These students graduated in 1890 from the Normal School at the Nevada State University, which was renamed University of Nevada in 1906.
These students graduated in 1890 from the Normal School at the Nevada State University, which was renamed University of Nevada in 1906.

Marjorie Carr was a geology student at the University of Nevada in the late 1940s.

โ€œShe was in this building,โ€ said Natasha Majewski, a researcher for UNR Libraries, sitting in a tiny study room with a very high ceiling and wavy glass windows in the Mackay Mines Building, which dates back to 1908. In Carrโ€™s time, the geology program wasnโ€™t particularly inclusive to women. According to Majewski, Carr had to walk to the education building to use a restroom, as there werenโ€™t any for women in the mines building. And, even though acquiring expertise in her field required on-site observation and training, Carr wasnโ€™t allowed on field trips.

โ€œShe told me that her professor would bring her back rock samples,โ€ said Majewski, who interviewed Carr in 2016. โ€œItโ€™s really fascinating. This lady, sheโ€™s learning a field that women are not really in, and also not getting to really learn the fieldโ€”and sheโ€™s still sticking it out. Some of her stories were about men who would help her, and then men who would haze her, essentially.โ€

In an audio recording Majewski made of their interview, Carr says in a calm, measured voice, โ€œIt was a different life, and I accepted it because thatโ€™s the way it was. โ€ฆ I didnโ€™t know that you might object, because in those days you did not object. โ€ฆ Theyโ€™d say, โ€™Goodbye. If you donโ€™t like it here, you can go elsewhere.โ€™โ€

In 1951, Carr became the third woman ever to graduate from the Mackay School of Mines.

Her story is one of many that Majewski and a few other researchers fished out of UNR Librariesโ€™ huge archive, โ€œmaybe 14,000 images,โ€ Majewski estimated, and assembled into a โ€œstory mapโ€ called History of Women at Nevada. Itโ€™s a scrollable collection of photos, short audio recordings, interactive maps, and other resources available to the public, that tell the stories of women at UNR through the years.

The collection showcases many women of achievement and milestones to be proud of, but it does not gloss over injustices. There was Stella Mason, class of 1952, UNRโ€™s first female African American student, who โ€œhad to have special arrangements made for her to finish her teacher training in a public school during a time when segregation was strictly enforced.โ€

Then there were women cast in roles that were downright infantilizing. In a photo from the 1920s of a ladiesโ€™ PE class, about a dozen grown women are shown wearing dresses that look like vintage Brownie Girl Scouts uniforms, engaged in a โ€œsportโ€ that looks a lot like โ€œRing Around the Rosie.โ€

Majewski, a trained geographer, said she used GIS (geographic information system) mapping โ€œto add a level of interactive storytelling.โ€ The entire collection reads something like a clickable, long-form magazine article. Itโ€™s concise and well organized enough so that readers can soak in some substantial stories in not much time. And each photo or other document links to its original source, which means that if youโ€™re the type to jump into a research hole, thereโ€™s a network of pre-dug tunnels to wander in. (The 1914 yearbook alone is a half familiar/half foreign world unto itself, available to flip through on screen with no appointment and no white gloves.)

History of Women of Nevada is one of several collections that UNR researchers have made easily accessible. Others include maps, Basque history, and an online exhibit of Renoโ€™s divorce history.

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