Preservation Unit
44 Library, MC-522
UIUC Library
1408 West Gregory Dr.
Urbana, IL 61801
217-244-1626
Conservation Lab
Oak St. Library Facility
OSLF, 2nd Floor
809 South Oak Street
Mail Code 527
Champaign, IL 61820
217-265-4198
Carl Sandburg Preservation Project
“Save America’s Treasures” Grant to Preserve Sandburg Collection
The Library has been awarded $239,000 in federal partnership funds that will
benefit its Carl Sandburg Collection. The funds are part of the 2004 “Save America’s Treasures”
federal grant program, which helps preserve nationally significant cultural artifacts and historic
sites. The Library is one of 60 organizations and agencies throughout the country that received
funding.
“This grant will ensure long-term access to the Sandburg collection, which faces significant
threat of deterioration. It would be impossible for us to complete this much work at this time
without this generous federal assistance,” said Tom Teper, head of the University Library’s
preservation program. Teper is co-directing the project with Gene Rinkel, special collections
librarian and curator of the Sandburg Collection. According to Rinkel, the grant will preserve “the
collection of a great author, biographer, and poet who achieved national recognition as a symbol of
American culture.”
Housed in the Rare Book and Special Collections Library, the Carl Sandburg Collection is the
most comprehensive collection of Sandburg materials in the country. Its massive contents include
Sandburg’s personal library of more than 2,800 volumes, roughly 300,000 pages of literary
manuscripts, over 3,000 photographs, and more than 25,000 letters of correspondence with notable
contemporaries such as Ernest Hemingway, Ezra Pound, and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Also included are
more than 45,000 newspaper clippings and over 600 audiovisual materials. The collection provides a
rich insight into Sandburg’s life and work as well as into the history, literature, and culture of
twentieth-century America.
The grant will fund a combination of treatments to preserve the collection. Paper-based books
and manuscripts will be treated to neutralize their acid content and protect them from becoming
brittle. Extremely fragile materials will be photocopied to spare the originals from wear and tear,
and some will be encapsulated in protective enclosures. Other activities will include reproducing
photographic materials to protect the originals and reformatting audiovisual materials that have
become obsolete.
The Save America’s Treasures grant program is administered jointly by the
President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH), National Park Service (NPS), National
Endowment for the Arts (NEA), National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), and Institute of Museum
and Library Services (IMLS). To be successful, each project must demonstrate its national significance, an urgent
preservation need, an educational or other public benefit, and the capability to provide nonfederal
matching funds. The Library will fulfill the 1:1 matching requirement through in-kind
contributions of faculty and staff time. It also will contribute the necessary preservation
supplies for materials that are treated in house.
For more information about the Save America’s Treasures grant program,
visit
http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/treasures/
.