Digitizing Atwater: Nutrition, Agriculture, and Home Economics in the Long 19th Century

Item

Title

Digitizing Atwater: Nutrition, Agriculture, and Home Economics in the Long 19th Century

Description

"Digitizing Atwater,” a collaborative project based at Wesleyan University, focuses on the papers of Wilbur Olin Atwater (1844-1907; Wesleyan B.A. 1865; Yale Ph.D. 1869), among the most important American scientists of the 19th century. Atwater's groundbreaking work in nutrition science resulted in the popularization of the calorie; his vilification by the Methodist church for his findings regarding the nutritive value of alcohol was a great controversy of the day. Atwater was also the founder of the first U.S. Agricultural Experiment Station. At Wesleyan, Atwater's professional papers will be processed and digitized, and two collections of Atwater family papers will be digitized; at the University of Connecticut, records of the Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station (SAES) will be digitized. Over two-and-a- half years, beginning in May 2016, "Digitizing Atwater” will digitally co-locate four interrelated collections of papers, making available the cohesive corpus of work by Atwater, his colleagues, and family.

Abstract

"Digitizing Atwater" will bring together electronically four interrelated collections comprised of correspondence, documents, photographs, postcards, letterbooks, diaries, ephemeral publications, and calling cards. Readily available published bound books that form a part of the collections will be excluded from digitization. Focused on agriculture, health, nutrition, and home economics, these collections also provide insight into the domestic life of a prominent family in the 18th-20th centuries. Atwater's children, Charles W. and Helen, were important scientists in their own right, making significant contributions to the fields of zoology and home economics, respectively. Family correspondence includes discussion of science and religion, reactions to the Civil War and two World Wars, temperance, a family member's struggles with schizophrenia, and many other issues. Correspondents outside of the family include such notable figures as Booker T. Washington, Woodrow Wilson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Orange Judd.



Wesleyan owns the Wilbur Olin Atwater Papers except for a portion of the collection that was de-accessioned and gifted to the University of Connecticut (UConn) in 1966. Those records formed the basis of the SAES Records collection. Catherine Galbraith gave the Atwater Family Papers, 1843-1943, to Wesleyan in 1966. Alan Galbraith gave the Atwater Family Papers, 1788-2003, to Wesleyan in December 2008 and January 2009. All of these collections contain correspondence to and from Wilbur Olin Atwater.

Date

Temporal Coverage

1788 - 2003

Spatial Coverage

Wilbur Olin Atwater travelled widely for his scientific work, and he wrote extensively about those travels. These collections include significant coverage of Connecticut, Alabama, Maine, Tennessee, Massachusetts, Vermont, Washington DC, Cuba, Germany, France, Russia, and India.

Extent

32 letterbooks, research notes, scrapbooks

Institution

Applicant Unit

Collaborating Institution

Identifier

PI2 Institution

University Archivist

PI2 Name

Mr. Leith

PI3 Institution

University Archivist

PI3 Name

Mr. Ms. Betsy

Primary Contact

Ms. Francesca Livermore

Request

$347,075

Was Funded