UBC Library opens Chung | Lind Gallery

UBC Library is excited to announce the official opening of the Chung | Lind Gallery showcasing the Wallace B. Chung and Madeline H. Chung Collection and Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection. The new exhibition space in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre on UBC’s Vancouver campus brings together two library collections of rare and culturally significant materials from Canada’s history.

The complementary collections explore the economic and social growth of early B.C. and the Yukon through exhibits that reveal stories about the Indigenous experience and the experience of Chinese immigrants to B.C. The gallery will provide faculty, students and the public with direct access to two significant Canadian cultural properties.

“We’re thankful to everyone who made the Chung | Lind Gallery a reality, after many years of planning and effort to create this remarkable space. Displayed together, these two outstanding collections will create a new focal point for historical research, teaching and learning at UBC, and in time become a magnet for scholars across Canada who wish to view these rare materials first-hand,” said university librarian Dr. Susan E. Parker.

“We are thrilled to have the opportunity to bring together these two avid and dedicated collectors—Dr. Chung and Mr. Lind—who share such a passion for history and material culture. And by putting their collections in dialogue with each other, we’ve discovered unexpected resonances. Now being displayed together publicly in the new Chung | Lind Gallery, we know the collections will continue to enrich and inform each other, providing new and exciting possibilities for learning and scholarship,” said Katherine Kalsbeek, head of rare books and special collections.

The Chung | Lind Gallery includes approximately 292 square metres of display space on the second floor of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. The space has been renovated to meet Canadian Conservation Institute and department of Canadian heritage guidelines and requirements for displaying, protecting and preserving heritage collections. Public and Page Two provided design support for the space.

An image of one corner of the gallery with colourful CPR posters on one wall and a black and white image from the Klondike in the foreground

The Chung | Lind Gallery. Credit: UBC Library Communications and Marketing

An achievement in visual storytelling, the Chung | Lind Gallery features both rare treasures from the collections and modern marvels. At the entrance, a large-scale model of Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) company steamship, the Empress of Japan, restored by Dr. Chung, rides the waves over a virtual ocean designed by Dutch Igloo. Further into the gallery, a miniature log cabin comes to life with projected scenes from the Klondike era.

Funding for the gallery renovation was generously provided by Phil Lind, the UBC President’s Priority Fund, the London Drugs Foundation, donors to the library, and by the Canadian government through the department of Canadian heritage’s Canada Cultural Spaces Fund.

“Libraries play a pivotal role in preserving and sharing Canada’s history and heritage, providing invaluable access to historically significant materials. They are custodians of collective wisdom, where every book can transport us to a moment in time and every shelf offers boundless opportunities for discovery. Thanks to the newly opened Chung | Lind Gallery, now and in the future, you can learn more about important moments in our country’s history and take in rare collections being showcased. Congratulations to the University of British Columbia and everyone involved in turning this dream into reality!” said Pascale St‑Onge, minister of Canadian heritage. 

A photo of a gallery visitor looking at a display of books mounted on wall behind glass.

The Chung | Lind Gallery. Credit: UBC Library Communications and Marketing

The Wallace B. Chung and Madeline H. Chung Collection, donated to UBC Library in 1999, contains more than 25,000 rare and unique documents, books, maps, posters, paintings, photographs, tableware and other artifacts that represent early B.C. history, immigration and settlement, particularly of Chinese people in North America and the CPR. Items from the Chung Collection were previously on display at RBSC. The new gallery space will bring this collection further into the public eye and provide new opportunities for community engagement.

The Chung Collection has been designated as a national treasure by the department of Canadian heritage’s Canadian Cultural Property Export Review Board (CCPERB), and has been named to the Canadian Commission for UNESCO’s Canada Memory of the World Register.

“This collection started with an interest in my neighbourhood. My family was confined to Chinatown, and I became curious about the history of the people that lived there. Many people do not know how difficult things once were for early Chinese migrants. While the world has changed, this was only possible through first understanding the past. Our future is tied to history; to move forward, we must forgive the ills of the past, but we should never forget,” said Dr. Wallace Chung.

The Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection is an unparalleled rare book and archival collection dating from the Klondike Gold Rush, donated to UBC Library in 2021 by UBC alumnus and Canadian telecommunications icon Philip B. Lind, CM. The gift included $2 million to support the collection and the gallery renovation.

A photo of the gallery entrance, with text on the wall reading "In Search of Gold Mountain" and photos of Wallace and Madeline Chung and Phil Lind.

The Chung | Lind Gallery. Credit: UBC Library Communications and Marketing

The Lind Collection includes books, maps, letters and photos collected by Lind in honour of his grandfather Johnny Lind, a trailblazer and prospector who operated and co-owned several claims on Klondike rivers and creeks. The Lind Collection has been designated as a cultural property of outstanding significance by the CCPERB.

“The Lind family is honoured to have the Phil Lind Klondike Collection housed at UBC Library. Our father’s collection stemmed from a fascination for his grandfather, John Grieve Lind, and grew into a passion that followed him through his life. He wanted to share this underrepresented history with the academic community and for future generations to enjoy. It is truly unique to share this space with The Chung Collection, bringing together two disparate histories of west coast Canada from the turn of the century that are integral to the formation of the notion of the west,” said Jed Lind.

The Chung | Lind Gallery was unveiled with a special ribbon cutting ceremony on Friday, April 19, attended by members of both the Chung and Lind families and UBC president and vice-chancellor Dr. Benoit-Antoine Bacon. The gallery will open to the public on May 1.

Explore photos of the Chung | Lind Gallery.

 

Media contacts

Erik Rolfsen
Media Relations Specialist
Tel: 604.822.2644
erik.rolfsen@ubc.ca

Anna Moorhouse
Manager, Communications & Marketing, UBC Library
Tel: 604.822.1548
anna.moorhouse@ubc.ca

UBC researchers eligible for new open access publisher discounts from Elsevier and Oxford University Press

Cover art of multiple journals published by Elsevier and Oxford University Press, displayed in a diagonally slanted grid

UBC authors looking to publish in peer-reviewed journals by Oxford University Press and Elsevier are now eligible for cost-savings thanks to new transformative agreements signed by the Canadian Research Knowledge Network (CRKN).

In February 2024, CRKN signed a new three-year, read-and-publish agreement with Oxford University Press (OUP). With this agreement, scholarly authors at UBC and other member institutions will be eligible for unlimited open access publishing in more than 350 OUP hybrid journals at no cost to the author. Authors can also benefit from a 10% discount on article processing charges (APCs) when publishing in OUP’s gold open access journals.

More recently, in April 2024, CRKN followed up by announcing a new three-year, read-and-publish agreement with Elsevier. Authors at participating member institutions, including UBC, will benefit from unlimited open access publishing in Elsevier’s hybrid journals without having to pay an APC. This includes more than 1,800 hybrid journals and 165 core hybrid specialty titles in Elsevier’s catalog.

“The new transformative agreements have already had a positive reception from faculty at UBC. There has been a growing interest from campus researchers to publish open access, but the issue of faculty assuming the publication costs has created a challenge that is difficult to overcome. With these new kinds of agreements the costs to publish and read are bundled together, removing that challenge,” says Erin Fields, Open Education and Scholarly Communications Librarian at UBC Library Digital Initiatives. “With the agreements with Elsevier and Oxford University Press, two of the larger publishers of UBC research, we hope faculty will take advantage of publishing open access, which is proven to increase access and readership.”

Transformative agreements have been changing open access publishing at UBC and are a clear indicator of UBC Library and UBC Okanagan Library’s continued commitment to open access. UBC’s participation in these transformative agreements, and as a CRKN member institution, is a joint effort co-funded by UBC Library and UBC Okanagan (UBCO) Library. Together, UBC Library and UBCO Library are able to significantly reduce or even eliminate the costs of open access publishing that would normally be paid by UBC authors, and instead enable those authors to redirect much needed funds back towards their research efforts.

Find out more about all the open access publisher discounts available to authors at UBC.

Dinner Menus from the 1930’s-50’s

This week’s blog post is a selection of dinner menus from the Chung Collection, which is held at UBC Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections. The Chung Collection contains many materials including travel pamphlets, itineraries and menus from the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, which was a large enterprise that dealt in railway and non-railway transportation and travel. These menus are from the commercial passenger trains, steamships and hotels and offer insight into the lavish fare that one could expect from these extravagant excursions.

Empress of Japan, 16th April 1931

            Today in 1931, this beautiful art deco illustration was the cover of the “au revoir dinner menu” on the Empress of Japan. The menu features wine suggestions, dinner, salad and dessert offerings.

Dominion Train, 1936

            This dining car menu is from the Dominion train in 1936 and includes both set and a la carte menus. It features a beautiful photograph of Kicking Horse River on the cover.

Empress of Britain, Meridian Day menu, 1937

            This Meridian Day menu from the Empress of Britain features musical selections alongside the dinner menu. The cover of this menu features an illustration of the ship and a golden chariot being pulled by three white horses.

Empress of France, 17th September 1955

            This menu is from the Empress of France and features a beautiful view of Castle Mountain from the Canadian Pacific Railway Line on the front page. The menu also features information about the mountain on the back page, including the reason for its renaming in 1946 from Castle Mountain to Mt. Eisenhower, the name which it held until 1979.

I hope you enjoyed seeing what passengers on Canadian Pacific trains and steamships were eating in the 1930’s-50’s.

Thank you for reading!

PHUB error when accessing UBC Library CWL

UBC Users may see a ‘PHUB error’ when trying to login via their CWL to UBC Library.

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Wine Industry Overview

Wine Industry Overview melissa

No access to ScienceDirect

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Upcoming reading room closure

Entrance to Special Collections. UBC Archives Photograph Collection. UBC 1.1/15912

The Rare Books and Special Collections and University Archives Reading Room will be closed on Thursday, April 18, and Friday, April 19. Normal satellite reading room hours will resume on Monday, April 23. We apologize for any inconvenience!

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the RBSC contact form or by sending an email to rare.books@ubc.ca.

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Open Collections Highlight – Historical Children’s Literature Collection

The Historical Children’s Literature Collection contains eighty-five works of children’s literature spanning from the late 18th to late 19th Centuries. The collection is a collaboration between UBC’s School of Information, Department of English Language & Literatures, Rare Books and Special Collections (RBSC) and Digitization Centre. The physical materials are from both RBSC’s historic children’s literature holdings as well as the Arkley Collection of Early Historical Children’s Literature.

Many of the stories featured in this blog post are variations of classics that you will likely recognize as stories from your own childhood. Others are less well known and may be tales you’ve never heard before!

UBC’s collection contains many chapbooks and early Canadian children’s literature materials. The books featured in this blogpost are all chapbooks, which McGill Rare Books states are “small, unbound, paper-covered books that were carried and sold by itinerant peddlers known as ‘chapmen’”.

I hope you enjoy perusing these historic children’s stories!

Jack and Jill, and Old Dame Gill:

This chapbook of “Jack and Jill, and Old Dame Gill” is thought to be from 1820. There is a pattern in the poetic meter (the number of syllables in each line), with the poem generally following a four-four-seven structure.

The History of Cinderella

This chapbook of “The History of Cinderella” is from 1840. The story is a narrative poem written in iambic pentameter, and rhymed in heroic couplets.

The History of Giles Gingerbread, A Little Boy, Who Lived Upon Learning

Children’s literature often contains strong moral messaging in an effort to teach young children about societal values. As these values and morals change through time and differ between cultures and geographic regions, readers can discern which values were commonly bestowed upon children during any given time period.

Giles Gingerbread is a great example of this as it is a moral tale thought to be from around two-hundred years ago (1820). The story highlights the importance of honesty, charity, goodwill, and hard work and follows the classic ‘American dream’ formula of inspiring upward class mobility, particularly through learning to read and write.

One interesting observation that can be made from the chapbooks featured in this blog post is the difference in how class mobility opportunities are presented to male and female characters in these tales. Cinderella is an example of a young girl who is beautiful, obedient and kind and through these traits she achieves upward class mobility by marrying a rich prince. In contrast, the male child in Giles Gingerbread is encouraged to learn to read and write in order to become wealthy. Of course, this observation is not a new one, it is an obvious and well documented trend in children’s literature, and one that unfortunately persists into contemporary children’s media. Although there is certainly progress being made!

That’s all for this week’s blog post, I hope you enjoyed reminiscing on some childhood stories and exercising some very light critical analysis.

Thank you for reading!

CNKI databases slow load issue

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