The Stephan Archives has reopened

The Stephan Archives reopened today following the annual Lawrenceville School spring break.  Normal hours resume tomorrow for spring term: 8:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.  If you need archival assistance, please contact the Archivist at jhaun@lawrenceville.org or 609-895-2034 or call the main Archives office at 609-895-2108.

Stephan Archives Newsletter, March 2013

Want to know what has been happening here in the Stephan Archives the past few months? Check out the first issue of the Stephan Archives Newsletter.  Meet the archival staff, learn about the recent visit of historian James McPherson and find out what to expect for Alumni Weekend 2013!

Stephan Archives Newsletter 1- 1

University of Wisconsin digitizes papers of Aldo Leopold, L. 1905

The following news comes from The National Historical Publications and Records Commission concerning the papers of Aldo Leopold, Lawrenceville Class of 1905, whose papers are held by the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s University Archives.  Leopold was a ground-breaking environmentalist and author of A Sand County Almanac.
“There are some who can live without wild things, and some who cannot. These essays are the delights and dilemmas of one who cannot.”

So begins the Foreword of “A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold, which he dated as March 4, 1948. Six weeks later, Leopold, one of the most influential natural conservationists of the 20th century, passed away.

Leopold’s legacy spans the disciplines of forestry, wildlife management, conservation biology, sustainable agriculture, restoration ecology, private land management, environmental history, literature, education, esthetics, and ethics.

Through a grant from the NHPRC, the Aldo Leopold Foundation contracted with the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center (UWDCC) to digitize the Leopold papers. The Leopold Collection (http://uwdc.library.wisc.edu/collections/AldoLeopold/project) houses the raw materials that document not only Leopold’s rise to prominence but the history of conservation and the emergence of the field of ecology from the early 1900s until the middle of the 20th century.

– Courtesy of the  National Historical Publications and Records Commission

For more background on this particular project, see this 2007 news article.

The digital collections themselves may be searched here.