The MASC

The MASC Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, at Washington State University Libraries Home to WSU's rare books and archives.

We're located within WSU's Holland and Terrell Libraries, and our website is: http://libraries.wsu.edu/masc/

In 1892, the first presidential election after WSU had come into existence, you had to be both male and 21 to be eligibl...
11/05/2024

In 1892, the first presidential election after WSU had come into existence, you had to be both male and 21 to be eligible to vote. Grover Cleveland beat incumbent Benjamin Harrison in that election.

While women had been able to vote in Washington territory from 1883 to 1887, when Washington became a state in 1889 that right was voted down. The state constitution was amended in 1910, allowing women to vote, though it would not happen until 1920 nationally. WSU female students’ first presidential election was then 1912, in which Woodrow Wilson beat incumbent William Taft and third party candidate Teddy Roosevelt.

Though in theory voting was open to any eligible person regardless of race, in reality election officials in parts of the country could put in place practices to inhibit minority voting. In 1965 the U.S. Voting Rights Act was put in place to allow the federal government to step in and protect minority voters’ rights. In 1968, Richard Nixon earned his first term, defeating Hubert Humphrey.

In 1970, Washington voters turned down a proposition to lower the voting age to 19, but the following year the 26th amendment was passed, lowering the voting age to 18 nationally. So, 1972 was the first year most Cougar freshmen could vote, with Richard Nixon earning a second term by defeating George McGovern.

Though it would evolve from there, in 1991 regular absentee ballots (e.g. vote by mail) became legal in Washington, allowing WSU students to vote in their home counties without traveling back to vote in person or registering at their school addresses. In 1992, Bill Clinton defeated the incumbent president, George Bush.

U.S. elections do evolve, but unless you’re 21+, male, white, and live close enough to home to go back and vote in person, well, the past may have been less than fair to you. If you’ve not already done so, take advantage of the rights gained over the history of this school, and vote today!

Washington State University Libraries Pullman

Helping students register to vote, stay aware of upcoming voter deadlines, and become more informed and involved with issues they're passionate about.

10/31/2024

Haunted MASC is starting now in Terrell Library's ground floor! Come catch all the spooky fun and activities, and Happy Halloween!

Stumbled across this here in MASC in the past few hours, and it felt very appropriate for today... Harold F. "Ole" Olsen...
10/31/2024

Stumbled across this here in MASC in the past few hours, and it felt very appropriate for today... Harold F. "Ole" Olsen and his future wife Jeanne Rounds are in the center here at a campus costume dance, likely in 1940 or 1941. She has come as the Bryan Hall clock tower; he as a copy of President Bryan's campus history book, Historical Sketch of the State College of Washington 1896-1925.

Washington State University Libraries Pullman
WSU Pullman

Archives after Dark!  We wanted to extend thanks and appreciation to the Association for Faculty Women, who held a 50th ...
10/16/2024

Archives after Dark! We wanted to extend thanks and appreciation to the Association for Faculty Women, who held a 50th anniversary event in the library atrium on Monday evening, and then came in to MASC afterwards to look at curated records held here in our collections. So much fun working with the AFW reps as they planned this, when they came in several weeks in advance to select items for display, and then watching the AFW members interact with that history. Great night!

Washington State University Libraries Pullman

As part of the 30th anniversary celebration for the Terrell Library yesterday, the staff opened the old Holland Library ...
08/28/2024

As part of the 30th anniversary celebration for the Terrell Library yesterday, the staff opened the old Holland Library entrance for a few hours, allowing students, staff, and visitors to enter the library as they would have from the 1950s to the 1990s. So lovely to have that light and breeze coming through again!

WSU Pullman Washington State University Libraries Pullman

Sharing a new article from HistoryLink, about Frank and George Hirahara: https://historylink.org/File/23031If you're unf...
07/18/2024

Sharing a new article from HistoryLink, about Frank and George Hirahara: https://historylink.org/File/23031

If you're unfamiliar with the names, they were Yakima residents of Japanese heritage who were interned at Heart Mountain, WY during the second Wolrd War. Frank went through high school there, then came to WSC after he was released and got his electrical engineering degree here, class of '48. The MASC connection is that the family set up a photo lab/studio in the camp, and their collection of 2000 negatives is housed here in the department. The full collection is digitized and online at https://content.libraries.wsu.edu/digital/collection/hiraharag/ - an amazing look at camp life from the eyes of those who lived it.

George Hirahara was 5 years old when he left Japan with his mother to join his father in Washington. At the age of 19, his parents sent him to Japan to wed Koto Inoue in an arranged marriage. The cou

We wanted to share this 22 minute documentary from the NFL, about the Heart Mountain (Wyoming) Internment Camp, where al...
05/29/2024

We wanted to share this 22 minute documentary from the NFL, about the Heart Mountain (Wyoming) Internment Camp, where almost 14,000 people of Japanese descent were held for up to three years during World War II. They tell the story of the high school students in the camp who were allowed to play football against other area schools, and of a former NFL player whose parents were interned. The documentary just aired on Monday.

Any time you see someone sitting on a stage with images projected behind him, those images are from the Frank and George Hirahara Photographs of Heart Mountain, held here at WSU MASC (the Hiraharas were from Yakima; Frank was in high school himself in the camp and after his release enrolled here at WSU Pullman, class of 1948). Their photographs can be found used in numerous other places in the documentary as well.

We are so grateful here to be able to curate and share these types of resources with others, to be able to aid historians and documentarians in making sure these stories are never forgotten.

Washington State University Libraries Pullman

Former NFL linebacker and Super Bowl champion Scott Fujita traces his family history in the U.S. back to Japanese internment during World War II. While he an...

January 7, 1974, a little over 50 years ago. Steve Puidokas of WSU puts up a shot against number 1 ranked UCLA's Bill Wa...
05/27/2024

January 7, 1974, a little over 50 years ago. Steve Puidokas of WSU puts up a shot against number 1 ranked UCLA's Bill Walton (32) in Beasley Coliseum, on the latter's last visit as a player to the Palouse. One of the last half-century's true faces of basketball, particularly here in the west - some will know Bill Walton as a Cougar opponent, some as the face of Blazermania, and some as the Pac-12's most exuberant ambassador for the past several decades. Rest well, Bill.

End of the week and sadly my last post as your semester curator. This being the case, I thought it would be fun to share...
05/10/2024

End of the week and sadly my last post as your semester curator. This being the case, I thought it would be fun to share with you some everyday archive random finds! This ranges from the lost sticky note to some of the cool tools and permanent pieces of the MASC. Of course not all of them are represented here, but as most things with history, it is a glimpse!

It has been my pleasure to share MASC with you through my own lens! I look forward to joining all of you in supporting and loving MASC as a fellow follower😉📖😇 Thank you to Trevor Bond, Mark O'English, Joleen Warner, Will Gregg, Lotus Norton-Wisla, and Linnea Rash!

You can also find me at Curio Tohm which is a page I created to help advocate for all libraries. On this page I spread positive gratefulness for what libraries do, share curious tidbits about the librarianship world and my journey through it, and of course anything to do with the power of reading. Curio Tohm is my personal project to bring awareness to and support of the library’s stand for freedom and democracy. Stop by the page and let me know what you think.

See you on the loving and commenting side of MASC...and until then stay curious and kind!

Do you remember a couple of posts about the Kenneth Brooks Collection that a fellow MASC employee, Jean, shared with me ...
05/09/2024

Do you remember a couple of posts about the Kenneth Brooks Collection that a fellow MASC employee, Jean, shared with me at the beginning of the semester? His daughter Barbara Brooks donated more of her father's stuff, including these blueprints. Since Jean had worked on processing the collection, she talked to Barbara a couple of times. During these chats Barbara had expressed a wish to see a 3D version of the house her father had designed for the family but had abandoned because it was too expensive. Jean said she would do it, and here it is! Barbara was so pleased, although she did say liked the one that was built better. Another wonderful example of what happens here in MASC!



https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv69085

Random Finds for my last week: Cashbooks and a Rubber Stamp! I have often admired several cashbooks in our collections a...
05/08/2024

Random Finds for my last week: Cashbooks and a Rubber Stamp!

I have often admired several cashbooks in our collections as I walk the stacks, so I was delighted that during a recent tour being given of our Archives that cashbooks were highlighted. They are super impressive in size and many of them are meant to be locked. What is it about a lock and key that makes it so curious? As I looked through these ledgers I couldn't help but think of Bob Cratchit! Is there anything that comes to your minds?

Then there is this rubber stamp...
The stamp is unique because it isn't a bank name or date, it is literally a scene of a bank lobby. This is no ordinary bank and upon giving it a closer look reminded me of the London bank in Mary Poppins! If you look closely you can see the tellers helping customers at the bottom. Just too cool. Oh the things you find in the Archives!



https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv68401
https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv89947
https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv07525
https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv38647
https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv30781

There are so many treasures I found in the Carl Johnson and Lenore Emerson Correspondence collection. I know I can't sha...
05/06/2024

There are so many treasures I found in the Carl Johnson and Lenore Emerson Correspondence collection. I know I can't share them all. As my time wraps up here in MASC so must the finds of this collection. For now, that is. I am sure some more researchers will find this interesting and I hope this collection will be used more in the future. I'd like to note that the new MASC finding aid that I wrote will be updated soon too!

The saying, as one door closes another opens, is exactly how I feel right now, and I imagine how Carl felt returning from the Navy. It was too late for him to enroll back in school at WSC, so he ended up taking up the only opportunity on his plate- farming in Rosebud, Alberta Canada. He only did this for a few months and his letters to Lenore during this time dwindled under the hardship.

The next set of images are postcards and letterheads from Lenore's trip to Long Beach, CA. It is also the tail end of this collection. I was proudly able to stick the official processed labels on this collection right before graduation! When another collection is successfully processed it is a good day in the Archives💜🥳💜🥳

Address

Terrell Library
Pullman, WA
99164

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Friday 8:30am - 4:30pm

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