Centennial
Anniversary of the War to End All Wars
Tomorrow,
April 6, is the 100th anniversary of the United States’ entry into
World War I. Europe erupted into war in
1914, but President Woodrow Wilson pledged neutrality for the United
States. But following a number of German
attacks on civilian ships—killing American citizens, Congress voted to declare
war on Germany. The U.S. officially
entered the war on April 6, 1917.
The Ball State University Libraries GIS Research and Map
Collection (GRMC) created this exhibit (above, click to enlarge) to commemorate
this date in history. “America Over
There: April 6, 1917” includes maps
showing the country borders of Europe before and after the war. Photographs from atlases in the Atlas
Collection and from the Digital Media Repository (DMR) are also included in the
display. And patriotic posters from the Elisabeth Ball Collection are also
shown. The exhibit is in the windows of
the GRMC on the east side of the second floor in Bracken Library.
The GRMC also provided World War I-era maps for a collection
in the DMR. The New York Times World War I Maps includes a set of five maps
that connect to create a larger map of the Western Front in France, the
Netherlands, Germany, and Belgium. A rare historic map of Hungary created for use at the Treaty of Trianon at the end of the war is also available for viewing in the Archives and Special Collections in Bracken Library.
For more information about using historic resources from the
University Libraries collections, please contact the Archives and Special
Collections at 765-285-5078 or the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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