Las Vegas Review-Journal

Not gone, and never forgotten

Museums and archivists work to ensure memories of the shooting — and the good deeds that followed — won’t fade

- By John Przybys Las Vegas Review-journal

Fsocial media posts sent minutes after the shooting began. For days and weeks afterward, flowers, signs, crosses and other mementos were left at various sites, creating an impromptu memorial on the Strip.

All are pieces of the emotional jigsaw puzzle created by last year’s Route 91 Harvest festival shootings.

Under a valleywide archiving initiative called “Rememberin­g 1 October,” museums and archivists have spent the past year collecting and preserving artifacts and stories related to the shooting and its aftermath.

UNLV University Libraries Special Collection­s and Archives has collected web pages and online news stories about the shooting, said Michelle Light, special collection­s director.

The goal is “trying to capture a balance of perspectiv­es, particular­ly media coverage about the event,” Light said. Some archived pages can be found at archive-it. org/collection­s/9521.

In addition, “we’ve captured about 11 million tweets from the first four days after the event,” Light said. “We used a tool that allowed us to capture any tweet that (had) the word ‘Vegas’ from about an hour after the shooting occurred to about four days afterward.”

A few tweets and Instagram postings are up, but “we’re still working on providing access to that,” Light said.

UNLV Libraries is accepting digital photos or videos relating to the shooting, while UNLV Libraries’ Oral History Research Center continues to take oral histories from first responders, people who were injured, family members of victims and others who were directly involved.

Center director Claytee White said about 50 interviews have been completed, “but we plan to keep this project open for a twoyear period.” Interview transcript­s will be available online, and

White said the center continues to seek people who wish to tell their stories (email oral.history@unlv. edu or call 702-895-2222).

Special Collection­s also will Area museums and archivists have spent the past year collecting and preserving artificats related to the shooting and stories of those affected by it. sponsor a public program on Oct. 5 called “Rememberin­g 1 October: A Night of Healing and Community,” which will feature guests discussing their experience­s.

The Nevada State Museum Las Vegas has collected nearly 2,000 artifacts related to the shooting, said Caroline Kunioka, curator of history and collection­s.

Among those are items the museum receives every week or two from the Las Vegas Community Healing Garden downtown.

Kunioka said the collection consists of ticket stubs and programs from the concert, cards sent to Mandalay Bay employees by other casinos’ employees, and even an IKEA sofa bearing written good wishes from customers. The museum also has collected magazines, newspapers and other items to be featured in an exhibit that was set to be up by Oct. 1, said Dennis Mcbride, museum director.

The crosses that became an impromptu memorial near the Las Vegas welcome sign — and items left by mourners on and around them — are part of the Clark County Museum’s Oct. 1 collection.

The museum has catalogued more than 14,000 items related to the shooting since February, and 1,000 to 2,000 remain, museum registrar Cynthia Sanford said. She expects the effort, which is being performed by about 20 volunteers, to be completed by late November. Some of the objects can be viewed at clarkcount­ynv.gov/museum.

A selection of items also will appear in “How We Mourned: Selected Artifacts from the October 1 Memorials,” an exhibit scheduled to run at the museum through Feb. 24 . Some of the

crosses also are part of “The Las Vegas Portraits Project,” an exhibit of portraits of those killed, done by different artists, which will run through Oct. 19 at the Rotunda Gallery of the Clark County Government Center.

The Las Vegas News Bureau photograph­ed many post-shooting events, including marquee tributes at hotels along the Strip, while the Mobmuseum plans to collect materials relating to the role of law enforcemen­t agencies. That effort has been delayed by the department’s focus on its investigat­ion, said Geoff Schumacher, the museum’s senior director of content. The museum also plans to contact the FBI to document its role.

Contact John Przybys at jprzybys@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ jjprzybyso­n Twitter.

 ?? Rachel Aston ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae Caroline Kunioka, curator of history and collection­s at the Nevada State Museum, lifts tissue from artifacts saved from the Healing Garden.
Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae Caroline Kunioka, curator of history and collection­s at the Nevada State Museum, lifts tissue from artifacts saved from the Healing Garden.
 ??  ?? A couch from Ikea bearing positive messages is seen Sept. 5 at Nevada State Museum.
A couch from Ikea bearing positive messages is seen Sept. 5 at Nevada State Museum.
 ??  ?? Notes to a victim of the Oct. 1 shooting are among Nevada State Museum artifacts from the Healing Garden.
Notes to a victim of the Oct. 1 shooting are among Nevada State Museum artifacts from the Healing Garden.

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