter of the first state university will be displayed Jan. 27 following restoration and conservation work. The document, originally signed in Savannah in 1785, will be exhibited in observance of Founders’ Day in the main library’s Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library from 8:15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. An overview display will be on view in the lobby of the Main Library, and a Web site created by University Archives (www.libs.uga.edu/hargrett/archives/charter2.html) recounts the charter’s history. The Web site also offers images of the document’s two pages, a transcript and a 1951 history, reprinted courtesy of the Georgia Review.

Due to its fragile condition, the charter rarely leaves the vault in the rare book library. In the late 1990s, a request to display the charter in Savannah was presented to the Hargrett’s director, Mary Ellen Brooks. When the local alumni saw its condition, they began a fund-raising drive for its conservation. Before finding a home at the UGA Libraries, the charter had been stored with other state papers and not treated reverentially.

“Prior to that time, its importance had not been recognized,” wrote John Olin Eidson, editor of the Georgia Review, in 1951. “It bears evidences of having been crumpled, soiled and wetted.”

The manuscript has now been cleaned and encapsulated in buffered film.
“They [the Northeast Document Conservation Center] adhere to the principles of historic and artistic conservation practices—to be minimalist in how you alter a document,” Brooks says. “It doesn’t look like a new document, but it is, in fact, conserved.”
 
 


Columns is produced by the UGA News Service, a unit of UGA Public Affairs.
286 Oconee St., Ste. 200N, Athens, GA 30602-1999
Juliett Dinkins (jdinkins@uga.edu): editor (706) 542-8017,
Janet Beckley (jbeckley@uga.edu): art director (706) 542-8170, Peter Frey (pfrey@uga.edu): photo editor (706) 542-8086,
Matthew Weeks (mweeks@uga.edu): senior reporter (706) 542-8024, Sara Freeland (freeland@uga.edu): reporter (706) 542-8077
Questions or comments should be directed to columns@uga.edu

Back Issues | Publication Dates | Subscribe to Columns | Contact Us | Text-only Version

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2008-2009 University of Georgia. All rights reserved
The University of Georgia • Athens, GA 30602 | UGA Directory Assistance 706/542-3000
UGA Home
| UGA Today | Public Affairs Directory