News & Announcements

August 19, 2011

New Trustee: Edward C. Matthews III

Welcome Edward C. “Ned” Matthews III of Sikeston to the Society’s Board of Trustees. Mr. Matthews takes the place of James R. Mayo, Bloomfield, who resigned earlier this year due to health concerns. Matthews will stand for re-election in November at the Society’s Annual Meeting.


Ned Matthews is involved in his family’s businesses and has served as vice president of the Bank of Sikeston; president, Bank of Sikeston Holding Company; and director, Bank of Sikeston and AmeriFirst Bancorporation, Inc., Bucoda Gin Company, Scott County Milling Company, and Semo Grain Company.

Currently, he is general partner of the E. C. Matthews Limited Partnership, director of the Matthews Cotton Company, and agent for Matthews Mineral Account.

In 2004 he published Matthews: The Historic Adventures of a Pioneer Family, profiling the lives of eight generations of the Matthews family as they settled in the Louisiana Territory and aided the growth and development of southeast Missouri. The central figure, C. D. Matthews, born poor in the 1840s, risked his life to supply corn and wheat to the South during the Civil War and went on to make a fortune in banking, lumber, railroads, and land.

posted @ 4:14 PM

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Society continues to adjust to change; two new staff members hired

We welcome the expertise and experience of two new staff members as initiatives to move forward get underway.


Steve Byers, who has worked for the Society as a consultant since February on a part-time basis, will expand his role and level of involvement to establish an Office of Development and associated programs. For the past several months, Mr. Byers has learned about the Society’s strengths and challenges, and with degrees in business communication and public administration, a passion for non-profit organizations, and over twenty-five years working in development, he brings significant experience to the task of increasing the Society’s support from private funds.

Steve served eighteen years with Children’s Mercy Hospital & Clinics, Kansas City, in several positions, rising to Senior Director of Development Administration. During that time, the hospital raised over $200 million. Steve’s duties included oversight of annual giving, direct mail, foundation grants, and several award-winning publications. From 2005 to 2008, Steve was chief development and communications officer for WaterPartners International, building their development program from the ground up, tripling revenue, and helping to secure a $4.1 million grant from PepsiCo Foundation. In 2008 he started his own consulting practice to help non-profit leaders identify and develop opportunities for transformative change.

In March of this year Steve completed a study of the Society and submitted to the Executive Committee a fund-raising plan to accomplish short, intermediate, and long-term goals. We appreciate Steve’s expertise in leading implementation of this important and exciting work.
 
John McKerley, will evaluate and prepare manuscripts for publication in the Missouri Historical Review and assist in the writing and design of Society publications. Associate Editor and Associate Director Lynn Wolf Gentzler has assumed many new duties in the wake of the merger with the Western Historical Manuscript Collection, and to accommodate those changes, the Society has created a new assistant editor position.


Dr. McKerley received the PhD in history from the University of Iowa with the dissertation “Citizens and Strangers: The Politics of Race in Missouri from Slavery to the Era of Jim Crow.” John is a certified documentary editor following completion of requirements in 2008 at the 37th Institute for the Editing of Historical Documents sponsored by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Wisconsin Historical Society. He received the MA in history from the University of Iowa and a BA in history with a minor in French from the University of Alabama, Huntsville.

For two years, John served as assistant editor with the Freedmen and Southern Society Project at the University of Maryland, College Park, which has produced five award-winning volumes of edited documents detailing the transition from slavery to freedom in the U.S., 1861-67. He also worked for two years as an editorial consultant for the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Birmingham, Alabama, overseeing revisions to the institute’s oral history project’s manuscript, Foot Soldiers for Democracy, a volume of edited interviews with rank-and-file civil rights activists.

The caliber of scholarship and experience John brings to the Society’s editorial division secures the high level of professionalism established for the Missouri Historical Review and promises high quality for the additional publications planned over the next several years.

posted @ 4:08 PM

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August 05, 2011

Columbia Research Center and galleries to close on Mondays, beginning in October

 Effective October 1, the Society’s Research Center-Columbia, associated art galleries, and administrative office headquarters will close to the public on Mondays to allow staff members time for collections management and care, completion of special projects, preparation of exhibitions and displays, and additional internal matters. 

The practice of non-public work on Monday is fairly standard in large collecting institutions and those offering ongoing gallery exhibitions, response to public information requests, and answers to individual research queries.  Examples of institutions that close one day a week include the Indiana Historical Society, Iowa Historical Society, Kansas State Historical Society, Kentucky Historical Society Research Library, Nebraska Historical Society, Tennessee State Library & Archives, and Ohio Historical Society, as well as the Missouri History Museum in St. Louis.

The Society’s Research Center-Columbia will be open to researchers and gallery visitors, Tuesday-Friday, 8:00-4:45, and Saturday, 8:00-3:30.

posted @ 12:59 PM

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