Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Live @ the Library featuring Jon Acuff! Get your tickets now!


Author and Samford University alumnus Jon Acuff will discuss his latest book and the "four big things every adventure with God requires" at Live @ the Library Friday, April 8

There will be a 6 p.m. VIP reception in Harwell G. Davis Library followed by a presentation and book signing at 7 p.m. in Brock Recital Hall.

Jon Acuff, Samford JMC Alumnus

Tickets start at $25 and are also available at the Samford Box Office in Swearingen Hall. 

Each attendee will receive a complimentary hard copy of Do Over: Rescue Monday, Reinvent Your Work, and Never Get Stuck.

Jon Acuff's Do Over. Each attendee gets a complimentary copy!


Acuff’s book discusses the four areas all great careers share: relationships, skills, character and hustle. In it, he covers how to invest in these areas in order to be prepared to handle inevitable career bumps, jumps, ceilings and opportunities.

Live @ the Library is an annual event hosted by the University Library to bring awareness to accomplished Samford-affiliated authors. This year’s event will be sponsored by EBSCO, and proceeds will go to the library.

Acuff, a 1998 Samford graduate, is a New York Times bestselling author of five books. For 18 years, he has helped some of the biggest brands tell their story, including The Home Depot, Bose, Staples and the Dave Ramsey Team. His blogs have been read by more than four million people, and he has more than 250,000 Twitter followers.
Jon Acuff, Live @ the Library, April 8.


Acuff lives with his wife, Jenny, and his two daughters in Franklin, Tennessee.

This is a reprint of an article by Aly Hathcock, originally published in the Samford Crimson.  Aly is a journalism and mass communication major and a news and feature writer in the Office of Marketing and Communication.

Friday, March 25, 2016

Library Closed for Easter


The library will be closed March 26, 27 and 28 in celebration of Easter.


We hope everyone has a lovely, blessed holiday with friends and loved ones.


The library will re-open on Tuesday, March 29 for regular hours.


Thursday, March 17, 2016

The Albert Casey Irish Collection


Some of our Irish Collection on the shelves in the Special Collection stacks.

In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, Special Collection would like to take a moment to share about Albert E. Casey’s generous gift of his Irish collection to the Samford University Library. This resource is one of the gems of the Special Collection.

According to this 1877 guide to Ireland, this is Wicklow near the Bray River where St. Patrick may have first landed.

Samford’s Irish collection, donated by Casey, is a rare and unique one. The only other Irish collection in the United States on par with Samford’s is located at Yale University. The Casey Collection is so unique that people have even visited Samford from Ireland in order to access the information found there.

The collection contains maps, periodicals, and books. According to Annie Ford Wheeler, the Head of the Library in 1976, “The Casey gift contained many rare volumes and many titles which now would be difficult, if not impossible, to acquire.”

One of the oldest pieces in the collection is this Irish history printed in 1633 and inset with woodblock print maps like this one.

Today, the Irish collection is still helping students. Juliana Kendall, a freshman, was working with some of our Irish materials recently, so we asked her what she thought of the Irish Collection, which she is currently using to work on a paper for her Irish-themed CA class.

“The books I found were incredible!” she told us. “Not only did I find all the information I needed, but I also learned to appreciate the beauty of old books … I’m thankful that the Irish Collection is here to help students like me learn more for Irish topics in class.”

Not all of the collection is in English. This is a bilingual book about Ireland in Gaelic and English.

We hope other students will be similarly inspired to come down to the Lower Level and check out our rich holdings of Irish materials in the Special Collection.

While all the books are listed in the Library Catalog, a bibliography was published of materials in 1976. Here it is on the Special Collection website.

Some of the books in the collection are directories like this postal directory from 1845. Before telephones, these were published every year.
Thanks to Rachel Cohen and the Special Collection and University Archives for text and images.  

Erin go bragh!- JD

Monday, March 14, 2016

Portrait of Julia Tarrant Barron, a founder of Howard College, returns to Samford

Among the earliest proponents of a college for young men in Marion, Alabama, Julia Tarrant Barron (1805-1890) was instrumental in the foundation of Howard college.  She worked with Baptist leaders and donated time and funds to the establishment of the school, even donating the land upon which the school would be rebuilt after the campus was destroyed by fire in 1854. 

Julia after the recent preservation work.

Julia's granddaughter, Olive Barron Becker, was commissioned by then president of Howard College, Dr. John C. Dawson, to paint a portrait of Julia.  The portrait was presented to the school in December of 1945.

Fast forward about seventy years, and the portrait of Mrs. Barron (affectionately referred to as "Julia") needed an upgrade.  After consulting with professional conservators, Julia was sent to the Atlanta Art Conservation Center.  The portrait had been framed most recently (we're not sure when) with a plexiglass covering which had become scratched and warped over the years.  The painting itself needed to be professionally cleaned, too.


Julia before cleaning, without plexiglass.
Julia after.

















Last week, Julia returned to campus, and the difference is amazing.  The colors of the painting are brighter and more saturated, and details that had been obscured by grime are now visible, such as her brown hair and green eyes. We're glad she's back and in better shape than ever.


Julia with Larry Shutts, art conservator for the Birmingham Museum of Art and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.

Julia is no longer covered in plexiglass, and "it will be important to find a way to display and house her securely," says Jennifer Taylor, director of the Special Collection and University Archives.

For more information about Julia Tarrant Barron, you can read a short biography from the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame, here.

To learn more about the portrait before the recent work, visit the Special Collection Treasures article, here.


None of this could have happened without the amazing librarian archivists in the Special Collection and University Archives. Thank you, Jennifer, Rachel, and Becky!