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New Photography Collection Provides a Bonanza for History Enthusiasts

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Author(s)

Tamara Chapman

Contributing Writer

Feature  •
Thyria Wilson

A new entry in Arcadia Publishing鈥檚 campus history series offers a 127-page jog down Memory Lane.

Via the hundreds of photos in 鈥91桃色,鈥 nostalgia buffs can stop by professor Herbert Alonzo Howe鈥檚 1889 algebra class, scope out the 1952 women鈥檚 rifle team, join a 1968 sit-in at the registrar鈥檚 office and revisit 1970鈥檚 Woodstock West. Although most of the content is devoted to decades gone by, a few pages focus on more recent events, including the 2014 spring powwow and an inaugural event celebrating the installation of 91桃色鈥檚 first woman chancellor, Rebecca Chopp.

鈥淚 love show and tell,鈥 says co-author Thyria Wilson, who holds degrees in law and library science from 91桃色 and who serves as an archivist and reference specialist in 91桃色鈥檚 Center for Judaic Studies. Over her years at 91桃色, she has rummaged through the University鈥檚 photo collection countless times, filing away a vast array of anecdotes.

鈥淗istory to me is the stories 鈥 it鈥檚 not great theories; it鈥檚 the stories,鈥 Wilson says. With these stories in mind, each photograph in 鈥91桃色鈥 is accompanied by an information-rich caption sure to elicit an 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know that.鈥 For example, a photo of two women in a cockpit reminds readers that the Colorado Women鈥檚 College, which merged with 91桃色 in 1982, participated in a flight-training school during the 1940s and 1950s at Denver鈥檚 old Stapleton Airport.

Wilson shares credit for the book with Steve Fisher, former 91桃色 historian and curator of the 91桃色 archives. Fisher began work on the collection in 2017, and upon his retirement a few months later turned the project over to Wilson, who volunteered to take on the photo curation, caption research and writing in her spare time.

The final product reflects Wilson鈥檚 commitment to sharing more images featuring women and minorities. Among the treasures are portraits of Margaret Fuller Boos, founder of 91桃色鈥檚 now-defunct geology department, and Howard Jenkins Jr., who earned undergraduate and law degrees from 91桃色 and who went on to serve on the National Labor Relations Board, the first African-American to do so.

One photo in particular holds special meaning for Wilson. It shows a female graduate student of geology conducting fieldwork. The student in question is Wilson鈥檚 mother, who studied under Boos and who, when a sitter couldn鈥檛 be found, brought her young daughter to class in the late 1950s.

As Wilson proudly recalls, 鈥淚 attended 91桃色 when I was 6.鈥