FEATURE/Leaving a Mark on History: American Antiquarian Society and David Rumsey Provide Collection of Historic Gravestones a New Resting Place Online.To download high-resolution, print-ready JPEG JPEG in full Joint Photographic Experts Group Standard computer file format for storing graphic images in a compressed form for general use. JPEG images are compressed using a mathematical algorithm. images, click on the thumbnail image above. WARNING: these images are very large (800K+) Click here for caption To download high-resolution, print-ready JPEG images, click on the thumbnail image above. WARNING: these images are very large (800K+) Click here for caption Photo, News & Lifestyle Editors FEATURE... NOTE TO MEDIA: Multimedia assets available WORCESTER, Mass. & SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 29, 2003 A unique collection of historic gravestones has found a new resting place online. The grave markers, which are subject to vandalism and deterioration, have been preserved in photographs and are now available on the Internet for the entire world to pay its respects by examining and appreciating these extraordinary objects. More than 13,500 images documenting the sculpture of more than 9,000 gravestones, most of which were made prior to 1800, make up the Farber Gravestone Collection. The American Antiquarian Society Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view. Mark blatant advertising for , using . (AAS) converted the photographic collection to digital form, and now, with help from David Rumsey's Cartography cartography: see map. cartography or mapmaking Art and science of representing a geographic area graphically, usually by means of a map or chart. Political, cultural, or other nongeographic features may be superimposed. Associates, a digital publishing company, this unique collection is available for free public access online. "We are thrilled to have the Farber Gravestone Collection online, so people have the opportunity to freely explore the rich early history of our country and its founders, many of whom are memorialized in the grave markers that make up this fascinating collection," says AAS President Ellen Dunlap. The Farber Gravestone Collection reflects the work of the late Daniel Farber of Worcester, Massachusetts, and his wife, Jessie Lie Farber, who photographed historic gravestones for more than 20 years. The collection can be found online at www.davidrumsey.com/farber/. Others whose work is incorporated into the collection include Harriette Merrifield Forbes, who worked in the 1920s mainly in Massachusetts, and Dr. Ernest Caulfield, who documented Connecticut grave markers. These gravestones, America's earliest form of sculpture, are a significant form of artistic expression and serve as precious records of biographical information. Now subject to vandalism and deterioration from the environment, the photographic records help preserve a perspective of our nation's history. In a description she wrote of the collection, Jessie Lie Farber said the digital images of the gravestones show "the sternness of the Puritan seventeenth century, replaced by the 'Age of Reason' of the eighteenth century, and that in turn replaced by the nineteenth-century's extravagance Extravagance Bovary, Emma spends money recklessly on jewelry and clothes. [Fr. Lit.: Madame Bovary, Magill I, 539–541] Cleopatra’s pearl dissolved in acid to symbolize luxury. [Rom. Hist.: Jobes, 348] , love of nature, and free expression of sentiment. The twentieth century, punctuated by two world wars and a depression, is by comparison secular, straight-forward and business-like. Death has become more distant." Map collector David Rumsey For other persons named David Rumsey, see David Rumsey (disambiguation). David Rumsey is a map collector and the founder of the David Rumsey Map Collection. He is also the president of Cartography Associates. , owner of Cartography Associates and a member of the AAS Council, says the unique nature and rich history contained within the collection inspired him to donate the resources needed to bring it to the Internet. Rumsey's own historic map collection is available for free public review online, and he has supported Internet access See how to access the Internet. to other important cultural heritage resources, including a collection of historic Japanese maps The earliest known term used for maps in Japan is thought to be kata (形, roughly "form"), which was probably in use until roughly the 8th century. During the Nara period, the term zu from the East Asian Library at Berkeley. "In many ways the grave markers are similar to maps because they combine historical events and artistic expression, and they also embody location because they are about places," Rumsey says of his fascination with the collection. The collection provides some insight into the private lives of historical figures, such as Paul Revere Revere, city (1990 pop. 42,786), Suffolk co., E Mass., a residential suburb of Boston, on Massachusetts Bay; settled c.1630, set off from Chelsea and named for Paul Revere 1871, inc. as a city 1914. , Sr., the father of the legendary silversmith who warned of the coming British. Upon viewing this grave marker and rechecking historical facts, one quickly realizes that Paul Revere, Sr., never knew of his son's contribution to our nation's history, having died a year before his son's well-known ride. The collection also confirms that John "Grizzly" Adams is not a work of fiction. He died in 1860, and a carving of a hunter with a bear appears on his marble gravestone where he is interred in Charlton, Massachusetts Charlton is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States. History Charlton was first settled in 1735. It become a separate district (from Oxford) in 1755, and was officially incorporated in 1775. . Many of the early grave markers give evidence of our past by relating stories of death by such means as disease, falling from a horse, fording a river, raising a barn, being cast away in a storm or slain by Indians. John Stockbridge's death in 1768 was documented as "sudden, premature, awfull (sic) & violent, providentially prov·i·den·tial adj. 1. Of or resulting from divine providence. 2. Happening as if through divine intervention; opportune. See Synonyms at happy. occasioned by the fall of a tree." But in case those paying their respects misunderstood the epitaph epitaph, strictly, an inscription on a tomb; by extension, a statement, usually in verse, commemorating the dead. The earliest such inscriptions are those found on Egyptian sarcophagi. , the marker also contains an illustrated carving -- presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. of Stockbridge -- showing a tree limb striking his head. The data accompanying the photographs in the online collection includes the name and death date of the deceased, the location of the stone, and information concerning the stone material, the iconography, the inscription, and -- when known -- the carver. Like the award-winning David Rumsey Map Collection, Los Angeles-based Luna Imaging's (www.lunaimaging.com) Insight software is being used to allow Web viewers to experience this unique collection of historic gravestones in a revolutionary way. Using Insight, users can zoom in, pan and do side-by-side comparisons of grave markers simultaneously. Users can save groups of images to create their own customized collections. They also can crop or magnify mag·ni·fy v. To increase the apparent size of, especially with a lens. areas of gravestones that otherwise would be difficult to decipher, and discover details that reflect artistry, culture, theology, precision and history. The launch of the Farber Collection online reflects AAS's commitment to use technology to make historic resources more widely available. This is in keeping with the tradition of the Society, one of the first research libraries to use microfilm to preserve and provide wider access to important historic works. The American Antiquarian Society (AAS) is an independent research library and learned society founded in 1812 in Worcester, Massachusetts. The library's collections document the life of America's people from the colonial era through the Civil War and Reconstruction. Collections include some three million books, pamphlets, newspapers, periodicals, broadsides, manuscripts, music, children's literature children's literature, writing whose primary audience is children. See also children's book illustration. The Beginnings of Children's Literature The earliest of what came to be regarded as children's literature was first meant for adults. , graphic arts graphic arts: see aquatint; drawing; drypoint; engraving; etching; illustration; linoleum block printing; lithography; mezzotint; niello; pastel; poster; silk-screen printing; silhouette; silverpoint; sketch; stencil; woodcut and wood engraving. , genealogy genealogy (jē'nēŏl`əjē, –ăl`–, jĕ–), the study of family lineage. Genealogies have existed since ancient times. and local histories. The Society is located online at www.americanantiquarian.org. Cartography Associates (CA), founded in 1996 by map collector David Rumsey, promotes the distribution of digital facsimiles both in print and electronic media. Specializing in both primary source documents and cutting-edge technology, CA (www.davidrumsey.com) is committed to developing tools that integrate cataloging with visual images on the Internet. CA's vision is to offer users the best of both worlds: the powerful searching, access, and user functionality made possible by technology, combined with the visual beauty, technical mastery and intellectual richness of original source materials Noun 1. source materials - publications from which information is obtained source - a document (or organization) from which information is obtained; "the reporter had two sources for the story" . Note: Two photos are available at these URLs: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/photo.cgi?pw.102903/bb6 http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/photo.cgi?pw.102903/bb6a |
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