Hauliday - from the 1967 Ceer
1 2021-09-09T23:24:31+00:00 Rachel Karas 18684fea626f7d5d7f977e613f3d26fd8c2cc6b4 151 3 Yearbook page. Two pictures of students moving boxes across the top of the page, captioned "Precision beautiful to behold." In the bottom left is a picture of many wooden chairs stacked together, captioned "What new things will we behold." In the lower right corner is a picture of students with their heads on each other's stomachs, captioned, "Ho! Ho!" In the center is a photo of the construction sign for the Chapman College Library. Next to it is the page's main text, which reads, "HAULIDAY. February 17 was designated "Haul-It-Day" by Mrs. Flint. Classes were dismissed to allow faculty and students to move some 55,000 books. Dr. Arthur E. Flint engineered the moving of the one and one-quarter mile long line of books. 1200 cookies and other refreshments were on hand all day. 'Isn't it amazing what can be accomplished when the students and faculty place their collective shoulders against a wall and both groups push in the same direction.'" 1967 Ceer (LD891.C466 C4), Frank Mt. Pleasant Library of Special Collections and Archives, Chapman Unviersity. plain 2021-09-21T17:00:09+00:00 Rachel Karas 18684fea626f7d5d7f977e613f3d26fd8c2cc6b4This page is referenced by:
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The Thurmond Clarke Memorial Library: 1967 - 2003
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A New Building
In 1965, ground was broken for the new Chapman College Library. The building was the first academic building constructed on the Orange campus, and the first built under the Chapman College Master Plan.
Haul-It-Day
Once the new library building was completed, the entire Chapman community came together to move the books and other materials from their previous home in Memorial Hall to the new library. Classes were cancelled to allow faculty and students alike to load up materials in boxes loaned by the Golden West Citrus Association, move them out of Memorial Hall on a conveyor belt, across campus on a 1.25 mile journey, and then into their new home on another conveyor belt.
The day was celebrated by all as emblematic of the unity of the Chapman campus. Cookies and refreshments were provided, and a dance was held for students that evening in the old library.
Dedication and Naming
The dedication of the new library was held a few weeks after Haul-It Day, on March 5th, 1967, as guests filled the lobby of the new building.
In March 1972, the library was officially named the Thurmond Clarke Memorial Library, in honor of the Southern California United States District Judge. Clarke's widow, Athalie R. Clarke, was a life trustee of Chapman and generous benefactor of the campus library.
Changing Times
Serving as the Chapman library for nearly four decades, the Thurmond Clarke Memorial Library spanned a period of many changes, both on-campus and off. Now that the library had its own building, the long-standing tradition of library events and exhibits, which the Leatherby Libraries still engages in today, began. One such event was a day of storytelling by folklorist Richard Chase in 1973.
The Thurmond Clarke Memorial Library also saw the greatest shift in technology. Two years after its construction, typewriters were added to the library in July 1969, a development that must have been a huge relief for students who needed to turn in papers without writing them by hand. Only 24 years later, in the Fall 1993 semester, the library made a huge technological jump into the Information Age when it was officially connected to the internet.
Into the 21st Century
While early pictures of the Thurmond Clarke Memorial Library seem to come from a long-ago past, later pictures show a much more modern, familiar-looking library. Staff members smile behind the Reference Desk in color photographs, and the library's newsletter, Cognitio, began in January 2000.
As Chapman University entered a new century and a new millennium, though, it was time for a new library, one we know and love today.