Edmund Blunden’s souvenir World War I map: St. Julien, Belgium, July 31, 1917
You must have Javascript enabled and the Flash 8 plugin installed to view this content. Consult your browser’s help file for instructions to enable Javascript. Click on the four-way arrow in the...
View ArticlePhoto Friday
Each Friday, the Ransom Center shares photos from throughout the week that highlight a range of activities and collection holdings. We hope you enjoy these photos that reveal some of the everyday...
View ArticlePostcards from France: Paul Fussell and the Field Service “Form-letter”
You must have Javascript enabled and the Flash 8 plugin installed to view this content. Consult your browser’s help file for instructions to enable Javascript. Click on the four-way arrow in the...
View ArticlePhoto Friday
Each Friday, the Ransom Center shares photos from throughout the week that highlight a range of activities and collection holdings. We hope you enjoy these photos that reveal some of the everyday...
View ArticleRansom Center partners with Texas Exes on World War I-themed anniversary tour
2014 will mark the 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War, a watershed event that claimed millions of lives and changed the course of the twentieth century. The Ransom Center’s exhibit...
View ArticleWar photography exhibition showcases images from the Ransom Center’s...
Back in November the exhibition WAR/PHOTOGRAPHY: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath opened at its fourth and final venue, the Brooklyn Museum. This exhibition, which I curated with Anne Tucker...
View ArticleIn the Galleries: Gordon Conway “Vanity Fair” cover illustration highlights...
World War I played a crucial part in the transformation of gender roles. As men left for the battlefields, women took on traditionally male occupations at home. Buoyed by this experience and a new...
View ArticleIn the Galleries: Frank Nicolet Lucien poster pays homage to poem “In...
In the spring of 1915, John McCrae, a young Canadian surgeon, conducted a burial service for a friend, killed by German artillery during the Second Battle of Ypres, in the First World War. Inspired by...
View ArticleWorld War I-era Russian propaganda posters portray food as evil
Food was in high demand during the First World War, especially in Russia. The food shortages were so constant that they were ultimately one of the factors that helped to incite the revolutions of 1917....
View ArticleBefore and After: World War I–era panoramic photo undergoes conservation...
The Ransom Center’s exhibition The World at War, 1914–1918 features a panoramic group portrait of the 103rd Aero Squadron (Lafayette Escadrille), the first U.S. aviation pursuit squadron in combat in...
View ArticleIn the Galleries: Dogs played major role in the First World War
During the First World War, dogs attached to the Medical Corps and the Red Cross lived up to the title “Man’s Best Friend” by helping to rescue soldiers. Medical Corps dogs were trained to enter No...
View ArticleExplore World War I propaganda posters online
The Ransom Center recently launched a new platform of digital collections on its website, which includes the World War I poster collection. More than 120 items from that collection, including the...
View ArticleBehind-the-scenes: Customizing a mannequin, from legs to limbs, to display a...
Presenting a costume or historical clothing on a mannequin may seem deceptively simple at first glance. Yet there is rarely an instance of a mannequin, standardized or made-to-measure, that is ready to...
View ArticleWorld War I Red Cross poster undergoes conservation treatment for exhibition
The conservation department at the Harry Ransom Center treated many collection items in preparation for the current exhibition The World at War 1914–1918. Among these were numerous posters of various...
View ArticleEnter to win a signed copy of Geoff Dyer’s “The Missing of the Somme”
The Ransom Center’s current exhibition The World at War, 1914–1918 marks the centenary of the start of World War I. Triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria by a...
View ArticleCelebrating the films of the First World War
The Harry Ransom Center’s current exhibition The World at War, 1914–1918 marks the centennial anniversary of the start of World War I. “The war to end all wars,” as it was optimistically dubbed, was...
View ArticleMeet the Staff: Jean Cannon, Literary Collections Research Associate
Meet the Staff is a Q&A series on Cultural Compass that highlights the work, experience, and lives of staff at the Harry Ransom Center. Jean Cannon has been the literary collections research...
View ArticleIn the Galleries: Frank Nicolet Lucien poster pays homage to poem “In...
In the spring of 1915, John McCrae, a young Canadian surgeon, conducted a burial service for a friend, killed by German artillery during the Second Battle of Ypres, in the First World War. Inspired by...
View ArticleWorld War I-era Russian propaganda posters portray food as evil
Food was in high demand during the First World War, especially in Russia. The food shortages were so constant that they were ultimately one of the factors that helped to incite the revolutions of 1917....
View ArticleBefore and After: World War I–era panoramic photo undergoes conservation...
The Ransom Center’s exhibition The World at War, 1914–1918 features a panoramic group portrait of the 103rd Aero Squadron (Lafayette Escadrille), the first U.S. aviation pursuit squadron in combat in...
View Article