I’m Kurt Johnson. I’ve been working with Joel on the Ashes
of Waco material since the beginning of October. I’m extremely excited to
be involved in this project. I’m a recent graduate of the School of Information
at the University of Texas, and I’ve been interested for years in many topics
related to this undertaking, from information organization to digital
preservation, from the variety and history of religious belief to civil rights
and questions of government power (and abuse thereof).
My first task here was to go through the archive, box by
box, and enter folder details into a searchable database. This process allowed
me to familiarize myself with the collection’s contents. It was also something
of a journey of discovery: I had some previous knowledge of the events that
occurred outside of Waco in 1993, and was aware of various controversies
surrounding those events, but I was unprepared for the ocean of history, facts
and myriad interpretations of those facts, evidence, legal and governmental
documents, transcripts, first-hand accounts and private correspondence,
official and underground rhetoric, newspaper reports, theories, conjectures, and
more that awaited me. It got
pretty overwhelming at times, but the material is important and fascinating,
tragic and at times outrageous, and gradually certain ideas began to take shape
for me.
Recently, I began scanning representative documents and
digitizing select videotapes in preparation for uploading to the internet. Our
server space will not permit us to post everything we’d like to add, but we
hope to be able to host a broad range of representative items. If you have any
comments, questions, suggestions, or requests, please feel free to contact us.
Over the course of this endeavor, we will be posting sample material to the blog. Here is a photo from a large batch I recently digitized:

The above photo was taken shortly after 12:10 pm on 4/19/93. The archive contains over 130 aerial photos from that day, starting before 11:15 am. These photos illustrate the gradual dismantling of Mt. Carmel over the course of the morning.
Recent Comments