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Sunday, May 24, 2026 |
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| University of Georgia students work together to bring history to life |
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Winslow Homer (American, 1836 1910), News from the War, from Harpers Weekly, 1862. Wood engraving, 13 1/2 × 20 3/8 inches. Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia; The Andrew Ladis and William Underwood Eiland Collection, Gift of William Underwood Eiland in honor of Sarah Blake McHam. 2012.16.
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ATHENS, GA.- Its easy to feel far removed from the Civil War era, but for students in the University of Georgias HIST 4760/6760 Hands-on Public History course that isnt the case. Students in this class work with community partners to develop public history projects based on primary and secondary sources. This spring semester, the class partnered with the Georgia Museum of Art to curate Seeing the News in Harpers Weekly, 1860 80, an exhibition featuring illustrations from Harpers Weekly that focus on the Civil War and its aftermath. The exhibition will be on view in the museums Study Gallery May 23 July 12.
Akela Reason, history professor and director of the museum studies certificate program at UGA, taught the course. To choose a topic for the exhibition, she partnered with Tricia Miller, deputy director of collections and exhibitions and head registrar at the museum, who taught HIST 4765 (Museum Registration Methods) this past spring. Reasons students selected the prints and wrote accompanying labels, while Millers students created condition reports for each work. Erin Ideker, an exhibition design intern at the museum, determined how the works are displayed.
Harpers Weekly was known for its illustrations, which told the news through imagery. Daily papers of the era did not have illustrations, and as a result people relied on weekly publications like Harpers for images. A crucial source for the period, it was widely accessible and commonly read. Reason said, Its estimated that a single issue would pass between 5 and 10 other people.
The exhibition focuses on two main artists, Thomas Nast and Winslow Homer, who both made illustrations for Harpers Weekly. Nast was one of the most popular cartoonists of his time, best known for establishing the donkey and elephant as symbols for the Democratic and Republican Parties. Homer was a well-known painter whose Civil War illustrations became iconic images of the period. Nasts and Homers illustrations cover political issues such as Reconstruction, post-war civil rights, segregation and dealing with ex-Confederates. Although Harpers began as a nonpartisan news source, it became staunchly pro-Union during the war and continued supporting the Republican Party in the years that followed.
Seeing the News in Harpers Weekly displays the printed illustrations as well as a complete edition of Harpers Weekly, all from the museums collection. Wood blocks that were used to stamp illustrations into the magazines also are on view, courtesy of UGAs Special Collections Libraries. Student curators wanted visitors to be able to imagine how Harpers was consumed back in the day. To re-create the experience, the class included a facsimile copy of a single issue in its entirety, which visitors will be able to pick up and read.
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