The Libraries New Resources

The Libraries New Resources

3815 images published in the Louisville Herald-Post newspaper (1925-1936) of people; business and industry; government; homes; places of worship; community organizations; parks; sports; and transportation in and around Louisville, Kentucky.

http://digital.library.louisville.edu/collections/heraldpost/

The University Libraries have an online subscription to the Chicago Manual of Style which includes a searchable version of the manual as well as the Chicago Style Q&A. 

Chicago Manual of Style

 

UofL Libraries continues to add primary source materials to its Digital Collections website at http://digital.library.louisville.edu.  The latest additions are:

The Ainslie Hewett Bookplate Collection (http://digital.library.louisville.edu/collections/hewett/ ) features Gothic and heraldic bookplates designed by Louisville native (George) Ainslie Hewett (1880-1963) for notable Louisville residents, as well as for clients across the United States.

GreenFILE

GreenFILE offers well-researched information covering all aspects of human impact to the environment. Its collection of scholarly, government and general-interest titles includes content on global warming, green building, pollution, sustainable agriculture, renewable energy, recycling, and more. The database provides indexing and abstracts for approximately 295,000 records, as well as Open Access full text for more than 4,600 records. (EBSCOhost)

Images of Kentucky and Environs (http://digital.library.louisville.edu/collections/kyimages/ ) will assemble images relating to Louisville, Kentucky, and environs from various small collections in the University of Louisville Libraries' special collections and archives. It currently features the A.W.

The African American Oral History Collection (http://digital.library.louisville.edu/collections/afamoh/ ), from the Oral History Center at the University Archives and Records Center, currently includes nineteen interviews (available as audio files and transcriptions), mostly conducted in the late 1970s, that document the many aspects of life in Louisville, particularly as experienced by African Americans.

ICE Virtual Library

Institute of Civil Engineer's Library gives access to the largest repository of full-text civil engineering papers in the world.

The Kate Matthews Collection (http://digital.library.louisville.edu/collections/matthews ) celebrates a pioneering woman photographer of Pewee Valley, Kentucky.

The Kentucky Maps Collection (http://digital.library.louisville.edu/collections/maps ) currently features three atlases of Louisville and Jefferson County, Kentucky, from 1876, 1884, and 1913. These maps show inter-city and commuter rail lines, waterway crossings, and private and public properties, from a time before interstate highways crisscrossed the region and the metropolitan area expanded throughout the county.

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