The
University Archives at the
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point will be dedicated in the name of
one of the first archivists in the UW System at a 2 p.m. ceremony,
Thursday, May 22 at the facility on the fifth floor of the Albertson
Learning Resources Center.
The Nelis R. Kampenga University Archives has been named in honor of an emeritus professor who served the university from 1941 until his retirement in 1974. He was among the first archivists in the State University System. The naming was approved by the UW System Board of Regents.
The dedication and following reception are open to the university and the community free of charge.
During his 33-year tenure at UWSP, Kampenga also served as library director and was instrumental in the establishment of the first federal documents depository in the teachers college system and the first Area Research Center. Active in the Portage County Historical Society, he played an important role in having the collections of the society housed and cared for in the University Archives. He also served on the Portage County Preservation Projects Inc. and the Plover Plan Commission.
Throughout his career and his life, Kampenga has been an advocate for strong ties between the university and the community. His career as a librarian spanned 52 years, beginning in his hometown as a schoolboy in 1922. He grew up in Muskegon, Mich., and earned two bachelor’s degrees and a master of arts in library science from the University of Michigan.
He and his wife, Marjorie Gerson Kampenga, a retired UWSP vocal music teacher, live in Stevens Point.