Happy Holidays! Fall for these festive, funny and romantic reads available on Hoopla. Don’t forget, you can download 10 digital materials each month with a few quick clicks.
November is National American Indian Heritage Month! Join the Pratt Library in celebrating by checking out these books highlighting the voices, culture, and history of Indigenous People.
Guest post by Paul Chasen, Special Collections Department
H.L. Mencken was a master wordsmith. He was a complex journalist and intellect. What Mencken did masterfully and proudly is leave our library a huge collection of sources of his life.
For Professor Ha, a retired journalist and communications professor, this is a personal-interest project that fits one of the things she is passionate about in life: uncovering the truth.
Using 1930 U.S. Census records, and scouring the addresses around Mencken’s 1524 Hollins Street address, Professor Ha figured out who most of the children in the photograph were. Then, she took more chances and figured out who an ancestor to one of the children might be. Professor Ha’s work paid off, leading to connecting with Angela Johnson, whose mother, Emma (1927-1995), is the baby in the photo. Other children in the photo include Evelyn (1919-?), Earl (1920-1930), Mildred (1922-?), and Daisy (1923-1995) Johnson.
That led us to the H.L. Mencken Room, where the late curator of the room, Dr. Vince Fitzpatrick, met with Professor Ha and Johnson to talk about the photo and the impact it has had on them. Prior to Professor Ha and Johnson’s visit, the photo had few details attached to it beyond our knowing that Mencken bought candy for the neighborhood children. Professor Ha delivered the truth to the photo. After the visit, the photo became rich in description and context, giving the Johnson family a place in history that would have otherwise been lost.
(l-r) Professor Keesha Ha, Dr. Vince Fitzpatrick, and Angela Johnson in the H.L. Mencken Room
Are you doing research about H.L. Mencken or one of the topics connected to him? (The Baltimore Sun, journalism, Prohibition, and politics are just a few.) Please consider visiting or contacting the H.L. Mencken Room at the Central Library at spc@prattlibrary.org or 410-396-5547.
This blog post is dedicated to the life and legacy of Dr. Vince Fitzpatrick. He was the long-time curator of the H.L. Mencken Room who died unexpectedly on July 15, 2023.