Monday, May 15, 2017

Summer Session A Library Hours - May 22 to June 30

Welcome back for Ship Summer Session A!

Summer Session A Library Hours are as follows:
Monday   7:30am – 4:00pm
Tuesday   7:30am – 4:00pm
Wednesday   7:30am – 4:00pm
Thursday   7:30am – 4:00pm
Friday   7:30am – 4:00pm
Saturday   Closed
Sunday   Closed

With one holiday exception:
Monday, May 29   Closed for Memorial Day

Breaking news: the last week of Summer A will have extended hours:
Sunday, June 25 4:00pm - 8:00pm
Monday, June 26   7:30am – 8:00pm
Tuesday, June 27   7:30am – 8:00pm
Wednesday, June 28   7:30am – 8:00pm
Thursday, June 29   7:30am – 8:00pm
Friday, June 30   7:30am – 4:00pm
Saturday   Closed

Check the Library Calendar for other dates! 

Thursday, May 11, 2017

Congratulations 2017 Spring Grads!


CONGRATULATIONS
 to our 2017 Spring Graduates!

You have burned the midnight oil, completed your studies, and are on your way! We've enjoyed helping you here in the library and we look forward to seeing your future success!



Several of you have worked with us in the library and while we're sad to see you go, we're looking forward to hearing about your future success!


Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Library Intersession Hours - May 13 through May 21

Welcome to Intersession, the library will be open as follows:

Saturday, May 13, 2016Closed
Sunday, May 14, 2016Closed
Monday, May 15, 20168:00-4:00
Tuesday, May 16, 20168:00-4:00
Wednesday, May 17, 20168:00-4:00
Thursday, May 18, 20168:00-4:00
Friday, May 19, 20168:00-4:00
Saturday, May 20, 2016Closed
Sunday, May 21, 2016Closed

Enjoy your time out of class!
Check the Library Calendar for other dates! 

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Fall Registration Opportunity

Attention Students who have not yet registered for the Fall 2017 semester:

If you have not registered for the Fall 2017 semester now is the time! Ship is re-opening registration starting Finals Week Monday at 8am through Finals Week Wednesday at 4pm.

If you have a hold that is blocking you from registering, those holds will be temporarily suspended (Monday 8am to Wednesday 4pm) so you can register.

Finals Week, of course, is not the best time to be thinking about registering - however, it is important that you register for your Fall classes now. Classes with low enrollment will be cancelled over the summer.

Remember that Schedule Adjustment will re-open on August 1st - but you really should register for classes before the end of Finals (for best availability).

See your advisor ot College Dean for more information!

Thursday, May 4, 2017

#TBT in the Archives 5/4/17: May Day

Celebrating the end of winter, the blooming of flowers, warm temperatures, and summer is nothing new. At Shippensburg in 2017, students flock to the red and blue lawn chairs scattered across campus, enjoy meals outside, and up their runs or cycling sessions outside.

Past students at Shippensburg also marked the coming of spring and summer, but with a bit more pomp and celebration. The annual May Day festivities included dancing, royalty, theater, and festivities on campus until the mid-1950s.

May Day Queen and her court, c. late 1940s.

Traditionally, May Day has been celebrated with a variety of activities. Children gather flowers to keep or bestow on others in celebration of spring, and May Poles are decorated with colorful streamers, which are wrapped around the pole by dancers.

Child attendants were regular members of Cumberland Valley State Normal School's May Day celebrations.

At Shippensburg, May Day also included the crowning of a May Queen (a senior woman) and her court of attendants (two from each class). With the exception of a few years, May Day was an annual campus event from the early 1900s until the 1950s. By the 1930s, celebrations included dramatic presentations, often of Shakespeare plays, and entire programs of dance related to the year's theme.


This Shippensburg State Teachers College May Day program features a print of a dancing girl celebrating nature.

In 1936, May Day was held in the SSTC Shakespeare Amphitheater, located generally where the Little Red Schoolhouse is today. The Campus Reflector reported the event was the first for the newly constructed outdoor gathering space and featured three Shakespeare plays as part of the festivities.

Dances during the 1920 May Day Fete.

In 1946, the theme of May Day was "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and dances punctuated the acts of the play's presentation. In 1951, the theme was "Una Fiesta Mexicana," and dances were based on aspects of Mexican history.

Program for 1951's "Una Fiesta Mexicana."

Though May Day festivities ended in the 1950s, spring celebrations at Shippensburg have not, though they've taken different forms over the past 60 years.

Shippensburg University Archives & Special Collections has plenty of photos and information about historic May Day programs as well as other spring celebrations on campus. To find out more, schedule an appointment at specialcollections@ship.edu.


Sources:
Campus Reflector, April 8, 1936
Class Files, 1933, 1934, 1946, 1951-1954, Shippensburg University Archives & Special Collections, Shippensburg, PA.
Record Group 30, Box 4, May Day file and May Day fete file, Shippensburg University Archives & Special Collections, Shippensburg, PA.












Friday, April 28, 2017

Extended Library Hours April 30 to May 11

The library's extended hours are in effect now through May 11th.

The library will be open until until 11pm on Friday, 9pm on Saturday, and until 1:00am Sunday through Thursday of Finals week!

Sometimes it's hard to stay inside and focus when it's so nice out (yay for the rain?) but remember the library has quiet study on the upper level and group study areas on the main and lower levels. Study hard! You've Almost Made It!





Thursday, April 27, 2017

#TBT in the Archives 4/27/17: Rail Trail

Throughout this academic year, a lot of construction has happened on the south end of campus. However, in contrast to other recent campus construction, this earth-moving hasn't involved new buildings. Instead, crews are blazing new trails - by extending the Cumberland Valley Rail Trail.


The Cumberland Valley Rail Trail stretches 11 miles from Shippensburg to Newville along a right-of-way previously used by the Cumberland Valley Railroad. It's a multi-use trail open to all ages, and accommodates pedestrians, cyclists, and horses on a route that traverses beautiful rural Cumberland County. Volunteer organization Cumberland Valley Rails-to-Trails has been working for 20 years to establish, maintain and expand the trail, which is free to use.


A CVRR train passes south of Old Main. The steam plant is pictured at left.
On the Shippensburg University campus, recent construction on the trail includes extending the route from Fogelsanger Road to North Earl Street, as well as a new pedestrian bridge stretching over Fogelsanger Road connecting campus to Britton Park. But why has the university gotten involved in this project?
This image from the 1900-1901 CVSNS catalog shows the Cumberland Valley Railroad crossing what is now Prince Street.
When Cumberland Valley State Normal School opened in 1873, Shippensburg was served by three railroads - the Cumberland Valley Railroad, the Western Maryland Railroad, and Philadelphia & Reading Railroad. Chartered in 1837, the Cumberland Valley Railroad ran from Harrisburg to Chambersburg, passing through Shippensburg. Tracks ran adjacent to campus - following the route traced by the new rail trail extension - before continuing south on Earl Street to a station that was located in the area of what is now the Shippensburg Beverage Center.


Western Maryland Railroad and the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad had an agreement to share a station located in the vicinity of the 7-11 on West King Street, as well as tracks. Western Maryland ran south to Chambersburg and Maryland, while P&R traveled north towards Harrisburg.


Passengers wishing to ride CVRR and transfer to another line had to walk several blocks between stations to switch trains. But Shippensburg students riding CVRR at the beginning and end of each term had the benefit of being dropped off on campus because the line ran along the south edge of school property. A stone kiosk stood in front of Old Main near what is now Prince Street to handle students and their baggage.
This kiosk stood on the CVRR at Cumberland Valley State Normal School for use by students at the beginning and end of each term.
Look closely at this image of campus and you'll see the kiosk in front of Old Main, roughly in the middle of the frame.
The special station must have been invaluable to students in an era where cars did not exist and it would have been foolish and expensive to take a horse away from family to keep on campus for months at a time. It was so important to student life that railroad information was featured in the CVSNS catalog from the 1880s until the first decade of the 1900s.


CVSNS Catalog, 1899-1900, page 8.




SU Archives & Special Collections has a variety of photos that show the railroad on campus, including photos in historic catalogs and images on display. To check out those images, make an appointment at specialcollections@ship.edu.


Sources:
Charles Pague, Burkhart Collection, Shippensburg Historical Society, Shippensburg, PA.
Cumberland Valley Rails-to-Trails homepage, http://www.cvrtc.org/index.php (Accessed April 24, 2017).
Cumberland Valley State Normal School Catalog, 1899-1900, 8.
Cumberland Valley State Normal School Catalog, 1900-1901, 25.
Cumberland Valley State Normal School Catalog, 1901-1902, 16.
Cumberland Valley State Normal School Catalog, 1902-1903, 1.
Cumberland Valley State Normal School Catalog, 1903-1904, 1.