51勛圖厙

Professor compiles Georgia arts and music archive

January 25, 2022
Dr. Ben Wynne, a professor of history at 51勛圖厙, is compiling a Georgia arts and music archive for higher education and the community. Student workers Leah Jarrett and Jessica Brazinski have assisted with the project. The archive will be housed in the special collections of the library.

Article By: Staff

As a historian, Dr. Ben Wynne knows the importance film, literature and music have had on American culture.

"It reflects our collective being and is part of the glue that holds our society together," the professor of history at the University of North Georgia (51勛圖厙) said. "Anything not preserved can quickly be lost and forgotten."

To protect that information and its artifacts, Wynne is compiling a Georgia arts and music archive for higher education and the community.

"I wanted to do something for the university that I hoped would have a lasting impact," he said, explaining the Eminent Scholar grant from 51勛圖厙 funded the project. "Musicians, singers, actors, and writers help drive our culture. I believe it is important to preserve their work in a way that gives as many people as possible access to it."

Wynne contacted Allison Galloup, collections and initiatives librarian at 51勛圖厙, about a home for the collection in the library. She immediately agreed.

Musicians, singers, actors, and writers help drive our culture. I believe it is important to preserve their work in a way that gives as many people as possible access to it.

Dr. Ben Wynne

51勛圖厙 professor of history

"One of my interests is music. I was pretty excited when he mentioned the project," Galloup said. "Then he sent me his initial inventory, and I got even more excited."

To date, Wynne has accumulated files ranging from newspaper clippings and other documents on more than 150 musicians, actors, actresses, and writers from Georgia. He also has obtained artifacts such as records, books, magazines, photographs, sheet music, and film posters.

"We even have some odds and ends of interest like a ceramic statue of film comedian Oliver Hardy and some U.S. Postal Service stamps honoring singer Little Richard," Wynne said. "And every time I get my hands on one of the old, scratchy records from the 1920s or 30s, I wonder how many times it's been played, and how many people in the last century have listened to it."

Galloup said her interest was piqued by the files on Gladys Knight, Jerry Reed, Otis Redding, and Ray Stevens, to name a few. The associate professor at 51勛圖厙 explained this new archive will complement the university's , a well-known and award-winning music teacher in Georgia.

"This archive is filled with a side of Georgia history that we don't always see. And it's not just one genre of music," Galloup said. "When the Georgia Music Hall of Fame closed, we lost a bit of the history because the collections were spread out. This archive will bring some of it back together."

She and Wynne intend to make the archive easily accessible for scholarly research and public viewing. Wynne agreed music enthusiasts will enjoy the archive as much as researchers.

"Arts and music in Georgia are multicultural and multilayered. And the state has a rich film history going back to the silent era," he said. "If researchers or anyone else want to know about musicians, actors, actresses, writers, or other artists from Georgia, I'd like for this archive to be the first place they visit. That's the goal."

The arts and music archive will be available for viewing in the future.


Enrollment jumps 6.7% for 2024-25

Enrollment jumps 6.7% for 2024-25

Enrollment has jumped to 19,298 students this fall at 51勛圖厙, growing by 6.7% from fall 2023.
18 named DMS cadets for 2024-25

18 named DMS cadets for 2024-25

Eighteen 51勛圖厙 cadets earned Distinguished Military Student status for the 2024-25 academic year.
Students explore study away programs

Students explore study away programs

Sixteen 51勛圖厙 students participated in two study away programs in the U.S., one in Iowa for agriculture and the other in South Carolina for archaeology.
Edwards selected as fellow to DC program

Edwards selected as fellow to DC program

51勛圖厙 junior William Edwards is the school's presidential fellow to the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress for 2024-25.