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Glenn Matsumura
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one day last summer,
Natalie Simmons was going through some boxes in the University
archives at Green Library
when she came across a mysterious bundle covered in
old linen. Carefully
unfolding the packet, she discovered a colored map about
five feet wide, printed in French and marked in pencil.
On the cloth
was an inscription: “This Map has served as a guide from
the year 1880 when we made our first trip to Europe. The
lead pencil lines were marked by my dear son. We allowed
him to
select the route on his last trip.”
Simmons, ’04,
was taken aback. She was pretty well acquainted with
the story of Stanford’s founders. But like most
students, she had never really given much thought to
the University’s
namesake. “Somehow, seeing Leland Junior’s own
pencil markings made him seem less historical and more
human,” she
says.
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Stanford Archives
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Simmons isn’t the only Stanford student to find
buried treasure in Green Library. In the past few years,
University
archivist Maggie Kimball, ’80, says she’s seen
an increase in the number of students asking to dig
through the old Stanford family papers and keepsakes. “Even
the Daily lately has had more interest in things historical,” Kimball
marvels.
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Stanford Archives
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Some of the increase in student interest stems
from course work. Susan Wyle, a lecturer in Stanford’s
program in writing and rhetoric, encourages her freshmen
to consult primary
sources in the family archives as part of her course,
Writing the American West: The Rhetoric of Race, Culture
and Conflict.
She says Stanford students “are pretty fascinated
with the colorful history of the Gold Rush and the
railroad, the
treatment of the Chinese, the death of little Leland,
and Jane’s
ability to keep the University going under duress.” Another
faculty member who values the archives as a teaching
tool, American history professor Richard White, says
he usually has
10 to 20 students using the papers each year. The family
letters and scrapbooks “really do capture the sensibility
of the Victorian upper class and the nouveau riche
in particular,” says
White. “As the best students realize, they are quite
foreign to modern sensibilities.”
Simmons, a biological
sciences major, signed up for her summer job in the
archives thinking it would provide
an occasional break from her intensive research at
the Medical
School’s
neurosurgery lab. One day she was delighted to find
a small volume adorned with Leland Junior’s scribbles.
Apparently he was learning to write his numbers. Another
book contained
the boy’s tracings of a sparrow and a man on a racehorse.
As
for the cherished map, Simmons says she hopes the Stanford
archivists can find a place on campus to display
it. “Sometimes
we come to the University but we don’t realize how
much effort and love was put into creating it,” she
says. “Knowing
more about the Stanfords and seeing how much they put
into educating their son—it made me appreciate the
University more.”
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