Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Happy American Archives Month!

Happy American Archives Month! During October, we like to share how awesome archives and history research can be. At the University of Wisconsin-Stout Archives, we have a wealth of online resources available to you to start your research journey. Two ways to view a slice of past UW-Stout student life is by exploring The Tower yearbooks and The Stoutonia student newspaper. The Tower was an annual publication produced by Stout students from 1909-1989, and The Stoutonia is a current publication produced by Stout students from 1915-present. They provide information and photographs about student activities, classes, organizations, staff and faculty, and the surrounding community. The archives houses physical copies of The Tower and The Stoutonia, and they are digitized and available on the archives website via the Internet Archive and Preservica:

Tower: https://archive.org/details/toweryearbook?&sort=date

Stoutonia: https://archive.org/details/stoutonia?&sort=date

Preservica:  https://uwstout.access.preservica.com/archive/

The UW-Stout archivist Heather Stecklein has also recorded video tutorials of where to find the Tower and Stoutonia on our website and how to conduct searches: https://library.uwstout.edu/tutorials/digitalprimarysources

1955-'56 Tower Yearbook staff

Tower Yearbooks


Another great resource to view past student and local life, and to understand the time period you are researching, is by looking at community and national newspapers. There are many great resources available via the UW-Stout Archives and Library website. Discover them here:

You can search the archives newspaper index, and request items to be scanned for you: https://library.uwstout.edu/arcarchives/arearesearchcenter

John Russell Articles Index (for Dunn County News): http://archives.lib.uwstout.edu/ics-wpd/russell_collection/index.shtml

New York Times Library database, etc.: https://library.uwstout.edu/az.php?a=n

Dunn County News via the Menomonie Public Library: https://menomonielibrary.org/databases/genealogy/

Rice Lake Chronotype via the Rice Lake Public Library: http://ricelake.advantage-preservation.com/

Newspapers via the Eau Claire Public Library: https://www.ecpubliclibrary.info/print-archives/

Wisconsin Newspaper Association Archive of WI Newspapers, 2005 to 90 days ago: https://badgerlink.newsmemory.com/wna/badgerlink/

Minnesota Digital Newspaper Hub: https://www.mnhs.org/newspapers/hub


Printing the Stoutonia, 1950-'51



Stoutonia staff members getting the newspaper ready to distribute, 1950-'51

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Happy American Archives Month!

Happy American Archives Month! During October, we like to share how awesome archives and history research can be. The University of Wisconsin-Stout Archives is part of a larger archival network in Wisconsin called the Area Research Center (ARC) Network. The ARC Network is a collaboration between the Wisconsin Historical Society in Madison, the University of Wisconsin System, and the Northern Great Lakes Visitor Center. Each ARC houses university, county, government, and regional interest related records for the surrounding counties such as yearbooks, newspapers, and genealogy records. UW-Stout houses records for Dunn, Barron, and Pepin Counties. If you wanted to look at records housed at a different ARC, such as UW-Green Bay, most archival items can be requested and shipped between the ARC’s in the network, so researchers do not have to travel all over the state for research purposes. Now that sounds like a cool system! Discover more about the Area Research Center Network here: https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Article/CS4000


March 8, 1973, Stoutonia article, "University Archives Preserved at Library"

Dec. 3, 1971, Stoutonia article "History Records find new Home"


There are also a wealth of online resources available to you to start your research journey. From the  Archives home page, there are 3 different links you can click on to find online resources and search indexes for items held at UW-Stout, and the surrounding community. You can search through the Tower Yearbooks, Stoutonia student newspapers, alumni publications, links to library databases and genealogical indexes, and the 1925 History of Dunn County. You can also access Ancestry with a Stout ID.

Digital Collections Link: https://library.uwstout.edu/friendly.php?s=digitalprimarysources

Collection Indexes Link: https://library.uwstout.edu/arcarchives/universityarchives

Area Research Center Link: https://library.uwstout.edu/arcarchives/arearesearchcenter

Preservica:  https://uwstout.access.preservica.com/archive/


County and state online resources available for historical and newspaper research:

Menomonie Public Library: https://menomonielibrary.org/databases/genealogy/

Dunn County Historical Society:  http://www.dunnhistory.org/

Mabel Tainter: https://mabeltainter.org/

Eau Claire Public Library: https://www.ecpubliclibrary.info/explore/

Wisconsin Historical Society: https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/


Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Celebrate Homecoming -- UW-Stout Style

It’s time to celebrate! Homecoming season is upon us at the University of Wisconsin-Stout and what better way to celebrate UW-Stout Pride than by looking at the history of our Alma Mater school song and the history of the Bowman Hall Clock Tower Bell. The first Homecoming was held March 30-31, 1917, along with the grand opening of the new Domestic Science Building, and many alumni were invited back. Homecoming was not held again until 1922, but has been an annual tradition since.



By 1923, Stout was more than 30 years old, but did not have an official school song. The Stoutonia initiated a school song contest, and a group of four students composed the school’s early fight song.

Oct. 12, 1923, Stoutonia article about school song contest

In 1927, freshmen Lillian Hylland and Jane Hambley created a more solemn and majestic piece appropriate for formal school assemblies. They composed “Alma Mater”, which became the school’s official song for commencements and other events. The brilliant “S” described in the song lyrics stands on the northern face of Bowman Hall’s Clock Tower.


Alma Mater sheet music, Stout Series 96, Music Dept. general files



Alma Mater and school fight song sheet music, Stout Series 96


Feb. 2, 2006, Stoutonia article reflecting on the alma mater song


From 1897 on, a bell rang out from the Bowman Hall Clock Tower, but by 1914, the pneumatic controls had broken. For many decades the bell was rung with hammers by students, but the bell eventually cracked and could not ring. A carillon replaced the bell, and in 1997 the cracked bell was removed and 5 new bells installed, initiated by 1970 alumnus John Meyer. A bell monument was created and dedicated during Homecoming 2005, near Micheels Hall, to memorialize the first bell. Learn more from the bell monument plaque down below.


Bell monument plaque


2005 Bell Dedication


2005  Bell Dedication


Check out the events happening during #Bluetober2021 and Homecoming here: https://www.uwstout.edu/bluetober ; https://www.uwstout.edu/homecoming

Learn more about Stout’s Homecoming and other traditions in An Idea Comes of Age: UW-Stout, 1891-2016, by Jerry Poling. We have them available to sell in the Archives!: https://secure.touchnet.com/C21720_ustores/web/product_detail.jsp?PRODUCTID=2128&SINGLESTORE=true

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Celebrate Homecoming -- UW-Stout Style

It’s time to celebrate! Homecoming season is upon us at the University of Wisconsin-Stout and what better way to celebrate UW-Stout Pride than by looking at the history of our beloved mascot Blaze and past traditions like the Homecoming Snake Dance. The first Homecoming was held March 30-31, 1917, along with the grand opening of the new Domestic Science Building, and many alumni were invited back. Homecoming was not held again until 1922, but has been an annual tradition since.



Until 1932, Stout athletic teams were called a range of names like the Manual Trainers, Trainers, Blues, Blue Shirts, Blue and White, Blue Ponies, and Blue Devils. From 1932 to present, the Blue Devils name has been used. Over the years, the Blue Devils Mascot has been depicted in various ways. During the 1950s-‘60s, the mascot was named Johnny Blue Devil with a scary mask and “S” sweater (shown in 1960 Tower Yearbook), and during the 1970s he wore a cape and bib overalls. In the fall of 2011, a new mascot was introduced, after more than 3 decades of an absence of a mascot. A poll was created to pick a name for the mascot and on Feb. 11, 2012, the mascot was named Blaze.

Johnny Blue Devil, 1960 Tower Yearbook, p. 90



Homecoming buttons depicting mascots, 1953, 1964, 1969


Current Blaze, 2018



For many years, Stout students celebrated major football games, such as Homecoming, with a Snake Dance. Students, faculty, and staff walked hand-in-hand with quick, angled steps, in a long chain that whipped and wound around across the football field, while the band marched through.


Homecoming Snake Dance, 1924


Starting in the 1920s, snake dances started at student residences, went up Broadway and Main Streets, and ended with students dancing in the streets downtown. From the late 1920s-1960s, the snake dance ended with a celebratory bonfire at the fairgrounds or on the north campus practice field. Freshman students were given the job of building and guarding the bonfire pile until it was ready to be lit.


1937 Homecoming Bonfire





Homecoming Activities, 1946 Tower Yearbook, p. 36


Discover photos of this and other past student traditions in the Tower Yearbook collection, 1909-1989, online via the Internet Archive:  https://archive.org/details/toweryearbook?&sort=date

Check out the events happening during #Bluetober2021 and Homecoming here: https://www.uwstout.edu/bluetober ; https://www.uwstout.edu/homecoming

Learn more about Stout’s Homecoming and other traditions in An Idea Comes of Age: UW-Stout, 1891-2016, by Jerry Poling. We have them available to sell in the Archives!: https://secure.touchnet.com/C21720_ustores/web/product_detail.jsp?PRODUCTID=2128&SINGLESTORE=true