Friday, October 14, 2016

A Visit to the Dauphin Island Area (3)

This post is the third of four describing a recent trip Dianne and I made to Dauphin Island to stay with my brother Richard and his wife Lucy. Son Amos joined us from Baton Rouge. Comments are below.

The first post can be found here, the second one here and part four here.


Friday's sunset on the Gulf side of the island was worth a viewing.



On Friday night after Amos arrived from Baton Rouge we headed out in search of some adult beverages. Dianne took this photo.



On Saturday Dianne, Amos and I had a nice lunch at the Pirates Bar & Grill at the Isle Dauphin Club







Built in the late 1950's, the club is one of Dauphin Island's architectural standouts. Son Amos, the urban planner, noted right away that it looked like an example of "googie" architecture. That style of "space age" or "atomic age" building began in southern California in the late 1940's and lasted into the mid-1960's. Many motels, gas stations, coffee shops and other structures were influenced by the style, which was named after a west Hollywood coffee shop called Googies.  







This postcard shows the club in the 1960's.
Source: Troy University Library



There's a very nice view of the water from the club. 



Here's a friend who spent most of the weekend hanging around the house with us. 



The Indian Shell Mound is the oldest sign of man on the island and has survived all the hurricanes. The area is now a small park with a trail, benches and some photographic trees. 










Tuesday, October 11, 2016

A Visit to the Dauphin Island Area (2)

This post is the second of four related to a visit to Dauphin Island Dianne and I made recently. Our son Amos also joined us from Baton Rouge. One of the places we saw with our hosts, my brother Richard and his wife Lucy, was the small community of Coden

This unincorporated fishing village is located on Bayou Coden, and the name is an English version of the French Coq d'Inde. Like nearby Bayou la Batre, Coden was a resort town in the late 19th century, but the 1906 hurricane ended much of that business. I've included comments below my photos and a few historical photos at the end of this post.  

The first post in the series can be found here, part three here and part four here.




Coden has a community center and a post office, both good signs of survival in a small town. 






Always sad to see abandoned structures, but churches seem especially so. The sign says "Coleman Chapel A.M.E. Zion Church, Pastor B. Sanders". I spent some time searching on Google and could find nothing about this church. 











Abandoned boats are a common sight in this part of Alabama. 



Now here are a couple of interesting sights down an unpaved road near Coden. We were looking for Zirlotts Seafood operation, a legendary family business in the area. We found it, and even though we arrived after closing time that afternoon, family members came out of their house to open up and let us purchase some of the goods. 

As we left, we decided to take a closer look at these two items which we had spotted earlier. The trailer above is behind the fence of a small cattle farm. The structure below mystified all of us, but someone else has suggested to me that it looks like a hunting blind. 








A house in Coden with a facade covered with oyster shells, about 1905.

Source: Alabama Mosaic




A grocery store in Coden before 1905

Source: Alabama Mosaic 




Rolston Hotel in Coden, ca. 1916

Source: Alabama Mosaic


Friday, October 7, 2016

A Visit to the Dauphin Island Area (1)

OK, just what is this "Dauphin" thing, anyway? 

From 1350 to 1791 and 1824 to 1830 this term described the heir apparent to the throne of France. The family's coat of arms featured a dolphin, which in French is "dauphin". That's a very simplified version of the French royal history; you can read a much more detailed version on Wikipedia

Over the years Dauphin Island has been occupied by Native American, Spanish, French, British, American and Confederate populations. The island has a long, fascinating history that began more than 500 years ago with frequent Native American visits. Spanish mapped the island around 1519 and named it Isla de San Feliz. The French, who arrived in the late 17th century, called it Ile du Massacre since they found dozens of skeletons there. U.S. forces seized the island from Spain in 1813, and the British held it briefly in 1815. Dauphin Island became part of the Alabama Territory upon its creation in 1817.

Today the island is mostly a vacation haven and target for hurricanes. Since 1979 Frederick, Elena, Danny, Georges, Ivan and Katrina have all done serious damage on the island. 

Sometime years ago when the kids were young, and we were visiting Gulf Shores, Dianne, the kids and I took the ferry from Fort Morgan and spent some time on the island. Recently my brother Richard and his wife Lucy have bought an interest in a house on the island and invited Dianne and I to come visit. Our son Amos joined us from Baton Rouge. This post and three that follow cover some of the sights from that long weekend. 

I've included two historical photos and a map at the end.

Part two of this series is here, part three here and part four here.



Here's the first sunset from the deck of their house on Lafitte Bay. 



Here's the view bright and early next morning. 




We had an excellent lunch at this popular place back on the mainland. The restaurant is located in Irvington just past Bayou La Batre.  




Today Bayou La Batre is primarily a fishing town. Its origins go back to a 1786 land grant from the Spanish to a French settler. In 1811 the town became part of the United States, and by the 1830's had its own hotel. Because of its location on the water, tourism developed after the Civil War. 




A hurricane in 1906 devastated the town and its tourism. By the 1920's the seafood industry and later shipbuilding became the economic mainstays. In the late 1970's immigrants from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos added significantly to the local cultural mix. An episode of the Alabama Public Television program Journey Proud explores these changes over the recent decades.








Abandoned structures and boats are frequent sights in the Bayou La Batre area. 








Smee General Merchandise in Bayou La Batre ca. 1900

Source: Alabama Mosaic




Fishing boats and oyster cannery in Bayou La Batre in the 1930's


Source: Alabama Mosaic

Fire insurance map of Bayou La Batre, 1955

Source: Alabama Mosaic 



Tuesday, October 4, 2016

UAB's Anesthesiology Library 1980-2015

From August 1983 until December 2015 I worked as librarian for the Anesthesiology Department in the University of Alabama at Birmingham's School of Medicine. The library originated in the late 1970's as a reading room on the seventh floor of Jefferson Tower maintained by secretary Patsy Byrd. In May 1980 the department hired a full time librarian, Beth Owens, and soon after the library moved to the fifth floor of the Kracke Clinical Services Building along with chairman and faculty offices. Ann Hester became librarian in October 1981, and the library collection expanded under her tenure. Emma O'Hagan is the current librarian.

For some years this description of the library appeared in the Directory of History of Medicine Collections maintained by the National Library of Medicine's History of Medicine Division:



"This library exists primarily to serve the faculty, residents, and staff of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Anesthesiology. However, others are welcome to use materials in-house. The library provides reference services and will photocopy from its collections. Interlibrary Loan services are available; the library is a DOCLINE participant. 

The library holds more than 3,000 monographs, 500 audio and video tapes, 1,700 bound journal volumes, and many items of ephemera (company literature, organizational publications, etc.). The collection includes more than 200 pre-1970 monographs related to anesthesia and pain management, more than 100 monographs related to the history of anesthesia and pain (secondary literature), and numerous subject and individual files related to anesthesia and pain history. Inventories available online: journal holdings, CD & DVD holdings, and historical files.


  • Collection Subject Strengths: History of Anesthesiology and Anesthesia;
    History of Pain Management"

  • Serving the clinical information needs of departmental faculty, residents and staff
    is the primary purpose of the library. A reconfiguration of the facility took
    place in 2014 and 2015. Space was reduced, the journal collection removed
    and new computer terminals added. Some of the historical books went to the
    Reynolds-Finley Historical Library, and historical files related to departmental
    history were accepted by UAB Archives
  • The following photos show the library during its "print" days and as materials were
    boxed for removal. I've made comments below some of the pictures.
  • Departmental libraries have been a feature of colleges and universities around
    the world since the late 19th century. At the end of this post I've included a
    brief bibliography of some of the literature available on the topic. Such libraries
    appeared not only in medical departments, but the humanities and sciences as
    well. 
  • In 1994 Bronte Moran at the Department of Surgery Library, University of
    Wisconsin-Madison did a survey of medical departmental libraries in the U.S.,
    which was published two years later. He found a total of 24, with only 2 in
    anesthesiology. Due to costs and the changing information landscape over the
    past two decades, I would imagine many of those two dozen no longer exist.
    Departmental libraries in other academic areas are probably also very rare
    these days. 













  • Most of the books seen here pertained to the history of anesthesia, pain medicine, and critical care medicine as well as the history of medicine generally.










    Yes, the library still had its card catalog. 







    This photo and the two below it show some of the main book collection. 






    The library became more crowded as space was reduced. 


    Looking through the big door you can barely see the door to my office on the left of the small table. 



    A portion of the journal collection is shown in these two photographs.








    Another view of some of the journals and the big table. 




    This bookplate was used in library books for many years and featured the department's logo, also in use for a number of years.

    In the photos below the library contents are being packed up and finally the library is completely empty. My understanding was that books would return and journals would not. No matter what happened, the library no longer exists as I knew it for so many years. But the new facility will continue to serve the department's contemporary needs.















    Here I am in the summer of 1983 in the library on Kracke 5.






    
    Constructed in 1928 as a student nursing dormitory for Hillman Hospital, the building was renovated and opened as the Roy R. Kracke Clinical Services Building in 1965. The Anesthesiology Department Library was on the fifth floor of this building until 1993. 
    Source of photo: Holmes, History of the University of Alabama Hospitals [1974]



    This aerial view of Jefferson Tower from 1945 also shows the Kracke Building on the right. The front of Jefferson Tower looks very different today.
    Source: BhamWiki



    SOME REFERENCES ON DEPARTMENTAL LIBRARIES


    Kasses, Carol D. et al. Departmental libraries: curse or blessing? Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 1978 April; 66(2): 177-184

    Moran, Bronte. The role of the medical departmental library. Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 1996 January; 84(1): 25-31

    Stefanacci, Michal A. et al. Departmental libraries: why do they exist? Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 1977 October; 65(4): 433-437

    Stokes, Janet H. et al. The Dripps Library of Anesthesia University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Anesthesia History Association Newsletter 1992 January; 10(1): 13

    Thompson, Lawrence. The historical background of departmental and collegiate libraries. Library Quarterly 1942 January; 12: 49-74