Staff Spotlight: Veronica McGurrin, Reference and Instruction Librarian/Archivist

Photo of Veronica in a white coat pointing to a building sign which reads, "No, I'm a Veronica"

Veronica McGurrin, Reference and Instruction Librarian/Archivist

Welcome back to our staff spotlight series! Over the next few weeks, we’ll catch up on featuring recent hires and new roles of staff in the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library here at the University of Virginia. 

Veronica McGurrin (she/her) recently joined the Small Special Collections Library as a Reference and Instruction Librarian/Archivist in Public Services. Previously, she was the Librarian for Art and Art History at UNC Chapel Hill, where she received her Dual Master’s Degree in Art History and Library Science. Outside the library, you can find Veronica reading outside on her porch with her cat, Morty, and beagle, Woody.

What was your first ever job with books or libraries?
I started volunteering at my local library when I was 12 and pretty much never left! I volunteered with the children’s department, then worked at circulation through high school and college before starting my MLS degree at UNC. 

What was the first thing you collected as a child? What do you collect now? (oh, c’mon, admit it).
I think I am horribly boring and will say that books are really the only thing that I collected when I was younger (besides rocks + shells from the beach). My house is overflowing with books, and my partner and I have begun a (modest) record collection as well. I’ve had to restrict myself, but I’m thinking that zines are going to worm their way in as a new collection. 

Hopefully you’ve been roaming Grounds and Charlottesville a bit since your arrival. What’s your favorite new discovery other than Special Collections?
Carter Mountain! One of our first stops after the frantic haze of unpacking was to go to Carter Mountain for some peaches and a peach milkshake. 

Tell us what excites you about your job?
Currently, it’s just being able to explore the depth of the collection here.You could be working and staring at your computer for a few hours, and then pop down into the stacks and pick out a first edition Little Women or Gone with the Wind off the shelf. I’m currently scheduling the instruction sessions for the fall semester, so I am really excited to get started working with students in their exploration of the collection. 

Tell us something about Special Collections or UVA that is different from what you expected.
It is so much colder than I thought it would be!! Remember to bring your cardigan when coming to the Reading Room, even in the dead heat of the summer. 

If you could be locked in any library or museum for a weekend, with the freedom to roam, enjoy, and study to your heart’s content, which one would you choose?
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston! Ever since I was a kid, it has been my absolute favorite museum. For those who don’t know, Gardner imported a Venetian palace into Boston and turned her home into this magnificent museum, open to the public. Her portrait, by John Singer Sargent, is stunning! 

Staff Spotlight: Rosalind Calhoun, Processing Archivist

Welcome back to our staff spotlight series! Over the next few weeks, we’ll catch up on featuring recent hires and new roles of staff in the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library here at the University of Virginia. Let’s go!

Photo of Rosalind Calhoun

Rosalind Calhoun, Processing Archivist at the Small Special Collections Library

As a Processing Archivist, Rosalind Calhoun works with the Patrick Oliphant Artwork and Papers, documents the history of enslavement at UVA for the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation funded project On These Grounds, edits and revises the Inclusion and Reparative Action Plan for Special Collections Technical Services, and improves discovery of collections. Previously, she was the Librarian and Archivist of the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library and Museum. She has a MLIS from the University of Maryland and a MSc in Book History and Material Culture from the University of Edinburgh. Her interests include art, history, travel, and her Rottweiler, Gumbo (@gumbotherottie).


What was your first ever job with books or libraries?
Working in Special Collections and University Archives at the University of Maryland’s Hornbake Library as a graduate student. While I was there I was fortunate enough to work with several books from the Kelmscott Press, which inspired my love for all things William Morris.

What was the first thing you collected as a child? What do you collect now?
As a child of the late-90s and early-2000s: Beanie Babies. Now I collect antique wax seals, Japanese netsukes, stirrup cups, Hermès silk scarves, Christmas ornaments, taxidermy, oddities, and curiosities.

Hopefully you’ve been roaming Grounds and Charlottesville a bit since your arrival. What’s your favorite new discovery other than Special Collections?
I’ve lived in Charlottesville since 2020, and my husband and I love the North American Sake Brewery. We enjoy eating on their patio next to Ix Art Park with our Rottweiler, Gumbo. There are also so many fantastic places in the area to go antiquing!

Tell us what excites you about your job?
All the wonderful things in the collections I get to see and the histories I get to help make discoverable and accessible, so we can share that knowledge and wonder with the world. 

Tell us something about Special Collections or UVA that is different from what you expected.
I am surprised that the atmosphere in Special Collections is so down-to-earth. It makes being here a lot less intimidating! Everyone has been kind and welcoming.

If you could be locked in any library or museum for a weekend, with the freedom to roam, enjoy, and study to your heart’s content, which one would you choose?
The Morgan Library and Museum in New York. I think the East Room is one of the most beautiful library spaces in the world, and their collections are amazing. I would love to see the Black Hours in person.

Perspectives from the Digitization of the Douglas H. Gordon Collection of French Books

Perspectives from the Digitization  

of the Douglas H. Gordon Collection of French Books 

This post is contributed to by two former UVA students working with the Digital Production Group (DPG) to digitize the Douglas H. Gordon Collection of French Books.

Three shelves of rare books stored in the Vault of Special Collections

A sampling of the Gordon Books taken by Stacey Evans, DPG

Perspective A: How a French Graduate Student Recovered a First Edition Novel From the 17th Century 

Contributor Biography: Christina Coomer received her MA in French from the University of Virginia in 2024. As a second-year graduate student in the Department of French she worked part-time at UVA’s Small Special Collections Library digitizing rare French books in the Digital Production Group Studio. She focuses on women’s studies in 18th Century French literature. She was awarded a 2023 Rare Book School fellowship to complete research on forgotten female authors of eighteenth-century France.  

To write about how I recovered a first edition French novel from the 17th Century, I first must explain the Gordon Collection and to tell my personal connection to it. The Douglas H. Gordon Collection of French Books is a collection of over 1,200 rare French books dating from the 16th to 19th centuries. The collection comprises first-edition copies of every notable French work by every famous French writer. The collection’s defining characteristic is the custom gold-leaf and leather book bindings. The collection is impressive in its magnitude of titles, and with all the matching book bindings, an aesthetic masterpiece.  

I first learned about the collection when I accepted a part-time position at UVA Library in the Digital Production Group (DPG). DPG was seeking a French graduate student to digitize a portion of the books in the collection. It was a dream to come to work and touch first-edition works by Moliere, Michel de Montaigne, and Balzac to name a few. After months of working at the library, I went on a tour of the library vault which houses some of the most rare and valuable books in the Special Collections Library.  

Christina is looking up at a bust housed in the vault with three books of shelves under it.

Taken during Christina’s tour of the vault by Stacey Evans with DPG

While on the tour, I learned more about the collection, which made it even more impressive in my eyes. The collection contains a book that once belonged to Madame de Pompadour and was custom made to match her apartments at the Palace of Versailles. The collection also includes a book rumored to have once belonged to Marie-Antoinette. The collection’s shining star, a beautifully bound set of Diderot’s Encyclopedie, was at one time believed to have been a part of the library of Catherine II of Russia. The identity of this set’s former owner remains a mystery. However, that day in the vault there was only one book on my radar: La Princesse de Cleves by Madame de LaFayette.  Gordon 1678 .L3 v.1/2 

A screenshot of the digital scanning of La Princesse de Cleves v. 1 title page

A screenshot of the digital scanning of La Princesse de Cleves v. 1 title page by Christina during the digitization process.

La Princesse de Cleves was the novel that persuaded me to specialize in eighteenth-century French literature. After studying it in Jennifer Tsien’s graduate course, I fell in love with the novel and period. It is the novel that defined French Realism and was France’s first psychological novel (as well as being highly entertaining on its own). I found the Gordon edition in the vault and instantly inquired about its digitization status. To think I could have the opportunity to digitize my favorite book was a pipe dream. To my disbelief, the library’s records indicated that it had not been digitized yet. I made my request to my supervisors and advocated for the novel’s importance and significance in literary history. More than that, Gordon’s specific edition of the novel included handwritten notes about the characters – information any French scholar would be eager to examine. I wanted my lasting impact at the UVA Library to be digitizing this novel for readers and scholars all over the world to enjoy. Thanks to the kindness of the DPG, my request for digitization was accepted, and I was allowed to personally digitize La Princesse de Cleves 

 

Perspective B:

Contributor Biography: Vaino Judson received his MA in French from the University of Virginia in 2024. He worked in the Digital Production Group studio in the UVA Library to digitize many artifacts in the UVA Library’s Douglas H. Gordon Collection of French books.  

The Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library is personally my favorite building on Grounds. Working in Special Collections means handling extraordinary and uncommon artifacts on a regular basis. Language, drawings, handwritten notes, and handmade things all make up the artifacts in the library, so really the extraordinary in this case is a variety of human activities in contexts that used to be common. Knowing that customs that have fallen out of use were once considered just as ordinary as the customs familiar to myself seems to contradict fascination with them on the surface. However, this knowledge also serves as a reminder that the human experience transcends not only myself and people I know, but the entire current moment as we understand it. In the case of the Gordon Collection of rare French books, the context in which the artifacts were made stretches back to as long as five hundred years ago. Many of these books contain biographies of major political actors and political treatises as well as philosophies that affected how people perceived themselves and others. In other words, people have been living in their own times for hundreds of years. 

Example of a handwritten page in French

Example of French hand writing

Coming into contact with the persistence of human consciousness does not only offer fascination but a humbling moment of resonance with a larger view of life. Scholars look to the past and to the previously formed ideas contained in books to understand the significance of current events. At the same time, current events relate back to the past such that the worlds of the living and the dead are intertwined. 

The library houses a number of priceless rare books and manuscripts, including those that belong to the Gordon Collection, in a secure underground chamber where the controlled temperature, moderated light level and humidity conditions shield these historical artifacts from change. Storing the books in this way makes them available to future generations and safeguards the knowledge they contain. However, they are simultaneously placed in a world unto themselves where the constant necessity of change that gives ideas gravity cannot affect the books. One way of affecting change on rare books, however, is by rendering them digital. Digitizing rare books takes these books that date back to hundreds of years in the past and recreates them in a way that is intelligible to how information is stored and shared in the present. It creates a kind of synchronism between the present and the past: a series of images in an online viewer. This relatively newly invented technology displays the use of an older technology to convey thoughts. People expressing interest in the lives of one another has existed for longer than anyone currently has been alive. Something about desiring to preserve that is distinctly human too. 

Digital picture of the spine of Lettres Philosophiques.

Voltaire, and Douglas H. Gordon Collection of French Books (University of Virginia). Lettres Philosophiques. Chez E. Lucas,
au Livre d’or [i.e. Jore], 1734.
Gordon 1734 .V65
https://search.lib.virginia.edu/items/u2334116
University of Virginia Library – search.lib.virginia.edu
Under 17USC, Section 107, this single copy was produced for the purposes of private study, scholarship, or research.
Copyright and other legal restrictions may apply. Commercial use without permission is prohibited.