Recently, the Steiny Road Poet had occasion to do research
at the Yale Beinecke Library in New Haven, Connecticut. Pointed research of
original source materials like unpublished letters and journals is not
something the Poet had done before. Before embarking on the trip, the Poet
tried to find out what to expect, but there is nothing like going there and getting the experience first hand. So, here is what I learned and yes, portraits of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas hang in the Beinecke reading room.
REGISTERING & ORDERING REFERENCE MATERIALS
Yes, the Beinecke Library gives you some help. You should
pre-register with them and line up as many as 10 archival boxes from which you
want to investigate materials. You should keep a list yourself noting the name
of the archive, the call number, and the box and folder numbers and notes about
what you expect to find in these boxes.
It is also important to pay attention to whether the
materials you want are part of the Beinecke Library or some other Yale library.
For example in the Poet’s research which was centered on Gertrude Stein, the
Poet was interested in seeing letters about Stein that were written by a third
party to Virgil Thomson. The Thomson archive turned out to be in Yale’s Music
Library. If one places the request to the Beinecke this causes a delay in
getting these materials. So far, the Poet has not seen those archival boxes
because she decided to stay at the Beinecke to work with the materials there
exclusively.
The reason it is important to line up the boxes you want
from Beinecke is because some of these materials are not stored onsite and they
need several days to retrieve these materials.
PLANNING YOUR TIME AT THE LIBRARY
Originally when the Poet was planning her trip to Yale, she
thought one day would be sufficient but if that day also involves travel to New
Haven, it is important to understand that the hours are limited at theBeinecke. The library is not opened on weekends. During the week, Monday through Thursday
it is open 9 am to 6:45 pm but Friday only 9 am to 4:45 pm. So the Poet’s trip
included travel on Wednesday with a few hours in the afternoon that day and
then two additional full days. What happens as one friend warned the Poet
before she went, what one find starts to point to additional resources.
INITIAL ENTRANCE & WHAT IS ALLOWED IN THE READING ROOM
Use of materials at the Beinecke is heavily monitored. On
the first day you enter the library, one signs in at the front desk, then you
are told how to find storage lockers where you place all the things that are
not allowed in the reading room. There are two sizes of lockers. The small
locker can hold a small backpack, purse, and coat. The larger locker may be
able to handle a small roll bag, but the Poet was not entirely sure about that.
The lockers have keys that you are allowed to carry with you even when you
leave the building for lunch if you are not clearing out the locker during your
lunch break.
Once your things are stored, you proceed with laptop (its
power chord), your cell phone (its power chord), loose sheets of paper and
several pencils downstairs to the reading room desk. There you present two
picture IDs—typically driver’s license and passport. Then they point to the
reading room through the glass doors and tell you that they will bring your
first box on your pre-ordered list as soon as they have it. That usually takes
anywhere from ten to 30 minutes on average. By the time the Poet had picked out
a table and set up her laptop including plugging in its power source, the first
box arrived. Subsequent boxes you must retrieve yourself and you are only
allowed one box at time.
The reading room can be chilly but if you want a sweater in
the reading room, you must wear it and you may not take it off. The Poet wore a
multi-pocketed travel vest that was handy for carrying identification
documents, tissues, power chords, smart phone, and pencils.
STRATEGY FOR COLLECTING DATA
They will tell you at the reference desk to use your cell
phone camera if you want copies of the materials you are interested in. Even if
you think the letter is only remotely interesting, it is probably a good idea
to take a photo of it anyhow. What often happens is that you do not know the
value of what you just looked at until you see other materials. So, it is more
efficient to take photos of everything rather than worry about having to go
back to these materials later. However, you can turn in a box and ask the
librarians to hold it until you release it at the end of your entire visit to
the Beinecke. Also you can order high-resolution copies that you pay for.
Not all original source material libraries have the same
rules. While Beinecke allows you to photograph their materials as long as you
heed their permission rules, some libraries only allow you to take notes.
Beinecke asks you to remove only one folder at a time from an archival box and
to handle the materials carefully. Some libraries require you wear white
gloves.
If you need to access an uncataloged archive, the resource
librarians are extremely helpful and will do their best to assist you. If you
find problems with any materials, you should be a good citizen and fill out a
form to help them correct problems. For example, the Poet discovered the gross
misspelling of a name in the Stein archive and mildewing papers in an
uncataloged archive.
Because every table has its own security camera, you can
leave your laptops without fear of it being stolen when you leave the reading
on bathroom and lunch breaks. The restrooms and water fountains are on the same
level as the reading room.
If you encounter problems with Internet access on your
laptop, you can use Beinecke computers set up to search their resource
materials.
LEAVING THE READING ROOM
When you leave the library for the day, take all your things
with you. The guard outside the reading room doors will ask you to open your
laptop to make sure you are not walking out with anything that belongs to the
library. There seemed to be no problem with the vest, into which the Poet
stuffed her power chords and pencils. Same with your locker—clear it out and
leave the key.
For lunch, the Poet went to a fairly quiet restaurant on
Wall Street at the corner of College Street where they had a counter to order
your food and tables to sit at. She also went to the much livelier (as in
noisy) Yale Commons, which is in the building next door to the Beinecke (on the
left as you walk out of Beinecke). The student Commons has the appearance of a
set from Harry Potter with high ceiling and long dark wooden tables. The
cashier is hidden off to the right side of the huge hall where you pay a fixed
price of something around $10 for as much as you want to eat from the steam
tables and salad bars. The food is fresh, tasty, and plentiful. Very
convenient. Sit anywhere.
No comments:
Post a Comment