Ball Brothers Factory Band, Digital Media Repository
Gas Boom to Glass Jars: Ball Brothers Documentary
Premieres This Week
A
Legacy Etched in Glass: The Ball Brothers in Muncie, a documentary produced by the Ball State
University Department of Telecommunications as part of an immersive learning
project, premieres on Thursday, September 25 at 6:00 pm at Minnetrista in
Muncie. The documentary tells the story
of the five Ball brothers—George, Lucius, Frank, Edmund, and William.
The Ball brothers moved
their glass manufacturing business from Buffalo, New York, to Muncie during the
Indiana gas boom of the 1890’s. Locating
the factories on the south side of Muncie, the Ball brothers expanded their
operations enormously in the early 20th century. The film explores the lives of the brothers,
their families, the ongoing Ball legacy in Muncie, and the core values that
propelled them to success as industrialists and community leaders.
The story weaves motion
graphic animation, beautiful cinematography, and archival materials with
interviews and analyses from expert historians.
Sanborn Fire Insurance maps (above, click to enlarge) and maps showing the Trenton gas
field are featured in the film. Historic
maps from the GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) used for the film are
available for viewing in the Ball State University Libraries’ Digital MediaRepository. The map collections include:
Muncie
Sanborn Insurance Maps, United States Transportation Maps, Ball State
University Campus Maps, American Cities Historic Maps, Indiana Natural
Resources Maps, International Historic Maps, Delaware County Aerial Plat Maps,
Indiana Historic County Atlases, United States Soil Maps, and United States Topographic Maps. The University Libraries’ YouTube channel
allows users a different format for viewing some of the resources from the
Digital Media Repository.
For questions about the
documentary, please contact the executive producer and faculty advisor Chris
Flook at 765-730-0841. For more
information about the Digital Media Repository, contact John Straw in the
Archives and Special Collections at 765-285-5078.
No comments:
Post a Comment