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| Joyce Lamont |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Confederate love memoirs, sheet music that
inspired American troops in the world wars, and letters from freed
slaves found in the dusty attic of a Greensboro plantation all serve
as artifacts that have been left behind by the people who guided
our nation through its most spectacular and turbulent periods.
A walk through the W.S.
Hoole Special Collections Library on The University of Alabama
campus offers a rare vision of history through forgotten personalities.
The library, found on the second floor of Mary Harmon Bryant Hall,
contains many relics from the past that give a voice to those who
were, in many instances, never heard in their own time. Thanks to
a new fund, their history will be preserved for many generations
to come.
The University of Alabama Board of Trustees recently announced
the creation of The Joyce Haguewood and William Edward Lamont Endowed
Library Fund. The endowment, which was made possible by contributions
exceeding $15,000 from UA alumni, friends and relatives of Joyce
Lamont and her late husband, William, will be used for the future
preservation and acquisition of material at the W.S. Hoole Special
Collections Library on the Tuscaloosa campus. The funds will facilitate
the gathering of print and digital materials that will assist researchers
throughout the region serviced by the library.
Lamont’s work was vital to the development of the Hoole
Library, which has become nationally recognized as a premier collection
of materials relating to the culture, history and economy of Alabama
and the South. Those materials include Confederate imprints, Alabama
government publications and UA archives.
Lamont said a collection of letters from newly freed slaves is
one of the most intriguing examples of the library’s many
volumes. The journals and correspondence between them, which dates
back to the era immediately following the Civil War, tells of their
struggle to assimilate into Southern society. This struggle eventually
led the freed slaves to move to Liberia.
The large collection of historical pieces from Confederate soldiers
is another priceless asset to the library.
“The story of one soldier, in particular, is told through
a scrapbook compiled by his family while he was away fighting,”
Lamont said. “Included in the volume are newspaper clippings
from battles he fought, love letters sent to his hometown sweetheart
and even his pardon from a Union prison camp.”
The library also boasts the Wade Hall Collection of Southern History
and Culture through a continuing gift from Union Springs native
Dr. Wade Hall. The large collection contains books, sheet music,
sound recordings, photographs and other materials that reflect the
rich culture and deep history of the South.
Joyce Haguewood Lamont, a native of Bellamy, graduated from the
Capstone in 1954. Following temporary employment by the School of
Commerce Library, Lamont became a full-time employee of University
Libraries in 1955. She transferred to the Special Collections Library
in 1975 where she served as curator. Lamont retired from the University
in 1994 after 39 years and 11 months of service.
University Archivist Emeritus Jerry Oldshue worked with Lamont
for many years. He cites her knowledge of Southern history and her
excellent storytelling as key elements to her successful service
to UA. “Joyce always had a good story to tell and that gave
her appeal to everyone,” Oldshue said. “She was always
happy to aid writers by telling them more about Alabama.”
Clark Center, the current curator of the Special Collections Library,
recognizes Lamont’s contributions to the library. “Joyce
Lamont knew which direction that this library needed to go, and
she took it in that direction,” Center said. “She was
a great representative of UA, and that’s why the library is
what it is today.”
Her husband, the late William “Ed” Lamont, was born
in Atmore and attended the University prior to his service in the
U.S. Navy. He returned to UA where he worked for the U.S. Bureau
of Mines until he retired in 1980. Lamont moved to the Minerals
Research Institute until retiring shortly before his death in 1994.
A metallurgist by trade, Ed Lamont would often assist his wife by
locating potential donors for the library in his trips around the
state.
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