| The History Center’s growing
collection of archival resources includes
more than 2,400 cubic feet of manuscripts,
maps, newspapers, photographs, oral
histories, and other materials. Our
reading room is open to the public
for research during regular hours
(M-F, 8-5 and S, 9-1). Staff will
answer phone, letter, and electronic
queries in the order they are received.
Photographs
The History Center’s photographic
collections contain approximately
200,000 images, dating from the late
nineteenth century to the present.
Images are primarily of people, places,
and events in East Texas with an extensive
representation of Diboll and Angelina
County. Photographs, while not comprising
the bulk of our holdings, are our
most popular resources.
Some
notable Photographic collections.
Oral
History
The History Center’s oral history
collection contains 200 interviews
conducted between 1954 and the present,
with most from the 1980’s. Most
have been transcribed and indexed.
Life experiences in East Texas sawmill
towns and logging camps, especially
Diboll and related communities, during
the early and middle twentieth century
are well represented. Thad Sitton’s
and James H. Conrad’s Nameless
Towns: Texas Sawmill Communities,
1880-1942, published by the University
of Texas Press in 1998, prominently
features many of these interviews.
Newspapers
The History Center holds more than
65 linear feet of original printed
newspaper issues and 500 reels of
microfilm, mostly representing Angelina
County from 1913 to the present. We
also have a few issues from the cities
of Galveston, Palestine, Pineland,
and Rusk, among others. Notable collections
include:
- (Diboll) Buzz Saw, 1947-1952
- (Diboll) News-Bulletin, 1953,
1955-1958
- (Diboll) Free Press, 1958-present
- Lufkin Daily News, 1913-present
- Pineland Star, 1958-1959
Maps
Our map collections contain more than
300 flat, 100 rolled, and 1,500 bound
maps, primarily documenting East and
Southeast Texas. Topographic, forest,
highway, railroad, land ownership,
and timber cruise maps comprise the
bulk of the collection.
Manuscripts
Our fastest growing archival component
is our manuscript collections, which
also comprise the bulk of our holdings.
Most of these collections remain in
an on-going state of processing. The
largest business archives include
records of Southern Pine Lumber Company
and Temple Lumber Company, along with
their various divisions and subsidiaries.
We also have municipal records and
a number of family and community collections.
Some
notable Manuscript Collections.
Genealogy
In addition to the collections above,
we have a number of other resources
that are useful for family research,
including various county and federal
census records. We have federal population
census records for most area counties
for the years 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920,
and 1930. We also have nineteenth
century federal agricultural, manufacturing,
and social statistics schedules for
area counties.
Books
and Vertical Files
The History Center maintains a growing
library of local history, forest,
Texana, and railroad books. We also
have a collection of Diboll High School
yearbooks and an active vertical file
collection of regional history subjects.
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