Page 4 - 2018 Fall Newsletter
P. 4

GRANT FUNDS





                  DIGITIZATION PROJECT






                           The Emperor of West Texas - Digitizing the Amon G. Carter Papers


        Mary Couts Burnett Library and the
        University of Texas at Arlington special
        collections departments received a grant
        of $50,000 from the National Historical
        Publications and Records Commission
        (NHPRC) to begin work on the
        project “The Emperor of West Texas –
        Digitizing the Amon G. Carter Papers.”
        The grant will be used to digitize
        materials related to media mogul and
        Fort Worth promoter Amon G. Carter.


        TCU Senior Archivist Mary Saffell
        is principle investigator. Brenda
        McClurkin, department head of UTA
        Libraries’ Special Collections, is
        serving as a co-investigator on the
        project.

        “We look forward to working with
        Texas Christian University in this
        collaborative effort to digitize the
        papers of Amon Carter, Fort Worth   Amon G. Carter and Franklin D. Roosevelt, Carter is delivering deed to Big Bend National Park, June 6, 1944
        Star-Telegram publisher, entrepreneur,
        civic leader, philanthropist, art collector
        of note and all-around Fort Worth booster,” McClurkin said. “This project is strongly enhanced by materials being
        contributed by both of these archival repositories.”

        The bulk of Carter’s papers are housed in TCU Library’s Special Collections. UTA Special Collections has the
        photographic archives of Carter’s newspaper, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram—around four million negatives, about 15,000
        of which document Carter’s own local and national activities.

        Besides founding the Star-Telegram and running it for close to five decades, Carter started the first radio and television
        stations in Fort Worth. He was also responsible for bringing aviation businesses (now Lockheed Martin, Bell Helicopter
        and American Airlines) to the area. The collection also includes ten boxes of files on Amon Carter Jr.’s internment in a
        WWII German prison camp.

        The digitized materials will be useful to researchers across a spectrum of specialties, including biographers and urban
        planners, as well as social, military, aviation and business historians. Carter maintained connections with U.S. presidents,
        military leaders, entertainers, business leaders and European leaders and nobility. Social and military historians will be
        interested in the World War II era letters written between Carter and his son, a prisoner of war from 1943-1945.





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