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Eyes on UMBC
UMBC Historian Wins First-Ever e-Lincoln Prize

In Anne Rubin's office sits a plaster bust of Abraham
Lincoln, sporting sunglasses, a plastic bead necklace,
and a UMBC cap on his head. The bust, a congratulatory
gift from one of her students, is a humorous reminder
of an extraordinary accomplishment: This winter Rubin,
an assistant professor of history in her first year on
the UMBC faculty, was awarded one of the most prestigious
prizes in her field, the Lincoln Prize, for scholarly
work in Civil War-era history.
Lincoln's hip attire is also appropriate, as Rubin's
work, Valley of the Shadow: The Eve of War, an innovative
website and CD-ROM, won the first-ever e-Lincoln Prize,
honoring scholarly work in new media.
Valley of the Shadow is a richly detailed portrait of
antebellum life in two rural communities, one in Pennsylvania,
the other in Virginia. Rubin joined the project's staff
while a graduate student at the University of Virginia.
The original concept of the project, begun by Rubin's
advisor Edward Ayers in the early 1990s, was to produce
a traditional scholarly book, but "this is a case where
technology caught up with what we wanted to do," explains
Rubin. Combining the power and flexibility of the new digital
formats with the depth and detail of primary documents,
Valley of the Shadow brings the communities vividly to
life, and allows visitors to work with the historian's
tools, including a trove of original letters, diaries,
census data, business and military records, even newspaper
articles and contemporary music.
As project manager for several years, Rubin supervised
the staff's digging for historical nuggets in the field
(tucked away in libraries, tiny historical societies, and
house attics) and then oversaw the translation of these
documents into digital format. To view the website,
visit valley.vcdh.virginia.edu.
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