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Lakeland Public Library - Special Collections
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African American Experience in Lakeland
Bernard Family
Buildings from Lakeland's Past
Dancing to the Big Band Sound
Detroit Tigers in Lakeland
Downtown Lakeland
Earl Morgan Savage's Lakeland
Early Homes of Lakeland
Early Lakeland Postcards
Frank Lloyd Wright and FSC
Hollis Photos
Hollis Photos-Part II
Howard Hughes Around the World Flight
Lake Mirror Promenade
Lakeland Loves a Parade
Lakeland Police Dept.
Lakeland Takes to the Air
Lakeland's Early Churches
Lakeland's Hotels
Lakeland's Pioneer Families: the Riggins
Lodwick School of Aeronautics
Munn Park Then and Now
New Photos from Lodwick
Postcard Images of Lakeland
School Daze
Special Collections Home
The Lakeland Public Library
The Pied Piper Players Present
Working for a living

LeftNav - Right Corner Image Main   >   Library   >   Library Special Collections   >   Speccoll Exhibits
PRINTS MADE POSSIBLE BY HOLLIS DONATION
Rider leads a parade past the Bryant Block, 1925
man on horseback

HOLLIS GIFT
The Special Collections unit of the Lakeland Public Library recently completed a project in cooperation with the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) to preserve more than 200 photographs documenting the history and development of Lakeland from the 1920’s to the 1950’s. The project was made possible as a result of a generous gift from Jack, Clayton, and Dean Hollis, sons of Mark and Lynn Hollis, in honor of their parents’ 50th wedding anniversary.

The commitment of the Hollis brothers to preserving the city’s history and their desire to honor their parents has manifested itself in the creation by NEDCC of 214 photographic prints and duplicate negatives of images of Lakeland that were previously unavailable to researchers. They were produced from aging and brittle original negatives, some as much as 80 years old. They were simply too fragile to be made accessible to the public. Now, thanks to the generosity of the Hollis family and the technical skill of the NEDCC staff, these important images documenting Lakeland’s history will be available to generations of researchers to come.

This small online exhibit displays 30 of the more than 200 photographs preserved as result of the generosity of the Hollis family.