Historic
World War I-Era Map Available in Ball State University Libraries
April
6 marked the 99th anniversary of the American declaration of war against
Germany in 1917. World War I began in
July of 1914, but the United States did not become involved until years later.
In
1983 Ball State University Libraries acquired a rare, historically significant map
related to the end of World War I. Paul
Stout, retired map librarian at the Bracken Library Map Collection, attended
the Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Special Summer Project that
year and processed a backlog of maps that the Division received for decades from
federal libraries and government mapping agencies. (Ball State University Libraries was one of
the many institutions to sponsor a participant in the program). In exchange for their work, participants were
able to select duplicate maps and atlases from the Library’s stock and send
them back to their sponsoring libraries.
During
a four-hour selection period, Stout discovered two maps that he suspected were
not duplicate copies. The maps were of
the Hungarian portion of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire dated 1919. One of the maps had specific notations
indicating it had been used at the Peace Conference in Versailles, France,
following World War I and was stamped “American Commission to Negotiate Peace.” (The Treaty of Trianon was organized as part
of the Peace Conference at Versailles in order to determine the borders of
Hungary and was signed in June of 1920, so the American delegation may have
used these maps as a resource for the peace negotiations). Stout returned the two maps to the Division
Chief, but he allowed Stout to keep the un-annotated copy of the map as a gift.
The
map (pictured above) measures over six feet by almost ten feet in size. The title of the map is Ethnographical Map of Hungary—Colonization and Population. The authors are S. Batky and Ch.
Kogutowicz, and the map is dated 1919.
The map states it is “designed by order of the Foreign Ministry of the
Hungarian Republic.” The map shows the
areas where ethnic Hungarians were predominant—one of the criteria for the
negotiations used by the American Delegation to Negotiate Peace in preparation
for the determination of the new boundaries of Hungary.
Stephen
Duecker, Information Services Librarian, researched the history of the
map. The two maps first belonged to the
U.S. State Department in 1919 and then transferred to the Central Intelligence
Agency in 1949. Duecker believed it is
plausible that the Ball State University map was at the Peace Conference
following World War I. Due to its
historic significance, the map is now housed in the Archives and Special
Collections on the second floor of Bracken Library. The map is available for historical research
and as a learning resource. (More historical
objects are also available in the Archives and on the Digital Media Repository,
including World War I posters and maps).
Please
contact the GIS Research and Map Collection at 765-285-1097 or the Archives and
Special Collections at 765-285-5078 for more information about historic maps
available at Ball State University Libraries.
No comments:
Post a Comment