Hitting the Road: Summer Road Trip Exhibit at Ball State
University Libraries
A new exhibit is on display on
the second floor of Bracken Library:
Summer Road Trip features historic maps, road atlases, photographs, tour
guides, and other materials depicting the heyday of the automobile. Ball State University Libraries’ Archives and
Special Collections and GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) collaborated to
create the special exhibit for the summer.
Jeff Koenker, Bracken Library Bookstacks Supervisor, also generously
donated historic maps, cases, and guides from his personal collection for the
display.
With the Eisenhower-era creation
of the national interstate system came a strong interest and desire to travel
the country via the car. The maps,
atlases, photographs, and ephemera displayed in this exhibit provide a taste of
what travel was like during this historic period and detail some of the tourist
destinations.
Historic photographs from the
Archives and Special Collections feature historic filling stations, drive-in
restaurants, and beaches. Historic tour
guides illustrate how directions to popular cities and destinations were
written using local landmarks like fences and trees. The maps from the GRMC and the Koenker
collection and the atlases from the Atlas Collection feature beautiful artwork
and advertising meant to persuade drivers to travel the country (map images shown above--click to enlarge).
Maps from the GRMC featured in
the exhibit include a Indiana road maps from 1925 and 1934, a 1945 map of
Indianapolis showing the location of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, a 1932
road map of Colorado that once belonged to activist Margaret Sanger, historic
pictorial maps of Missouri and Florida, a modern map of Route 66, and a unique modern
road map of the state of Hawaii.
The exhibit is located in the
display cases on the north side of the Archives and Special Collections. For more information about these resources,
please contact Neal Coil from the Archives and Special Collections at
765-285-5078.
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