Pioneer America Society Images Collection
C1: 255
1938–1984 (bulk 1968–1982)
2,271 prints and negatives, 306 35mm slides, 2 cassette tapes
The Pioneer America Society was a nonprofit organization that sought to document, preserve and analyze rural America’s cultural landscape. It was founded by Henry H. Douglas (1903–1987) in 1967. The postwar period contained some of the first large-scale endeavors to protect historic locations and artifacts from industrialization. In a 1972 Pioneer America newsletter article, organization members articulated that people would only find interest in the preservation of history after “information about these structures, their geographic surroundings, and the way of life they supported becomes available.” The Society used photographs, written documents and internal newsletters to accumulate educational information on the history of America.
The Pioneer America Society Images Collection contains the prints, negatives, slides and cassettes that were previously part of the Pioneer America Society Records Collection (Accession 40235). The records collection, located in the Archives, contains information in the form of brochures, postcards, maps, newspapers and more.
Within the Pioneer America Society Images Collection, prints, negatives and slides are organized by location. The collection primarily focuses on farm buildings and the exteriors of homes. Other items focus on schools, churches, railroad stations and streets. The collection also holds two cassette tapes covering steam train journeys in 1971 and 1973. The photos of homes present how the architectural designs of each era were interpreted by everyday people, and those of … Read the rest
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