Category Archives: Archives & Special Collections

Polish and American World War Veterans Auxiliary – UMass Dartmouth Archives and Special Collections Blog

Topic: Polish and American World War Veterans Auxiliary

The archives staff recently completed the processing of the records of the Polish and American World War Veterans Association Auxiliary, New Bedford post, dated 1938 to 2008.  These records were …. <Read more … >

Check out this new item on the:
UMass Dartmouth Archives and Special Collections Blog

https://jfarrar1895.wordpress.com/2011/03/31/polish-and-american-world-war-veterans-auxiliary/

Dr. João Leal speaks on the “Imperadores and Queens: Travels of a Ritual across the North Atlantic” and book launch of “Azorean Identity in Brazil and the United States: Arguments about History, Culture, and Transnational Connections” – March 24th, UMass Dartmouth

What: Talk by anthropologist, Dr. João Leal on the “Imperadores and Queens: Travels of a Ritual across the North Atlantic” and launch of his book: Azorean Identity in Brazil and the United States: Arguments about History, Culture, and Transnational Connections

Where: Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, Claire T. Carney Library, UMass Dartmouth

When: 6:00 – 7:30 pm, March 24, 2011

Light refreshments will be served.

Please join us for the launch of Azorean Identity in Brazil and the United States: Arguments about History, Culture, and Transnational Connections published by Tagus Press at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

At the launching, the author, anthropologist, Dr. João Leal, will deliver a talk titled “Imperadores and Queens: Travels of a Ritual across the North Atlantic” and will be on hand to sign copies of the book

Dr. João Leal is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at the Universidade Nova de Lisboa and a senior researcher at CRIA (Centre for Anthropological Research) in Lisbon.  Dr. Leal’s presentation at the launching of Azorean Identity in Brazil and the United States will explore the importance of transnational links between Azorean communities in the Azores and the USA in the maintenance and transformation of the Holy Ghost festas. Based on two case studies carried out in the islands of Pico and Santa Maria, he will show how the innovations introduced into the Holy Ghost festas in the U.S. have transformed these rituals in their place of origin–the Azores.

The Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives are a joint collaboration between the Center for Portuguese Studies and Culture and the Claire T. Carney Library.

The entrance to the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives is located on the campus side of the Claire T. Carney Library.  For access during library construction as you approach from Lot 13, enter the library basement and proceed to the first floor, exit the building, and proceed to the right to the Archives entrance.

For further information, contact 508-999-8684 or email spacheco@umassd.edu.

 

 

Portuguese-Canadian Academic Underachievement and Parental Approaches Towards their Children’s Schooling” a lecture by Dr. Fernando Nunes – Nov. 18th – Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives

What: Portuguese-Canadian Academic Underachievement and Parental Approaches Towards their Children’s Schooling” a lecture by Dr. Fernando Nunes, Assistant Professor in the Department of Child and Youth Study at Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Nova Scotia

Where: Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives located in the Claire T. Carney Library

When: Thursday, November 18 from 12:30 to 1:30 P.M.

The event is free and open to the public.

Based on a national, community-based study that was undertaken to uncover the barriers and support mechanisms influencing retention and academic achievement in Canada, the lecture will report the research’s preliminary findings for Portuguese-Canadian students and describe the common roles, approaches and responses of the parents of these youth to their children’s education. Dr. Nunes will also address the implications of the findings for current theory and policy, including anti-racism education, caste theory and the policy of Employment Equity.

The event will take place on Thursday, November 18 from 12:30 to 1:30 P.M. in the Prince Henry Society Reading Room of the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives located in the Claire T. Carney Library.

Dr. Fernando Nunes holds a Ph.D. in the area of education and community development, and a M.Ed. in applied psychology, from the Multicultural Focus of OISE/UT, (the Ontario Institute of Studies in Education of the University of Toronto). He has conducted research on at-risk immigrant youth, the academic underachievement of Portuguese-Canadian children, Portuguese-Canadian immigrant women, and the Lusophone Diaspora; coordinated the first national study on the Portuguese in Canada, “Portuguese-Canadians: From Sea to Sea;” wrote the first monograph on the adaptation of the Portuguese in Canada– Problems and Adjustments of the Portuguese Immigrant Family in Canada;  and authored several research articles and reports on Portuguese Canadians.

Prior to his current position at Mount Saint Vincent University, he taught at OISE/UT, Brock, York and Ryerson Universities. He is affiliated with CERIS-Toronto (The Joint Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Settlement), and The Atlantic Metropolis Centre.

Dr. Nunes has also served as a board member of various community organizations, such as the Portuguese-Canadian National Congress, the Portuguese Interagency Network, Canadian National Institute for the Blind-Toronto and the Toronto Community Care Access Centre.  In the early 1980s, he also co-founded the first student-led Luso-Canadian student association, the York University Portuguese Association.

His current research activities focus on minority academic underachievement, the civic and political participation of Portuguese-Canadian youth, and the effectiveness of Canada’s model of immigration settlement services.  His most recent project, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, is examining the barriers and support mechanisms to the education of Luso-Canadian youth, in five Canadian cities.

Directions:

For directions to the UMass Dartmouth campus, see https://www.umassd.edu/vtour/.  Please use Parking Lot 13.

Access to the archives during library construction is by way of the library basement and first floor exit.

Exhibit and Lecture Featuring the Collection of the Late Miguel Corte-Real at UMass Dartmouth

What: Exhibit and Lecture featuring the collection of the late Miguel Corte-Real at UMass Dartmouth

Where: Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, Claire T. Carney Library

When: Friday, October 22nd, 2010 at 6:00 PM

The event is free, open to the public and includes light refreshments.

The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth announces the opening of the exhibit “Miguel Corte-Real: the Man and his Collection” and a lecture entitled “The Côrte-Real Collection: a Personal and Intransmissible Experience,” organized by the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives in collaboration with the Claire T. Carney Library.

The event will take place on Friday, October 22nd, 2010 at 6:00 PM, in the Prince Henry Society Reading Room of the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, Claire T. Carney Library.

Curated by librarian/archivist Sonia Pacheco, the exhibit features key items from the collection, such as books and archival documents.  Irene de Amaral, a PhD candidate in the Department of Portuguese at UMassD, who is using the Côrte-Real materials to research her doctoral dissertation, will speak about her experience using the collection and its importance for the field of Azorean studies in the U.S.

Born in Ponta Delgada, S. Miguel, Azores, to Luis de Figueiredo Lemos do Canto Côrte-Real and Filomena M. da Conceição, Miguel de Figueiredo Corte-Real was the youngest son in an aristocratic family.  He was raised in Santa Maria, an island which always held a special place in his heart.  In 1969, he immigrated to the United States with his wife and children and settled in New Bedford.

Unlike the majority of immigrants who arrive in the U.S. with little more than a suitcase of personal items, Miguel Corte-Real was able to bring along an extensive number of cherished family heirlooms and household items including a large number of books, manuscripts and other historical documents.  Once established in his new country, he continued to add to his existing library and archive by collecting items associated with the presence of the Portuguese in the U.S.  In 2008, he donated his personal library and archive to the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives asking that the collection receive the name of his father Luis de Figueiredo Côrte-Real.

Miguel Corte-Real’s library was the work of a lifetime and contains rare, and sometimes difficult to find volumes.  Considered by some to be the best private collection of Açoriana outside of the Acores, it includes fictional works by Azorean authors and about the Azores; comprehensive histories of individual islands and of the archipelago; geographical and geological studies; monographs on various topics related to the Azores; and texts that document religious and cultural practices and rituals specific to the Azores. The Archival Collection includes personal correspondence; various scrapbooks; genealogical research; and Luso-American newspapers published in the last 30 years.

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Parking is available in Lot # 13.

The entrance to the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives is located on the campus side of the Claire T. Carney Library.  For access during library construction, from Lot 13, enter the library basement and proceed to the first floor, exit the building, and proceed to the right to the Archives entrance.

For further information contact 508-999-8684 or email spacheco@umassd.edu.

Reflections on migration, translocal connection, identity and soccer – September 21st – Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives

What: “Reflections on migration, translocal connection, identity and soccer: corporate/categorical forms of belonging and affective ties.”
Where:
Claire T. Carney Library – Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives
When:
Tuesday, September 21 from 12:30 to 1:30 P.M.
~  The event is free and open to the public.  ~

Soccer Team Image

The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth announces a lecture by Miguel Moniz, FCT Research Fellow at the Center for Anthropological Research in Lisbon, Portugal, organized by the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives.

Based on research with in-migration to Portugal and with Lusophone migrant communities in New England and the UK, Dr. Moniz looks at how soccer and other affective ties create translocal links, implicating socio-political identity categories such as ethnic group and the nation.

Miguel Moniz received a PhD in anthropology from Brown University in 2004.  In addition to numerous articles, Dr. Moniz is the author of two books– Across the Atlantic: Anglo and American travel writing about the Azores and Azores (World Bibliographical Series). Currently, he is a fellow of the Fundação para Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) with a research position at CRIA (ISCTE/IUL), a newly formed national anthropological research group, composed of anthropology units of ISCTE/IUL, the Universidade Nova, the Catolica and the Universidade do Minho. Moniz’ current research looks at the functioning of state bureaucracies on local identities (work begun with his dissertation on Azorean deportees, written while lecturing at UMassD) and burgeoning nationalism within the European Union; as well as ethnomusicological approaches to material culture and migration. He is a researcher in Lisbon-based Diasbola, a working group on the socio-cultural role of soccer in Luso-migrant communities, with institutional links in the UK, France and Germany and research projects among migrant populations in Europe, Africa and New England.

The event  is free and open to the public.   For directions to the UMass Dartmouth campus, see https://www.umassd.edu/vtour/.  Please use Parking Lot 13.

Access to the archives during library construction is by way of the library basement and first floor exit.

Portuguese-American writer Darrell Kastin (The Undiscovered Island) to speak at UMass Dartmouth, May 6, 2010

Darrell Kastin - The Undiscovered IslandWhat: Portuguese-American writer Darrell Kastin, author of The Undiscovered Island, to give a book talk followed by a concert with the singer Shawna Kastin performing lyrics composed by her father or adapted by him from Portuguese poetry
Where: Prince Henry Society Reading Room, Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese American Archives & Special Collections, Claire T. Carney Library, UMass Dartmouth
When: May 6, 2010 at 5:00 PM

~  The event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served.  ~

Darrell Kastin will talk about and read from his new book, The Undiscovered Island, recently published by the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.   The book talk will be followed by a concert with the singer Shawna Kastin, who will perform lyrics composed by her father or adapted by him from Portuguese poetry.

According to Karen Joy Fowler, author of The Jane Austen Book Club, The Undiscovered Island is a“story of mystery and magic—magical appearances and mysterious disappearances, mysterious women and magical islands—beautifully and lyrically told.”

From the dust jacket of The Undiscovered Island, “History, legend, poetry and myth are seamlessly interwoven as the novel explores relationships between personal and cultural identity, fate and self-determination, reality and illusion. The Undiscovered Island is a lyrical evocation of a locale and a people, rendered with wonderful respect for Azorean tradition.”

Darrell Kastin was born in Los Angeles, California. His maternal ancestors came from the Azores, settling in the United States at the end of World War II. He has spent considerable time on the islands over the years, using them as a setting in many of his short stories. His short fiction has appeared in The Seattle Review, The Crescent Review, The Blue Mesa Review and elsewhere. He is currently setting to music the poetry of Luís de Camões, Fernando Pessoa, and Florbela Espanca.

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Please park in lot 13. The Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives is located on the campus side of the Claire T. Carney Library, accessible through its own entrance.


The socioeconomic status of the Portuguese in late 19th century New Bedford – April 27, at 12:30 P.M. – FMPA Archives, Claire T. Carney Library

What: A lecture on the socioeconomic status of the Portuguese in late 19th century New Bedford by Prof. Rose Rodrigues of Fairfield University
Where: Prince Henry Society Reading Room of the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, located in the Claire T. Carney Library
When: Tuesday, April 27, at 12:30 P.M.

~ The event is free and open to the public ~

The last three decades of the 19th century saw the decline of New Bedford’s whaling industry, the emergence of textile manufacturing and the onset of the first significant wave of Portuguese immigration into the U.S.

In this presentation Dr. Rodrigues explores how this group of new arrivals adapted to their new home and the changes going on around them, showing how the career and home ownership patterns of Portuguese immigrants were influenced by their pre-migration skills and values as well as the occupational opportunities and exclusionary practices they encountered in the area.   Using data collected from the U.S. Census Population Schedules, the logs of whaling voyages, ship registers and textile mill records, she maps out the intergenerational and occupational mobility trends of the New Bedford Portuguese between 1870 and 1900.

Dr. Rose P. Rodrigues is the current Chair of the Department of Sociology & Anthropology and the former Director of Women’s Studies at Fairfield University.

A Celebration of Scholarship and Research – Claire T. Carney Library Browsing Area, Monday, April 26 4-6 PM

Celebrate Scholarhip
What: A Celebration of Scholarship and Research
Where: Claire T. Carney Library Browsing Area
When: Monday, April 26 ~ 4:00 – 6:00 PM
~ Wine and Cheese reception ~

Come and celebrate!

This reception is our chance as a university community to celebrate the scholarship and research of our faculty and staff.  The scholarship and research being recognized represents the intellectual and creative work (other than books) of our faculty and staff that have been published, performed or otherwise disseminated during the period from Summer 2007 through Summer 2009.  More than 600 such items of scholarship will be recognized at this reception.  These works are representative of the inspirational and groundbreaking activity that takes place across campus. This collection of work is a constant reminder to all of us that ideas can build bridges between people, communities and cultures.

“On the Front Page: the Carnation Revolution” – an Exhibition in the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives

The Carnation RevolutionExhibit Inauguration: April 23, 2010 at 4:00 PM – Her Excellency the Consul of Portugal in New Bedford, Dr. Graça Fonseca, will inaugurate the exhibition.

The event is free and open to the public.

Ongoing exhibition information:

What: On the Front Page: the Carnation Revolution – an Exhibition
Where:
In the William Q. and Mary Jane MacLean Gallery of the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, located in the Claire T. Carney Library
When: April through May, During the regular Archives hours  Monday – Friday, 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM

The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth announces an exhibition entitled “On the Front Page: the Carnation Revolution” organized by the Ferreira-Mendes Portuguese-American Archives, in collaboration with the Center for Portuguese Studies and Culture and the Claire T. Carney Library.

The Carnation Revolution (Revolução dos Cravos, in Portuguese), also referred to as the 25 de Abril, took place 36 years ago in Lisbon, Portugal, on April 25, 1974.  Besides ending Portugal’s forty-year dictatorship and starting a democratic form of government, the Carnation Revolution also led to the independence of Portuguese colonies in Africa and Asia.

 

 

Curated by Sónia Pacheco, the librarian archivist for the Ferreira-Mendes Archives, the exhibition documents the events surrounding the 25 de Abril through the use of historic newspapers from New Bedford and Portugal.

For directions to the UMass Dartmouth campus, see https://www.umassd.edu/vtour/.

Please use Parking Lot 13.

Voices from the Waterfront: Portrait of the New Bedford Fishing Industry – April 13th

New Bedford Fishing IndustryClaire T. Carney Library Associates Present Norwegian Lifelines

Presentation: Voices from the Waterfront: Portrait of the New Bedford Fishing Industry
When: 7:00 PM on Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Where: Claire T. Carney Library Browsing Area (1st Floor)
Cost: Free, donations welcome.

Kirsten Bendiksen, of Norwegian descent with family ties to the New Bedford scallop industry and co-author Laura Orleans, a folklorist, will present a slideshow of photographs and share excerpts from their recently released book, Voices From The Waterfront. A book signing and reception to follow. Hope to see you there!

We welcome your support. Please consider joining the Claire T. Carney Library Associates.