/cushman_photos

Metadata from the Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection published by the Indiana University Libraries and housed by the Indiana University Archives.

Overview

The Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection, initially published in late 2003 by the Indiana University Libraries in partnership with the Indiana University Archives, is one of our most visited digital special collections, with nearly nine million hits to date. Charles Cushman, amateur photographer and Indiana University alumnus, is regarded for his early adoption of Kodachrome color slides and his depiction of every day life, between 1938-1968, in the United States and abroad. An Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) National Leadership Grant in 2000 funded the digitization and online publication of Cushman’s unknown yet spectacular photographs that amounted to nearly 14,500 35mm slides available on the web site.

Once released to the public, Cushman captivated the masses and impacted scholarship, in unanticipated ways. Professor Eric Sandweiss, Carmony Chair of Indiana University Bloomington’s History Department, published articles and, more recently, a book analyzing Cushman’s photographs, The Day in Its Color, and heavily used the online collection to further his research. The collection was also used in creative ways. It inspired individuals to blog personal histories, write fictional stories around photographic themes, and modern day photographers to replicate and juxtapose current day images of buildings and sites with those depicted in Cushman’s original photographs. The worldwide press coverage was unanticipated and has included a home page feature on the Daily Mail and a story on ABC News, both published as recently as September 2011, NPR's Picture Show in 2012, and more.

Metadata

Recently, we were contacted by Jon Voss from HistoryPin who had heard of our Cushman Collection and was keen on integrating all or parts of the collection into HistoryPin. Developed by the Non-For-Profit, We Are What We Do, in partnership with Google, HistoryPin is a community-driven, collaborative digital history project that exposes our global cultural heritage, with an emphasis on place and space, via a platform that's conducive to mapping (or "pinning"), storytelling, and crowdsourcing our collective history.

As indicated above, the Cushman photos are a mesmerizing slice of life that has already captured the interests of so many people. The Cushman collection is an ideal contribution to HistoryPin, and we are, in turn, eager to share the Cushman Collection more broadly and benefit from the collective knowledge of HistoryPin users.

To this end, though others interested in the Cushman metadata are welcome to it (see Terms of Use below), we include in this repository a CSV file of 15,190 rows of metadata, 14,425 records of which are currently published in the Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection. The collection is richly described with every record containing geographic location information, at a minimum, at the city level. The following controlled vocabularies were used:

Cushman metadata is also available via OAI-PMH, which provides additional information like which controlled vocabularies or encodings were used:

Once Jon and his team parse through the metadata, we will announce next steps which will hopefully include an unveiling of all or some of the Cushman Collection in HistoryPin as a tour or channel.

Terms of Use

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

The metadata for the Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection is published by the Indiana University Libraries is available free of restrictions under the Creative Commons Attribution license. This means that you can share or adapt the metadata from the Cushman collection for any purpose, even commercial, as long as you give attribution as follows: