*African American innovation in information management – talk on Back 
Number Budd Saturday, Feb. 18, 1 pm, Astoria, Queens*

If you didn’t have a scrapbook and didn’t have room for piles of 
newspapers in your house, how else could you find old news items in the 
late 19th and early 20th centuries? You could visit a form of offsite 
storage, flourishing first in a basement in midtown Manhattan, and then 
in an old horsecar barn in Astoria, Queens.

In the 1870s, an African American man known as Back Number Budd began 
sorting and organizing back issues of newspapers for sale to 
researchers, lawyers, and browsers. In a time before library newspaper 
collections or indexes, his business allowed his clients to find long 
lost information. Especially because he was black, buyers were 
suspicious of the high prices he charged for his work of sorting and 
saving old newspapers elsewhere considered trash. The story of his work 
offers a view into forgotten moments in African American history.

Fire destroyed Robert Budd’s business, but competition from the New York 
Public Library, which started saving more newspapers, and clipping 
services, which came into use in the 1890s, also displaced it.

Ellen Gruber Garvey will be speaking about Back Number Budd on Feb. 18, 
1 pm at the Greater Astoria Historical Society, 
<http://astorialic.org/events.php?id=1191> not far from where Budd had 
has warehouse, in Ravenswood, Astoria, Long Island City. Quinn Building, 
35-20 Broadway, Long Island City, NY 11106.

She already has had the extraordinary pleasure of meeting some of his 
descendents in Massachusetts, and hopes that /someone/ in Astoria will 
have a lead on a photo of his business – or have other stories to share.

Thanks to the Public Scholars in the Humanities, Humanities New York, 
for sponsoring this! <http://humanitiesny.org/>

Ellen Gruber Garvey is the author of /Writing with Scissors: American 
Scrapbooks from the Civil War to the Harlem Renaissance/ (Oxford 
University Press, 2013), a prizewinning book that looks at how thousands 
of American newspaper readers -- from Abraham Lincoln to Susan B. 
Anthony to African American janitors -- shaped their use of information 
through scrapbooks.


-- 

Ellen Gruber Garvey, Ph.D.

Professor, Department of English, New Jersey City University

Author, /Writing with Scissors: American Scrapbooks from the Civil War 
to the Harlem Renaissance 
<http://www.amazon.com/Writing-Scissors-American-Scrapbooks-Renaissance/dp/0199927693/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1418658012&sr=8-1&keywords=writing+with+scissors>/

Visit the Scrapbook History website 
<https://scrapbookhistory.wordpress.com/>



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