From classroom to community: Ohio history gets a helping hand from students
While many college students spend their Saturday mornings sleeping in, a dedicated group at 91探花 is hard at work preserving the history of southeastern Ohio.
The students spend their weekends in New Straitsville, a former coal mining town located in southeastern Perry County, collecting artifacts and preserving documents to help others understand the region鈥檚 rich history.
Nancy Tatarek, Ph.D., an associate professor of anthropology in the College of Arts and Sciences, began researching the community more than a decade ago. She said the project is an illustration of how the University impacts local communities through service.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe in going into a place and simply taking data, for example, and leaving,鈥 Tatarek said. 鈥淚 believe it should be a partnership.鈥
Last month, she led a group of students in removing mold from thousands of pages of the town鈥檚 historical documents. The records date back over a hundred years and include court documents, birth certificates and even ordinances about pigs in the streets.
Tatarek said the documents are a window into News Straitsville鈥檚 past. 鈥淭hese are the first official things that the town passed after they got incorporated,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o, it really speaks to what was on their minds, you know, in 1872.鈥
In 2019, the records were nearly lost after flooding caused damage to the town鈥檚 old jailhouse. While some of the documents suffered mold and water damage, Tatarek and her students successfully relocated the records.
鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty amazing,鈥 Tatarek said. 鈥淲ithout those kinds of students' help, we would not have been able to save probably even a quarter of [the documents].鈥
Students are now actively cleaning the records to prevent further mold growth.
鈥淲e're going through a process of mold remediation, which means every page, every single piece of paper, has to go through a process where we try to get the mold off of it, which is a lengthy process because you've got thousands of pages.鈥
The next stage will involve digitizing the collection, an effort to make the town鈥檚 entire history publicly accessible. Without this, Tatarek said people risk forgetting New Straitsville's history and the broader 鈥淎merican experience.鈥
鈥淪mall towns can have a lot to say about American history,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's not just the town's history, but it's also these little moments where the town pulls in these wider American stories and American events.鈥
Today, New Straitsville offers a deeper understanding of Appalachia鈥檚 long history of exploitation.
New Straitsville was founded in 1870 as a coal mining town, and its population grew quickly as jobs and immigration surged.
But a labor strike in 1884 led to a fateful decision. Miners, seeking better pay and working conditions, set fire to coal cars to halt mining operations, .
The fire rendered the coal mines inoperable and forced many residents to flee. Despite the odds, a determined group of residents chose to stay and sought out alternative industries including brick manufacturing and iron production.
Susan Miller, the fiscal officer of New Straitsville, emphasized the importance of preserving the town's documents and artifacts in maintaining this history.
鈥淚f we didn鈥檛 preserve these, if we didn鈥檛 go through and look at them, I don鈥檛 think we鈥檇 have a clue of all the struggles and achievements that the town鈥檚 been able to do,鈥 Miller said.
With the help of Tatarek and 91探花 students, Miller has documented the town鈥檚 history through a collection of artifacts in the . The townspeople have provided most of the collection.
鈥淓verything鈥檚 changing,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淲e want people to be able to come to the museum and step back in history and see the struggle and achievement timeline. And we can do that with these documents.鈥
Tatarek鈥檚 students are responsible for turning artifacts into museum exhibits, highlighting different pieces of the town鈥檚 history.
One of these students was Lee Sites, an 91探花 alum who graduated with a degree in anthropology and a certificate in museum studies. Sites recently returned to Ohio after earning master鈥檚 degrees from Bath Spa University in the UK and now volunteers at the New Straitsville History Museum.
Sites believes that the museum is significant in shaping the future of the town. 鈥淣ew Straitsville is seeing a rise,鈥 Sites said. 鈥淚 hope that they continue to see this growth and continue to see volunteers coming in.鈥
Along with Tatarek鈥檚 students gaining real-world experience, the partnership with New Straitsville serves as a way to preserve the past so that the region can have a future. This is an integral part of Tatarek鈥檚 research mission.
鈥淚f we can form collaborative relationships with different organizations in different towns, that can work towards saving history,鈥 Tatarek said.