Country of Service: Nigeria
Place of Service: Abiriba
Service Type: Secondary School Teacher, Enuda High School
Dates in Service: 1965-1967
Keywords: Community Development, Education, Information Technology, Libraries, Literacy, Youth
Accession Date: February 16, 2021
Access: no restrictions
Collection Size: .25 linear feet (located in small collections)
Country of Service: Burkina Faso (Also: USAID work in The Gambia; Peace Corps Technical Training in Texas, Alabama, South Carolina, Senegal, Mali, Tunisia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Kenya, Niger, and Chad)
Service Project Title(s): Agroforestry Specialist, Peace Corps African Food Systems Initiative Design, Peace Corps Agroforestry Feasibility Study
Dates in Service: 1978-1981
Keywords: Agriculture, Community Development, Education, Environment, Health, Information Technology, Urban Planning, Youth
Accession Date: February 3, 2021
Access: no restrictions
Collection Size: .1 linear feet
Document Types
Slides
Photographs
Digital Surrogates
Digital scans of slides
Finding Aid
Box 1
Photographs; Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Kenya, South Carolina, Alabama, Senegal, Niger, Mali, Liberia
Photographs, Cameroon and Kenya
Photographs; The Gambia, Niger, Mali
Photographs, Peace Corps Technical Training (Epes, Alabama and St. Helena Island, South Carolina)
Photographs, Cameroon and Chad
Photographs, Liberia
Slides; Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Kenya, South Carolina, Alabama, Senegal, Niger, Mali, Liberia
Box 2
Slides; Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, The Gambia, Kenya
Slides; Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, The Gambia, Kenya
Country of Service: Kiribati
Place of service: Onotoa
Service Type: Community Health Worker
Dates in Service: 1979-1981
Keywords: Agriculture, Community Development, Education, Environment, Health, Urban Planning, Youth
Accession Date: January 27, 2021
Access: no restrictions
Collection Size: .25 linear feet
Country of Service: Colombia
Place of Service: Bucaramanga
Service Type: Physical Education Teacher & Coach
Dates in Service: 1963-1964
Keywords: Community Development, Education, Health, Sports, Youth
Accession Date: January 27, 2021
Access: No restrictions
Collection Size: .5 linear feet
Country of Service: Yemen
Place of Service: Taizz
Service Type: Librarian
Dates in Service: 1977-1979
Keywords: Business, Community Development, Education, Environment, Health, Information Technology, Libraries, Literacy, Urban Planning, Youth
Accession Date: October 21, 2020
Access: No restrictions
Collection Size: 1 linear foot
Country of Service: Iran
Place of Service: Kerman
Service Type: English Teacher
Dates in Service: 1964-1966
Keywords: Community Development, Education, Libraries, Literacy, Youth
Accession Date: September 22, 2020
Access: No restrictions
Collection Size: .5 linear feet
Document Types:
Correspondence
Photographs
Publications (Memoir & Cookbook)
Finding Aid
Correspondence, 1962-1965
Postcards, letters with photographs, etc.
Correspondence, Sept. 1964-March 1965
Correspondence, April 1965-Jan. 1966
Correspondence, Dec. 1965-May 1966
Correspondence, July 1966-Aug. 1966
Correspondence, July 1971-Dec. 1971
Correspondence, Jan. 1972-June 1974
Memoir & Cookbook
Mary Dana Marks, Walled in Walled Out: A Young American Woman in Iran (Oakland: Peace Corps Writers, 2017).
Cookbook: Peace Corps, Iran (no publication information).
Name: David Baum
Country of Service: Uzbekistan (with training in Guatemala)
Service Type: English Teacher
Dates in Service: 1992-1993
Keywords: Community Development, Education, Literacy, Youth
Accession Date: September 22, 2020
Access: No restrictions
Collection Size: 0.25 linear feet
Document Types:
Correspondence
Newspapers & Newsletters
Publications
Training Materials
Finding Aid:
Correspondence, February 1994-March 1997 (1 of 2)
Letters, postcards, holiday invitations, etc.
Correspondence, no date (2 of 2)
Letters, postcards, holiday invitations, etc.
ID Cards and Uzbekistani Currency
Newspaper Clippings, April 1995-February 1997
Notebook and Personal Notes, July 1992-February 1993
Publications, 1985-1997
Newsletters, Airline Magazines, Published Book Chapters
Teaching Materials, No Date (1 of 2)
Teaching Materials, No Date (2 of 2)
Ambiguous as to whether teaching materials originate from Baum’s training in Guatemala or service in Uzbekistan
Name: Priscilla Mae Murray
Country of Service: Turkey
Place of Service: Konya (taught at Konya Maarif Koleji)
Dates in Service: 1967-1969
Keywords: Community Development, Education, Environment, Health, Youth
Accession Date: September 9, 2020
Access: No restrictions
Collection Size: 0.01 linear feet
Document Types:
• Correspondences
• Photographs
Finding Aid:
Correspondence, 1967-1969
Description of Peace Corps Volunteer Service
Writing about training, interactions with fellow Peace Corps Volunteers
Country of Service: Colombia
Place of Service: Pasoul Bravo
Service Type OR Service Project Title: Education
Dates in Service: 1963-1965
Keywords: Education, Youth
Throughout the blog, you have probably noticed the various records we use to tell the stories of Peace Corps Volunteers. This post highlights some of the more common types of records that volunteers donate and record their experiences with.
The most common type of record that PCVs donate that tell their story is letters. Volunteers send correspondence back and forth with their family and friends for two years in which they express their accomplishments, frustrations, and describe their everyday life. A letter like the one below, air mail, was a familiar sight for families as it was the fastest and most common way volunteers sent letters.
Joyce Emery Johnston served in the Philippines in Education from 1965-1967.
Similar to correspondence is volunteers’ journals or diaries. These are where volunteers write more in depth about their daily activities and daily thoughts. Diaries are used to preserve memories, and some volunteers even start keeping diaries in the language of their host country as seen below.
David Day served in Kenya and India in Agriculture from 1965-1967.
David Day served in Kenya and India in Agriculture from 1965-1967.
A way that volunteers formally share their experiences is through memoirs. Alan Crew compiled his memoir as a gift to his son upon his graduation from college. In it he details his life in Nigeria and includes pictures of where he worked.
Alan Crew served in Nigeria in Education from 1965-1966.
Along with writing, volunteers also take many photos during their service to show their friends and families where they work and live. While most volunteers take regular digital photos, many early volunteers also used slides.
Patricia Kay served in Kenya in Education from 1966-1968.
Patricia Kay served in Kenya in Education from 1966-1968.
Volunteers also send home postcards when they travel or want to share more photos of their host country.
Tina Singleton served in Benin in Health Education from 1992-1996.
Along with these records, some volunteers also take videos of their service experience. The video below was taken by Brian Adler who served in Suriname with his wife Cindy from 2002-2004. In this clip he gives a tour of where he and Cindy lived, and the video goes on to show a village party, soccer game, and conversations with the villagers.
For volunteers who either could not write home or found this method easier, they recorded audio tapes. This audio clip is from Richard Holmquist to his fiance Ann. In the full recording, he discusses his work as a professor at UMBC, how he met Ann, and what he did in Nigeria from 1966-1968. In this clip he discusses a need in Nigeria for lifeguards. (play button is on the far left).
Along with these personal records, Peace Corps Volunteers also donate some of their official Peace Corps paperwork. These include certificates of training and service completion, letters of service acceptance, and volunteer ID cards like Debby Prigal’s below.
Debby Prigal served in Ghana in Education from 1981-1983.
The Peace Corps Community Archives holds many other different types of records such as architectural drawings, posters, newspapers, training materials, correspondence from the Peace Corps and various governments, and much more. But the handful of records highlighted here are the main forms of learning about what a Peace Corps Volunteer experienced while abroad.