This is a hybrid (digital and physical) crowd-sourced photograph collection, collected by the Georgia Tech Archives for the 2026 physical exhibit in Price Gilbert Library, "Centennial Summer: Georgia Tech's Olympic Legacy." Crowdsourced digital photos and documents were received from multiple donors via a Qualtrics form, in partnership with the GT Alumni Association, who used the form to collect stories from alumni about their memories of the Olympics.
A. Harris Goldwasser graduated from Georgia Tech in 1928 with a degree in Civil Engineering. This collection contains photographs of the Class of 1928 during homecoming.
This collection contains 3 photographs of computer equipment.
The Alan Buchsbaum Visual Materials contain materials produced or used by Buchsbaum and his Design Coalition associates for design projects. The majority of materials in this collection are drawings or images for architectural projects undertaken by Alan Buchsbaum or his firm. Other materials relate to graphic design work or textile patterns designed by Buchsbaum.
This collection contains images related to Alexander Memorial Coliseum.
This collection includes photographs of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity at Georgia Tech. These photographs document the social history of the fraternity during the mid-1940s.
This collection contains images relating to Alvin M. Ferst, Jr.'s involvement in Georgia Tech and the Atlanta community, including the development of the Georgia Tech Research Park.
This collection contains photographs from a few ASME-Atlanta events and awards presentations as well as images of some ASME-Atlanta individuals.
This collection contains materials from the twenty-fifth, fiftieth, seventy-fifth, and one-hundredth anniversaries of Georgia Tech.
This collection contains visual materials related to the twenty-fifth and one-hundredth anniversaries of Georgia Tech.
The records of the Achievement Rewards for College Scientists (ARCS) Foundation contain charter documents, general administrative files, National Executive Board yearbooks, annual meeting notebooks, newsletters, and videotapes, documenting the activities of the organization mainly during the period between 1976 and 2004.
This collection consists of photographs of President Arthur G. Hansen during his time in office at Georgia Tech and slightly after, as president at Purdue University. It also contains photos of billboards for Georgia Tech's radio station, WGST, around Atlanta.
These photographs have been separated from the professional papers of E. Jo Baker, Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology. One campus scene and one photograph of a group of students at the Capitol Building in Georgia are the highlights of this collection.
The seven series of this collection contain the professional papers of Benjamin Hirsch and his architectural firm, Benjamin Hirsch and Associates, Inc.
This mixed materials collection contains papers, photographs, and artifacts related to Billiee Pendleton-Parker, an employee at the Georgia Institute of Technology (GT) between 1987 and 2016.
This collection contains photographs illustrating both professional and personal events in Bobby Dodd's life. Photographs include images of Dodd as a child and young man, images from his time at Georgia Tech, as well as images from after his retirement.
The Bud Foote photographs appear to have been taken during lectures, book signings or conferences relating to science fiction. The photographs frequently include Bud Foote and his colleagues with authors and scholars of science fiction.
The Bulletin was a Tech publication, which began about 1901. This publication has had numerous forms, such as the General Catalog, the Student Handbook, and the Cooperative Bulletin. This collection contains images of campus buildings, laboratories, and equipment from various periods of the Institute's history.
This collection contains Georgia Tech campus photographs which were taken during snow precipitation in 1914 and 1936.
This collection consists of a single photograph of Bertha Lamme, the second woman in the United States to graduate college with an engineering degree.
Chester Gavin was a member of the class of 1940. These photographs depict individuals and groups from a much earlier time period.
This collection contains one black and white photograph of the dedication of the Chi Epsilon key monument on the Georgia Tech campus in September 1945.
Chipman-Union Mill was formed by the merger of Charles Chipman's Sons Company, Inc. and Union Manufacturing Company. These photographs document the history of the mill.
This collection contains two scrapbooks with photos from events hosted by the Co-op Club: the "Miss Perfect Lips" Dance, blood drives, casino nights, ski trips, and initiation ceremonies, as well as one single picture of the 1996-1997 Co-op Club taken for the 1997 edition of the Blueprint.
The collection contains materials that document student life on the Georgia Tech campus, including notebooks and papers, news clippings, magazines, student publications, photographs, brochures and programs, and other memorabilia.
This collection contains photographs and architectural drawings from the College of Architecture relating to architecture classes and projects as well as materials related to Tech buildings, particularly those designed by Bush-Brown, Gaily, and Heffernan.
This collection contains photographs of Atlanta and Georgia Tech from 1953-1954 when Koehler was an exchange student for a year through the Georgia Tech World Student Fund and the Georgia Tech YMCA, earning a master's degree in electrical engineering. Additional photographs are from Oct-Dec 1960 when teaching at Georgia Tech for a year.
This collection consists of photographs of students using library computers.
This collection consists of photographs of the interior of the Georgia Tech library.
This collection contains photographs of DramaTech productions. Photographs include images of set construction, rehearsals, cast and crew, and scenes from productions.
This collection consists of numerous photographs of Georgia Tech President Blake Van Leer while in office (1944-1956), but there is also one photograph of William Alexander, Georgia Tech football coach from 1920 to 1944. Several photographs were found in an envelope marked Gasper-Ware Studio (876 West Peachtree Street, Atlanta).
Ed Lafitte was a member of the Georgia Tech baseball team in 1906-1907. This collection consists of one photograph of Lafitte in his Georgia Tech baseball uniform.
This collection includes one folder, containing a graduation photograph of Edward L. Darling, Jr., a postcard from a friend in Savannah, and a photograph of the 1925 Anak Society members.
This collection contains photographs separated from the Edwin Rembert DuBose, Sr. Papers. It includes photographs from 1928 to 1998 and contains snapshots taken while traveling with the Georgia Tech Alumni Association, photographs and snapshots from class reunions, snapshots sent to DuBose in Christmas cards (mostly of alumni events), photos of Tech students, personal photos, and official military photographs.
Published as part of the centennial celebration of the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1985, Engineering the New South is the first comprehensive history of Georgia Tech. These records document the planning, research, and writing of the seminal volume by six faculty members of the Department of History, Technology, and Society.
This collection consists of photographs and slides documenting the design, construction, and renovation of numerous buildings and other construction projects on the campus of the Georgia Institute of Technology. Digital materials are available at http://hdl.handle.net/1853/67354.
This collection contains one photograph of Frances Newman. This is the same photograph that appeared in the 1924 Atlanta Constitution article announcing Miss Newman as the new librarian at Georgia Tech.
This collection contains architectural drawings and architectural photographs from Francis Palmer Smith, Henry Howard Smith, and the partnership of Robert Smith Pringle and Francis Palmer Smith. Project types include commercial, residential, medical, religious, and academic buildings.
This collection contains photographs depicting the Georgia Tech campus and dormitory life during the early twentieth century. The description of the photographs provided is identical to that written on the images.
This collection contains over 100 photographs that document the construction of the Tallulah Falls Dam, the early days of football at the Georgia School of Technology, and the boarding of military troop transport ships. Family photographs and a photo album make up the remainder of the collection.
The photographs in this collection include images of Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills' buildings and environs, employees, and machinery.
The photographs in this collection, collected by George C. Griffin, relate to all aspects of Georgia Tech and its history, including students, faculty, administrators, alumni, sports, traditions, and buildings. This collection is particularly strong in athletic and alumni photographs from the first half of the 20th century. Nearly 600 of these images are available for online viewing.
The photographs within this collection contain images depicting the history of the Georgia Tech Alumni Association, which began in 1898. The collection focuses mainly on alumni, previous football coaches, and the 1996 Olympics.
This collection contains black and white photographs used in the Georgia Tech Alumnus magazine, 1927-1975. The collection documents activities at Georgia Tech with photographs of students, athletics, events, faculty, research, alumni, and Tech buildings.
The Athletic Association is an independent, non-profit organization that manages Georgia Tech's sports programs. All of the photographs, except for one, are team pictures of the Georgia Tech football team between 1919 and 1938.
This collection contains photos from the first round of the 1991 NCAA basketball tournament, Georgia Tech vs. DePaul University.
This collection contains Georgia Tech class and reunion photographs.
This collection contains photographs published in the Georgia Tech Engineer from 1938 to 1967, mainly depicting laboratories and technical subjects.
The Georgia Tech Faculty Women's Club, formerly known as the Georgia Tech Woman's Club, was founded in 1921 as a social and service organization for the wives of faculty members and administrators. Later the Club expanded to include women faculty members and administrators.This collection includes loose photographs removed from scrapbooks in the Georgia Tech Faculty Women's Club Records (UA301).
This collection contains images of Georgia Tech Library buildings, events, and employees through the years.