Home Stretch

Hello!
Time grows short and my summer CCEPS projects edge closer to completion. It has been a very productive and satisfying week working with the Finkle maps and blueprints — pieces from all states but California have been organized into folders and their data entered into Archivists’ Toolkit. Now I am slowly distributing the giant California pile into smaller piles around the room. I have been trying to stick to my inventory categories in deciding where to place the items, but in many cases I have seen new patterns emerge in the papers themselves that have led me to rename an existing inventory entry or regroup items according to different criteria as I go.

To accommodate my many California piles I have had to take advantage of every available surface, and have also improvised several new flat areas using the office chairs-

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I also started wearing a dust mask after getting a headache and sore throat the first day of moving.

This is a neat item from the King’s River project in central California – a list of lumber for a bridge over the river, with a date stamp of August 10, 1906 –

7-27-KingsRiverBridge.jpgOverall, I am looking forward to having this project finished and rehoused just for the satisfaction of having it done, but also know that I will miss coming to the library every day to take on an archiving challenge!

Ditches, Gulches, Rip Rap and Slickens

Hello!
This week I finally have some end results that I can share – the Padua Hills Theatre Collection is now uploaded to the CCDL’s City of Claremont History Collection page! You can search for ‘Mexican Players’ or ‘Padua Hills’ and the playbills and fliers will come up along with a few postcards and photographs. Please visit and explore. It was difficult choosing which pieces to digitize, but I think I have a good selection that represents the large span of time, and you can see the lettering and design element changes corresponding to larger cultural design shifts over the decades.

After uploading the Padua Hills material, I returned to the 24 folders of Finkle papers, and began sorting material according to state (with moving help from the Special Collections staff – thanks, Ayat, Tanya, and Lisa!). Now I have the CCEPS room tables covered with piles of maps and blueprints, with California’s pile being the highest by far. I’ll look forward to continuing with this next week, when I will have to come up with a more comprehensive and detailed plan to refine the collection sorting even further. It will be very satisfying and wonderful to get these into a workable order!

I have been taking more photos as I sort through the piles this time – many of the blueprints are striking as works of industrial engineering art, although (to me) incomprehensible as work plans. And some of the maps are just stunning. I’m including my favorites below, as well as my favorite placename – Get There Ditch, in Boulder County, Colorado.

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The “Zone of Hydraulicked Slickens” is a close second. You’ve got to keep the Rip Rap under control, after all. This paper has some water damage but still somewhat readable.

Zone of Hydraulicked Slickens.jpgBeautiful colors for Gore Canyon, Colorado:

GoreCanon.jpgSnoqualmie River and Falls area in Washington:

Snoqualmie.jpgThe Main Cables for the Power House at Bull Run River, Oregon:

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Quick Stepping

Hello! This week feels like it went by very fast, probably because I fit a lot of different steps of the archival process into just a few days. The Padua Hills Theatre Collection is now well on its way to digitized completion!

The first accomplishment of the week was creating a finding aid in Archivists’ Toolkit, which was even more gratifying when I got to see a copy printed out for proofreading. I also got started with scanning, beginning with some of the photos and postcards featuring images of the theater and the Mexican Players and then moving on to the advertisement fliers. Then we went over metadata entry for items as they will be cataloged in the City of Claremont History Collection at the Claremont Colleges Digital Library. I took a lot of notes on what information to put where, and with the help of a few templates I was able to get a majority of the fliers and their metadata uploaded on Thursday. Next week I will get finish with the fliers and also get the playbills and newsletters scanned and uploaded.

Many of the steps will have to be revisited when I finally have a completed folder count and numbering system in place, and then I will add the final numbers into each record on both Archivists’ Toolkit and the metadata fields in the digitized records. I have been hesitant to move forward with the numbering part until we know exactly how many additional newsletters from Carpe Diem we will end up with. There are 23 total that could be coming in, which could be divided into several folders depending on the years represented. It will just be easier to wait for the items to be in hand than to build around them, but it is very unsatisfying to leave information out of all the cataloging entries knowing that I will have to go back through every one later! Especially since I only have about three weeks left to work, and a lot of Finkle maps to move around!

Moving and Removing

Hello! I had a very productive week on the Finkle Papers and the Padua Hills collection, with a few good surprises to make it even sweeter. While the Finkle Papers project only moved ahead on the planning side of things, I was able to begin physically re-housing the Padua Hills material into new folders and removing the many duplicate copies of some of the playbills. The former arrangement had placed items in folders organized by theatrical season, so that even if a folder contained only two fliers from July 1949, the folder – and the fliers – were labeled “1948-49,” which became confusing when the fliers did not have printed years on them. I rearranged the item by the year the production actually took place so each piece will be easier to find. It was very satisfying to make real changes with results I could see!

I also had my first in-depth encounter with Archivists’ Toolkit, and hope I will be able to keep my children and siblings straight when I get into it for real with my big plans.

And now for some nice surprises!
A bookseller at Carpe Diem in Walnut has some copies of Padua Hills News Notes she said she would be willing to exchange for some of the extra Padua Hills materials we will be weeding out, and it sounds like they will be a nice addition to the collection with some missing years represented.

Additionally, there was another file here in Special Collections containing many more items relating to Padua Hills, including clippings, printed brochures, and several more advertisement fliers including one from 1938 – the earliest in the collection – and two larger lobby card-sized items. Lisa Crane helped me come up with an additional series to my completed arrangement that could accommodate the added material, and I was able to complete re-housing the entire contents of the box with the exception of the News Notes, which will wait until we see what comes in from the bookseller.

I was also glad to find in the file a copy of a  very good 1995 article by historian Matt Garcia about the Mexican Players, which has proved very enlightening and helpful in writing the biographical/historical context for the finding aid –‘Just Put on That Padua Hills Smile”: The Mexican Players and the Padua Hills Theatre, 1931-1974″. California History 74 (3): 244-261. I recommend it to anyone interested in the theatre and local history.

Unfortunately, I still have not come across any clues about the identity of the person who created the collection, but I suppose something could still turn up.

Next week I will continue working on the description for the collection to be added to the finding aids for both collections, and will also get back into Archivists’ Toolkit to practice navigating and updating the pages for Finkle. Until then, a happy Fourth of July holiday to all.

Finkle Arms and Padua Hills

Hello again! This week, I delved into the details of Fred C. Finkle’s professional life to create a new biography for the finding aid, researched place names to identify untitled maps and blueprints, and cracked open the box containing my next project – playbills and newsletters for the Padua Hills Theatre, featuring productions by the Mexican Players. Reading the CCEPS processing manual and description templates got me thinking and plotting my strategy for organizing these collections – I foresee some challenges, but

First, thanks to Special Collections Librarian emerita Jean Beckner for locating several folders with Finkle-related clippings and notes. One particularly delightful factoid I was pleased to learn is that Fred Finkle built a Finkle Building in downtown Los Angeles to house his offices, and which was also home to the Hotel Snow (see photo). He also built several apartment buildings, including the Finkle Arms at 9th and Figueroa and Finkle Manor. What wonderful names!

Finkle’s reputation as an expert engineer and geologist is reflected in these stacks of disorganized blueprints; while working mainly for Edison Electric Co., Finkle designed and built seven hydroelectric projects while consulting for companies in Colorado, Oregon, and Washington, as well as other companies in Central and Southern California. The dates on the blueprints for these projects often overlap or run closely together, evidence his skills were widely respected and in high demand.

Finkle started his own consulting firm in 1911 in Los Angeles, which he continued until his death in 1949, and served as an expert witness in many trials litigating water rights and supply issues. He was also an outspoken opponent of several high profile water projects he determined to be defective or impracticable, including the poorly designed and constructed  St. Francis Dam (a Mulholland venture) which Finkle condemned four years before its catastrophic failure resulting in the loss of 631 lives and $20 million in property.

The folders also revealed several past inventories of Finkle’s maps and
blueprints; there is one typewritten
copy, a handwritten copy on yellow legal paper, and a printed copy that
looks like it was made on a computer from the 1980s or early 1990s. It
seems plenty of people looked at the papers, but they still were put
back into the same folders in no particular order each time. I am sure organizing the papers seemed so daunting a task that it was easier to just put them away again, even if disorganized. I cannot really blame them!

I mentioned my next project – a small
collection of playbills, fliers, and newsletters for the Mexican Players at the Padua Hills
Theatre. Next week I hope to get closer to devising a schema to arrange and describe the material with the
CCEPS description template. I also checked out a 1961 book called Mexican Serenade: the Story of the Mexican Players and Padua Hills Theatre, written by Pauline B. Deuel and published by the Padua Institute.
 
Below is a playbill from 1943 and a newsletter from 1940 – the hand drawn images and lettering are very charming. I also include a photo of Fred C. Finkle’s Finkle Building – one of several structures bearing his name that have sadly been demolished – it seems the apartment buildings are gone, too. (Photo LAPL)


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Fred C. Finkle Papers

Hello! I’m Jade, a History major at Pitzer College and the CCEPS Fellow this summer. I am very excited to explore the materials in Special Collections and learn as much as I can about archiving, processing, and digitizing during my time here.

My first project is reexamining the Fred C. Finkle Papers in the Water Resources Collection. Finkle (1865-1949) was a engineer and geologist who designed or consulted on many hydroelectric power projects throughout the western states beginning in 1887.

The Finkle Papers are comprised of 24 oversized flat folders stuffed with maps, blueprints, charts, and tables from Finkle’s water projects in California, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington state, as well as several items from a project in Mexico City. The time frame for the materials ranges from 1895-1931, with the majority being from 1902-1912.

My first task has been to inventory the collection, over 800 pieces that for the most part are a disorganized mess, with all projects and material types jumbled together. The folders are labeled, but only with simple labels such as “Water – Finkle – Blueprints, Tables, Maps,” which is not useful at all for organization or research. Next week I will begin researching some of the placenames and other clues to determine where some of the more mysterious items that do not have titles or obvious reference points. I will also begin research for a more thorough Fred C. Finkle biography entry to add to the online collection guide. I will also devise a schema to rearrange and re-house the collection.

I hope to post a lot of photos of items from the collection over the coming weeks, it will be helpful in showing what the collection contains while also highlighting the beauty and artistry of the drawings. Below are a few items that struck me as I worked through the last folder.

The first gives an idea of the type of content and organization of the folders, with a promotional blueprint for rail car gear lubrication oil at the bottom and a blueline map of the rivers and reservoirs of Oregon’s Mt. Hood Railway & Power Co. above. The second photo is a portion of a blueprint diagram sheet for Kern River Power Plant No. 1, in California’s Central Valley. The third image is a graph diagram I found particularly lovely, made for the Arrowhead Reservoir and Power Co. based in San Bernardino. Click the thumbnails to see full images.
More next week!

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