100 Years of the College at Valdosta State Museum

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The 100 Years of the College at Valdosta State Museum is located on the fourth floor of the Odum Library addition, this museum and presidential portrait gallery traces the 100-year history of the college that became ßÏÀÖÔ°. It includes painting, display panels, and display cases. Part of the museum overflows into the ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives. The fourth-floor exhibits are available any time the library is open, and the archives exhibits are available during our hours of operation. Other times may be available by request, depending on staff availability. Located on the fourth floor of the Odum Library addition, this museum and presidential portrait gallery traces the 100-year history of the college that became ßÏÀÖÔ°. It includes painting, display panels, and display cases. Part of the museum overflows into the ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives. The fourth-floor exhibits are available any time the library is open, and the archives exhibits are available during our hours of operation. Other times may be available by request, depending on staff availability.


South Georgia Folklife Project

Photo by Dennis Coelho, 1976

The award-winning is a ten-year, multi-genre ethnographic collection founded by Dr. Laurie Sommers in 1996. Highlights of the collection include Southeast Georgia Sacred Harp, Okefenokee Music Survey,  Flint River fisheries, Traditions of Turpentiners, Folkwriting, online exhibits, and a radio archives of documentary programs originally broadcast on NPR affiliates. Visit the  or here to .


ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives Video Collection

The ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives and Special Collections houses thousands of videos in a wide variety of formats, including Umatic, Betamax, VHS, DVD, DV Pro, MiniDVD, and Blu-Ray. Videos include content created by ßÏÀÖÔ° Television (ßÏÀÖÔ°-TV), Ball games, lectures and speeches, ßÏÀÖÔ° promotional materials, ßÏÀÖÔ° Symphony concerts, and much, much more. You can search the or visit our .

The ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives and Special Collections is committed to digitizing every video we have in our collection. If a video has already been digitized you will find a YouTube link to it in the . If you would like to view a video that has not been digitized and put online, please contact archives@valdsota.edu with your request and we will digitize it as soon as possible.


Babylonian Clay Tablets

Valdosta One - Umma, Amar-Suen, Year 1

Dr. Richard Holmes Powell, first president of South Georgia State Normal College (now ßÏÀÖÔ°), acquired ten Babylonian clay tablets for the school's students to study.  The tablets, which are roughly 1.5" square, are imprinted with Cuneiform writing and are indicative of daily record-keeping in ancient Mesopotamia.  They were purchased in 1920 from archaeologist and antiquities dealer Edgar J. Banks at a total cost of $40.  Banks provided translations for each tablet, along with his personal guarantee regarding their authenticity.

The are on permanent display in the ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives and Special Collections reading room on the 4th floor of Odum Library. View photographs and read more information on the website. 


The Eichberger East African Art Collection

The was created by Willis George Eichberger who collected these items during his ten-year stay in Ghana West Africa and Ethiopia in the 1960's while he worked with the United States Department of State. The Collection includes are wide variety of trade carvings, traditional pottery, basketry, jewelry, gourds, cloth, weapons, some paints, sixties-era publications about the area of East Africa, and numerous slides and photographs of the are. The Eichberger Collection is displayed annually at the Azalea International Folk Festival held the first weekend of March at the Rainwater Conference Center in Valdosta.  or .


The Leona Hudson Collection

Leona Hudson, Spain (Alhambra - Cadiz - Gibraltar), c. 1964-1971.

The held at the ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives and Special Collections contains information relevant to topics as diverse as South Georgia History, the Valdosta Social Scene, Missionaries in China, a history of devotional literature, Nazi trials, the military in Korea, and images from years of travel around the world. The collection spans a long time period, from 1884-2008, and is equally rich across those time periods. The features access to much of this collection.


The Kessler Collection

Three Monks, Jokhang Temple, c.1999
Charles and Jeannette Kessler donated 140 items, from antique Ban Chiang pottery, antique textiles and Tibetan photographs. Jeannette Kessler was an avid collector of antique textiles.  Some pieces she bought to show and some she had made into clothes.  In all over 60 textiles from South East Asia are part of this collection. Charles Kessler made several trips to Tibet in 1999 and 2000.  Kessler, an amateur photographer, was fascinated by the people he met there and created a photography exhibit, “Faces of Tibet” which has been exhibited in galleries previously. You can browse the or view .

African Art: United States Fish and Wildlife Service

Songye tribal masks and power figures from Congo, Africa. Seized by United States Fish and Wildlife Service while being smuggled into Hartsfield International Airport. Some pieces incorporated materials harvested from endangered species, which were removed. United States Fish and Wildlife Service donated these materials to ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives in 2011. The African Art: United States Fish and Wildlife Service Collection is on permanent display on the 3rd floor of Odum Library. photographs and drawings of the artifacts. .


The Tatler-Burgess Collection

The is the fruit of many year of work by collectors Andrew and Kahy Tatler-Burgess. This exciting library of pieces, some of which date back to the middle of the 15th century, including woodcuts by Albrecht Durer and others offering glimpses of the artistic taste of the late medieval/early renaissance period. The Collection boast rarities of unsurpassed quality such as a leaf from the Saxon Chronicles and leaves from Sebastian Brandt's Ship of Fools, a very popular allegorical work in its day. Thirty items from the exhibit are on display in the William Mobley Reading on the Fourth floor of Odum Library in the Archives.


The in the ßÏÀÖÔ° Archives are an open collection. The reflect the work of a writer in the prime of her production; thus, material will be added to the collection periodically.  The collection contains handwritten and typed manuscripts of short stories and novels, edited copies of works, copies of published books, VSC college coursework, correspondence, newspaper clippings and publicity material, photographs and audio tapes. .


The consists mainly of correspondence with colleagues and students.  It also includes  a few photographs, articles and copies of all of her books. Although some items date to Joyce's childhood in Valdosta, the bulk of the papers are from the early 1980's to 2001. Joyce Ann Joyce was a star student at Valdosta State College during her time. website.


The began in 1965, when professionals from around the state decided to meet together annually to share information and ideas about the growth of theatre performance and education in Georgia. From a few dozen people who began meeting more than forty years ago, the organization has grown to a current membership of over twelve-hundred, encompassing secondary and college students and teachers, professionals involved in all branches of the theatrical arts, and people of all ages who are passionate about theatre in their community. .

Art in Odum

Art in Odum

Art in Odum is the artwork on display throughout Odum Library featuring the Lamar Dodd Collection, Ross Rosenberg Exhibit, Elantu Veovode, Tatler-Burgess Collection, Irene Dodd Collection, Rembrandt and Dali Collections, the Valdosta Artists Series, and more. To learn more about this collection see the Art in Odum webpage.


Archives and Special Collections: LibGuides

Archives and Special Collections partners with Dr. Sarah FitzGerald for a Public History project in which students create these Online Exhibits. Other displays featured are made by student interns working with ßÏÀÖÔ°'s Archives and Special Collections. Browse the online exhibits at .

Public History Online Exhibits