ISU and Clabber Girl Team up to Host Community
History Day April 28
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. -- Do you own a little bit of Wabash Valley
history?
Bring your documents, photographs, memorabilia and personal memories
and stories to the Clabber Girl Museum on Friday, April 28 from
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. where they can be recorded for future generations
to view and learn our community's rich history.
Items for Community History Day, co-sponsored by Wabash Valley
Visions and Voices, Indiana State University's Cunningham Memorial
Library, Clabber Girl, the ISU History department and the Vigo
County Historical Society, may be brought to the Clabber Girl
Museum at 900 Wabash Avenue.
Representatives from the Cunningham Memorial Library will handle
the digitization of photographs and documents. Scanning of oversize
or three-dimensional materials can be arranged for a later time.
To ensure all materials can be processed in a timely manner, there
is a limit of five items to be scanned per person. Arrangements
can be made with the Cunningham Memorial Library to scan additional
items. All items will be returned to their owners immediately
after scanning and will become a permanent part of the Wabash
Valley Visions and Voices database (visions.indstate.edu).
ISU history faculty and students will record oral histories from
residents. To schedule an appointment for an oral history, email
history@isugw.indstate.edu . Participants in the oral history
interviews will need to sign a release form.
Nancy Baggett, one of America's
most respected baking teachers, will be at Clabber Girl*. to promote
her most recent book, "The All-American Dessert Book."
Nancy will be presenting a lecture "As American As Apple
Pie: Uniquely American Desserts" the evening of April 27th
at Clabber Girl. She will be giving two recipe demonstrations
from her book "The All-American Dessert Book" at 10
am and 1 pm during Community History Day. She will present these
demos in conjunction with Clabber Girl executive chef Eddie Wilson.
Nancy Baggett will also be on hand to talk to visitors about baking
history, to answer any questions people might have and to sign
copies of her book which will be available for purchase. (autographed
copies are now available at the Clabber
Girl online Store.)
Baggett is the author of the best-selling "All-American
Cookie Book," "The International Cookie Cookbook,"
and "The International Chocolate Cookbook," which was
named the best dessert cookbook by the International Association
of Culinary Professionals. She has written for numerous well-known
publications, including Bon Appetit, Food & Wine, Gourmet,
Eating Well, Cooking Light and The Washington Post and has demonstrated
her recipes on many television shows, including Good Morning America
and CBS This Morning.
For more information about Community History Day, please contact
Cinda May, Wabash Valley Visions and Voices at 812.237.2534 or
Tom Payne, Clabber Girl at 812.232.9446 or info@clabbergirl.com
.
About the Organizers
Wabash Valley Visions and Voices
Established by Indiana State University Library, Wabash Valley
Visions & Voices Digital Memory Project is dedicated to the
documentation and the preservation of our region's history and
cultural heritage in print, pictures and sound. This is a cooperative
effort involving the Wabash Valley's libraries, museums, cultural
organizations and community groups. This project provides open
access to its digital collection via the Internet at visions.indstate.edu
and promotes remembrance and lifelong learning for all.
Clabber Girl Museum
Opened in 2002, the Clabber Girl/Hulman & Co. museum showcases
the company's history as well as the family history of founder
Herman Hulman. The Clabber Girl Museum is located in the first
floor former lobby of the historic Hulman building. The building,
erected in 1892 at the corner of 9th Street and Wabash Avenue
in Terre Haute, has served as the company's headquarters for more
than a century.
ISU Department of History and the Research Center for Wabash
Valley History and Culture
The Department of History faculty has a long commitment to Wabash
Valley history, including numerous student-led research projects
detailing local history and our regularly offered Indiana History
course. This spring, supported by a grant from the Lilly Endowment,
the Departments of History and English (which has faculty members
who study and teach Hoosier folklore) are establishing the Research
Center for Wabash Valley History and Culture. Its main purpose
will be to facilitate student and faculty research projects that
detail the rich history and culture of our region.
Vigo County Historical Society
The mission of the Vigo County Historical Society is to collect,
preserve and share the rich heritage of Vigo County. Donations
of artifacts and photographs relating to Vigo County history are
accepted for display in the Museum. The paper and photographic
archives are available for research. The History Living program
for 3rd, 4th and 5th grade students in Vigo County as well as
other outreach programs and exhibits are offered to patrons and
to visitors to the community.