Papers from Gore Sr., Gordon, Cooper among items available
MURFREESBORO — MTSU’s
Albert Gore Research Center is joining national commemorations of “Congress
Week” from April 1-7 by opening several new groups of research materials for
scholars and the public.
“As we celebrate the 225th anniversary of
Congress this year, we are pleased to highlight the work of several local members
of Congress who devoted decades of their lives to the service of Tennessee,”
said Dr. Jim Williams, director of the Gore Research Center.
Among the historical materials recently made accessible to
the public for the first time are the typewritten radio addresses that then
Congressman Albert Gore Sr. delivered weekly on WSM radio leading up to and
during World War II. Those interested can see Gore’s own handwritten changes on
the typescripts of the speeches on the research center’s website (http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu).
“Through the support of former Congressman Bart Gordon,”
Williams continued, “we have been able to process his papers faster than is
usual — and the first batch of legislative files is now available for
research.”
Gordon represented the Tennessee's 6th Congressional
District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1985 until 2011. The MTSU alumnus,
now a partner in a Washington, D.C., law firm, received an honorary doctorate
from his alma mater last May.
Similarly, the first segment of Congressman Jim Cooper’s
correspondence from his time as the representative in Congress for the 4th
District from 1982 to 1994 is open. Cooper, D-Nashville, currently represents
the 5th District, a post he’s held since 2003. Finding aids for
these collections are available on the center’s website.
“Congress Week” is a program of the Association of Centers
for the Study of Congress, to which the Gore Research Center belongs. More
information on events taking place around the nation may be found at
www.congressweek.org.
The Gore Research Center is a nonpartisan public service of
the College of Liberal Arts at MTSU and is the premier repository for the
personal papers of members of Congress and the Tennessee General Assembly in
Middle Tennessee. Its collections are open to anyone with research needs
without charge. The center is located on the MTSU campus in Todd Hall.
For more information, contact the director at jim.williams@mtsu.edu or (615) 898-2633.
No comments:
Post a Comment