The Harry B. Welliver sound recording collection includes sound tape reels and sound discs and has been organized by these formats. The recordings capture folk songs and stories from the Michigan Upper Peninsula recorded by Welliver and Alan Lomax between 1948 and 1949. They provide insight into the culture and prominent lumbering industry of northern Michigan. Supplemental materials include data sheets about the recording sessions as well as one cassette tape. Many, but not all, data sheets correspond to recordings within the collection. A selection of the audio materials has been digitized and can be accessed within the Bentley Historical Library reading room by following the links in this finding aid.
Harry B. Welliver, 1910-2005, received his bachelors and masters degrees in music from Oberlin College in 1932 and 1933 respectively. In 1935, he began teaching music and directing the radio program, Radio Music Classroom at the State Teachers College, in Minot, North Dakota. In the late 1940s, he worked with Alan Lomax collecting recordings of folk songs in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan for the Library of Congress with a grant from the Rackham Graduate School at the University of Michigan. He acted as Dean of the School of Music at Milliken University from 1956 until 1960, when he was appointed Music Director of the Radio Broadcasting Service at the University of Michigan. He retired in 1975. He was an organist and wrote various articles on the history of the organ and teaching music.