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              <text>I first met Roy Rosenzweig at a 1999 conference sponsored by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation at Stanford University organized by David Kirsch and Timothy Lenoir about use of websites to capture recent history of science and technology.  I believe the link was James T. Sparrow, who pioneered websites on the New York City blackouts of 1965 and 1977 while still a history graduate student at Brown University (http://sloan.stanford.edu/InfoBlackout.htm; http://blackout.gmu.edu/).  Roy recruited Jim to the Center for History and the New Media about that time.  David had developed a site about the history of electric vehicles ( http://sloan.stanford.edu/InfoEV.htm), while Tim had a site about the history of the computer mouse (http://sloan.stanford.edu/InfoMouse.htm).  Only eight years ago creating history on the web was radical and indeed very hard, as such early sites show.  The breadth and depth of Roy’s vision for history and the new media elevated the Stanford conference, which assembled scattered, lonely and even clandestine practitioners.  Roy saw that new kinds of history could be created and communicated, and that some strong institutions were needed to improve and spread the practice and to spur preservation and access.  After the conference, Sloan invited a proposal from George Mason to expand CHNM’s work into history of science and technology.  Roy submitted a characteristically first-class proposal, which won support within only a couple of months of submission.  Roy, always expanding, assimilated historian of science Daniel Cohen and the Exploring and Collecting History Online (ECHO http://echo.gmu.edu/) project – Science, Technology, and Industry took off.  &#13;
	&#13;
A few days after 9/11 Sloan Foundation staff members were considering ways that Sloan-supported activities might help improve matters in New York and Washington DC.  I contacted Roy, and before September was over he visited the Foundation offices in Rockefeller Center together with GMU colleagues and also counterparts from City University of New York.  Roy appreciated instantly that the software and techniques developed for ECHO might apply to 9/11 and its aftermath.  Within weeks, sites were established to collect, preserve, and present the history of 9/11 (http://911digitalarchive.org/).  While already building the sites and collecting materials, Roy prepared another first-class proposal, which the Sloan Foundation trustees immediately supported.  Less than two years later, in September 2003, the Library of Congress would accept the 9/11 Digital Archive into its collections, an event that both ensured the Archive's long-term preservation and marked the Library's first major digital acquisition.  The Sloan story repeated in 2005 after Katrina and Rita with the creation of the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank (http://www.hurricanearchive.org/).  Meanwhile, Roy had further built the CHNM team with Tom Scheinfeldt, Josh Greenberg, and other excellent recruits. &#13;
&#13;
During the eight years or so that I knew Roy, he expanded, with excellence, in all directions: into history of science and technology, into contemporary history, into new technologies, into the heart of the historical profession, out to the expert amateurs and enthusiasts, into the Library of Congress, Internet Archive, and other archives, into bookstores, and onto desktops, within George Mason University and in networks covering the USA.  Helping provide support was a pleasure, and my main concern was to minimize his chores with regard to funding, so he and his colleagues could get on with their very worthy work.  Fast, smart growth of imaginative historical practice is what I will always associate with Roy.&#13;
&#13;
Jesse Ausubel, program director, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation</text>
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                <text>You must be 13 years of age or older to submit material to us. Your submission of material constitutes your permission for, and consent to, its dissemination and use in connection with Thanks, Roy in all media in perpetuity. If you have so indicated on the form, your material will be published on Thanks, Roy (with or without your name, depending on what you have indicated). Otherwise, your response will only be available to approved researchers using Thanks, Roy. The material you submit must have been created by you, wholly original, and shall not be copied from or based, in whole or in part, upon any other photographic, literary, or other material, except to the extent that such material is in the public domain. Further, submitted material must not violate any confidentiality, privacy, security or other laws.&#13;
&#13;
By submitting material to Thanks, Roy you release, discharge, and agree to hold harmless Thanks, Roy and persons acting under its permission or authority, including a public library or archive to which the collection might be donated for purposes of long-term preservation, from any claims or liability arising out the Thanks, Roy's use of the material, including, without limitation, claims for violation of privacy, defamation, or misrepresentation.&#13;
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Thanks, Roy has no obligation to use your material.&#13;
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You will be sent via email a copy of your contribution to Thanks, Roy. We cannot return any material you submit to us so be sure to keep a copy. Thanks, Roy will not share your email address or any other information with commercial vendors.</text>
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              <text>I met Roy at the funeral of Dave Sloane back in the 1986 or 7 in New Jersey. Roy was extremely engaging. I teach history to high school kids and he was full of questions and observations. I'd read a piece he contributed to the Radical History Review and was excited to meet the author, and to learn he was such a nice guy; and that through at least two marriages we were sort of related (my bro-in-law's cousin's husband!). Then when I returned home and told my girlfriend (who is my wife now) about him, she exclaimed that she knew him already! - he had been her favorite professor at Geo. Mason. where she was an American Studies major. Roy gave her much encouragement at GMU. So small, small, world, especially when someone like Roy is in it to help us all make connections historical and personal, across class and religious lines, too. &#13;
His work at CHNM is useful to me each year as I continue to teach high schoolers. (Two assignments require visiting the world history sources site and listening and reading). May we carry forward the work he began with the courage he demonstrated.</text>
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You must be 13 years of age or older to submit material to us. Your submission of material constitutes your permission for, and consent to, its dissemination and use in connection with Thanks, Roy in all media in perpetuity. If you have so indicated on the form, your material will be published on Thanks, Roy (with or without your name, depending on what you have indicated). Otherwise, your response will only be available to approved researchers using Thanks, Roy. The material you submit must have been created by you, wholly original, and shall not be copied from or based, in whole or in part, upon any other photographic, literary, or other material, except to the extent that such material is in the public domain. Further, submitted material must not violate any confidentiality, privacy, security or other laws.&#13;
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By submitting material to Thanks, Roy you release, discharge, and agree to hold harmless Thanks, Roy and persons acting under its permission or authority, including a public library or archive to which the collection might be donated for purposes of long-term preservation, from any claims or liability arising out the Thanks, Roy\'s use of the material, including, without limitation, claims for violation of privacy, defamation, or misrepresentation.&#13;
&#13;
Thanks, Roy has no obligation to use your material.&#13;
&#13;
You will be sent via email a copy of your contribution to Thanks, Roy. We cannot return any material you submit to us so be sure to keep a copy. Thanks, Roy will not share your email address or any other information with commercial vendors.</text>
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              <text>I was a close friend of Roy's back at PS 162 in Bayside. He and Louis Wang were my 'smart friends.' Although there was no way I could keep up with him intellectually (in fact, I was one of those poor contestants that Roy easily beat in the Current Events bee Louis mentioned), that was of no consequence to Roy. &#13;
&#13;
Unfortunately, I lost touch with Roy when I moved out of town in junior high, but I never lost touch with the memory of the warmth and depth of his friendship. &#13;
&#13;
I have frequently thought of tracking Roy down, because I just knew he would become a great man. His decency, compassion, sense of humor and intellect were already on display back then. &#13;
&#13;
Unfortunately, it was only today, in preparation for a presentation I will be making at a CNI conference, that I learned of Roy's passing. Reading the testimonials all evening has been a bittersweet experience. Very, very sad, but so thrilled to see what a wonderful human being he turned out to be. &#13;
&#13;
So, a little bit about the Roy I knew. He, Louis and I did a lot together, often at Roy's house after school, in large measure because he lived much closer to school than we did, but also because it was always a warm and comfortable place to be.&#13;
&#13;
We'd play the standard board games (Monopoly, Careers, Life, etc), we'd go bowling (I don't recall that Roy was particularly adept at that particular activity!), we'd talk sports, and I even vividly recall that it was at Roy's house that I was shown my first Playboy magazine. But whatever it was we did, it was always easy and just plain fun. Simply put, Roy was someone you wanted to be around. &#13;
&#13;
I now know that the boy I knew, was truly the father of the man so may others were lucky enough to know and love. &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>				&#13;
You must be 13 years of age or older to submit material to us. Your submission of material constitutes your permission for, and consent to, its dissemination and use in connection with &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; in all media in perpetuity. If you have so indicated on the form, your material will be published on &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; (with or without your name, depending on what you have indicated). Otherwise, your response will only be available to approved researchers using &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt;. The material you submit must have been created by you, wholly original, and shall not be copied from or based, in whole or in part, upon any other photographic, literary, or other material, except to the extent that such material is in the public domain. Further, submitted material must not violate any confidentiality, privacy, security or other laws.&#13;
&#13;
By submitting material to &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; you release, discharge, and agree to hold harmless &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; and persons acting under its permission or authority, including a public library or archive to which the collection might be donated for purposes of long-term preservation, from any claims or liability arising out the &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt;\'s use of the material, including, without limitation, claims for violation of privacy, defamation, or misrepresentation.&#13;
&#13;
&lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; has no obligation to use your material.&#13;
&#13;
You will be sent via email a copy of your contribution to &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt;. We cannot return any material you submit to us so be sure to keep a copy. &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; will not share your email address or any other information with commercial vendors.</text>
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              <text>Good afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
I’m Kathi Brown, a former student of Roy’s...as well as former neighbor...and also a friend. I met Roy more than 20 years ago when I first entered the evening Masters program in History at GMU. I also had the privilege of being one of Roy’s research assistants on the opus that he and Betsy Blackmar crafted on the history of Central Park.&#13;
&#13;
When Roy’s wife Deborah e-mailed me a month ago to invite me to say a few words today, it took me approximately a nanosecond to reply with an enthusiastic “Yes!....Please!....Thank you!”&#13;
&#13;
No sooner did I hit SEND to respond to Deborah’s invitation than I burst out laughing. &#13;
&#13;
I pictured Roy, wide-eyed and astonished over the speed with which I had accepted an invitation to speak in public. &#13;
&#13;
He knew first-hand how much I loathe standing up in front of an audience. In fact, it was an ongoing joke between us. After I graduated with my Masters degree and started my historical consulting business back in the late 1980s, Roy used to ask me once a year to come back to campus to talk to graduate students about my career. Each year, like clockwork, I would listen to his invitation...hoot with delighted laughter...look him straight in the eye and reply: “Love you...would do almost anything in the world for you...EXCEPT this...NO!” &#13;
&#13;
After a few of these comically predictable annual exchanges, Roy conceded defeat and presumably found others who were less stubborn and more willing to say yes.&#13;
&#13;
Today, of course, is the exception that proves the rule. I could not in my wildest dreams imagine turning down Deborah’s invitation.&#13;
&#13;
Which brings to mind what I think is probably my all-time favorite quality in Roy. &#13;
&#13;
Roy, as we all well know, was brilliant...funny....eloquent...&#13;
inspiring...and blessed with the kind of giant mind, gentle spirit and generous heart that are rarely found cobbled together in one human being. &#13;
&#13;
But the trait I probably cherished most in Roy was something in which he was abysmally, magnificently lacking: &#13;
&#13;
Roy possessed a complete and utter inability to say NO. &#13;
&#13;
Need to borrow a book? Sure! No problem! Come on over to the Kaplan-Rosenzweig Lending Library anytime! Conveniently open from dawn to midnight. No lines, no limits, no late fines or fees............I loved it! And benefited from it, in part because I lived only four blocks away from Roy and Deborah for ten years...Believe me, I wore a trough in the sidewalk between their house and mine.&#13;
&#13;
Looking for a level-headed analysis of an existential crisis? Roy was my go-to guy. I could always count on him for a no-nonsense, if somewhat bemused interpretation of life’s quandaries. Mostly because I gave the poor man absolutely no choice, Roy shepherded me gently from my mid-20s “What should I do with my life?” to my current late-40s, middle-aged “OKayyyyyyyy, that was great! NOW what?”  If he had stayed with us for another couple of decades, I have no doubt that he would have had wise words and entertaining advice to offer me on everything from menopause to choosing a retirement community.&#13;
&#13;
Yet another area in which Roy could never manage to say NO was in the realm of computers. I can’t think of anyone who had more technology per square inch stuffed into a home office than Roy. Whenever I walked in the door at his Jackson Street house, I felt like I was boarding the Starship Enterprise.&#13;
&#13;
Roy’s affinity for the latest in high-tech toys proved his undoing. At least where I was concerned. Knowing that I had an expert living mere blocks away prompted me more than once to throw myself on Roy’s mercy when contemplating a computer purchase. &#13;
&#13;
Even now, a full 20 years later, I’m still half-ashamed of myself for the time I successfully pestered Roy into driving around Arlington with me one afternoon to three or four computer stores to protect me from fast-talking, geek-speaking salesmen. He did all the talking, while I more or less hid behind him, checkbook in hand, ready to close the deal whenever he gave me the signal!&#13;
&#13;
The next time around I was just as bad. When the time arrived to upgrade again, I actually made Roy call J&amp;R Music and Computer World, a big electronics discounter in New York, pick out a computer and negotiate a mail order sale for me.&#13;
&#13;
Later that day I got a call from him. &#13;
&#13;
“Kathi? Roy. OK, here’s what you do. Get out your wallet. Call 1-800-806-1115. Ask for extension 352. A very nice, non-threatening guy named Ed is standing by to take your credit card number....”  &#13;
&#13;
I kid you not!&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps even worse than begging for help with my computer purchases were the COUNTLESS times I dragged Roy away from the comfort of his home office to rescue me from some computer-related snafu of my own clumsy-fingered making. &#13;
&#13;
Just one example. I will never forget the time I managed to wipe out an entire book manuscript with just a few keystrokes. How I accomplished this incredible feat, to this day, I have no idea. All I know is that I sat dumbstruck at my computer for a few seconds and then did the ONLY logical thing....&#13;
&#13;
“Roy?” I cried tearfully into the phone. “My computer just ate my book!!!! Help!!!!”...There was a moment of silence...Then the voice on the other end replied calmly: “OK, put down the phone, raise your hands and slowly baccccckkkk awaaaaay from the desk. Don’t touch anything!! I’ll be right over!”&#13;
&#13;
Sure enough, Roy popped up on my doorstep five minutes later and spent at least THREE hours picking through my hard drive, scooping up shards of prose and reassembling as much of my opus as he could find. All the while, trying to comfort me. All I could do was sit next to him, doing a fine impression of Edvard Munch’s “The Scream,” staring helplessly at the screen, and humbly thanking him every five minutes for rescuing my baby from oblivion. &#13;
&#13;
And, naturally, Roy being Roy, as he was leaving, he extracted from me a solemn promise to learn to BACK UP MY COMPUTER, LOL!&#13;
&#13;
How can you not love a friend like that????&#13;
&#13;
I’m sure there were times when Roy might have preferred to Control-Alt-Delete me AND my computer problems right out of his life, but fortunately for me, he was too loyal and too kindhearted to say NO, no matter how ludicrous or ill-conceived my request......My comfort lies in the hope that along the way I provided him with sufficient entertainment—and friendship—to make it worth his while to keep me around!&#13;
&#13;
I’m just about out of time, but before I turn things over to the next speaker, I have just a little more to add, on a more serious note.&#13;
 &#13;
Roy was my hero. &#13;
&#13;
Plain and simple. &#13;
&#13;
When I first walked into Roy’s classroom on a September evening more than twenty years ago, I had no inkling that the mustached man with the shy smile and twinkling eyes at the head of the room was about to forever change the way I see the world. &#13;
&#13;
Not by hammering me over the head with the kind of ear-splitting, in-your-face, see-it-my-way-or-hit-the-highway blustering that dominates our public discourse today.&#13;
&#13;
Instead, he did it quietly. &#13;
&#13;
By putting the right books in my hands...&#13;
&#13;
By taking me on as a research assistant so I could learn the incomparable pleasures of historical detective work...&#13;
&#13;
He did it by listening...REALLY listening...never once in more than 20 years giving me the feeling that any question, any opinion, any idea I had was not worthy of serious consideration and a serious response.&#13;
&#13;
Above all, Roy did it by teaching me to ask the right questions.&#13;
&#13;
Not just in the classroom...&#13;
&#13;
Not just in my consulting work...&#13;
&#13;
And not merely questions about the past...&#13;
&#13;
Instead, he taught me to ask questions on a bigger, broader scale...about the way the world really works...or, often, doesn’t work. &#13;
&#13;
Questions I’ll be asking today...tomorrow...and for the rest of my life.&#13;
&#13;
The ability to shape someone’s mind for the better is a gift...the value of which is not to be underestimated. &#13;
&#13;
Fortunately, for those of us who were his students, Roy possessed that gift, in spades. &#13;
&#13;
So, whenever it was, 30 or more years ago, that Roy was presented with the opportunity to choose teaching as a career, rather than find something else to do with that magnificent mind of his.... &#13;
&#13;
I, for one, will always be grateful..........that he didn’t say NO.&#13;
&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
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              <text>A few weeks after Roy died, I went back and read Eight Hours For What We Will. It begins with the description of how Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman, and Modiste Aronstamm opened an ice-cream parlor and lunchroom in Worcester, hoping that the profits would provide financial support for the return to their native Russia. But then, in the summer of 1892, the Carnegie Steel Company locked out the workers at its Homestead plant, and evicted strikers from company houses. Goldman and Berkman, hoping that the class struggle in the United States would finally take off, thought the day had come and the “native toiler had risen.” They left Worcester and the ice-cream parlor, went to Homestead, and Berkman went on with his unsuccessful attempt to assassinate Henry Clay Frick, the chairman of the Carnegie Steel company. Roy noted that, however, despite their dedication to the Homestead workers, Berkman’s and Goldman’s “understanding of the American proletariat remained limited.” Berkman remained preoccupied with the situation in Russia, and Goldman, at least in her reminiscences, largely seemed to have ignored the situation of the workers in Worcester. In a way, as a historian, Roy picked up where Emma Goldman and Sasha Berkman had left off, and he went back to the ice cream parlor and back to the workers in Worcester, and showed that that they mattered, the ice-cream-parlor, the workers, and their eight hours for what we will, even though Worcester wasn’t exactly the revolutionary hot-spot of the time. And, working at George Mason University in Fairfax County, Virginia, which, as Mike O’Malley had pointed out at the OAH, started as a branch college of the University of Virginia and which, to this day, is not exactly known as a radical hot-spot, Roy approached his students as a teacher with a similar interest, respect and consideration of circumstances as he approached the workers in Worcester as a historian.&#13;
&#13;
When dealing with the students at Mason, both the masters and the doctoral students, most of whom work part or full-time outside campus while getting their degrees, and many of whom don’t plan on pursuing traditional careers in university teaching, Roy was not only supportive, but always considerate of economy and circumstances. He picked people up where they stood, and practical questions greatly mattered to him. He wasn’t only concerned about how can you write a really good research paper or a dissertation, but how you can do it if you work x-hours during the week and the archives with your research materials are only open 9-5 during the week. Indeed, he sometimes indicated that such practical considerations were among the reasons why he was so interested in the possibilities of the internet in making research materials available online.&#13;
&#13;
Roy sometimes mentioned that he had never really gotten that much out of his formal university education himself, and that the most important thing during his time as a graduate student had been the access to the library, and the chance to meet and study with numerous of his fellow students and friends, many of whom have shared stories and memories on this website or at the memorials in Arlington, at the AHA, or at the OAH. Whether it was driven by his experiences at Harvard, by his New Left radicalism, by his anti-authoritarian attitude toward professorial authority, by the belief that higher education should be accessible to everyone, or by something else, I got the sense that he thought (and I think I remember that he even said it at one point) that studying history, when it comes down to it, doesn’t really require that much and not necessarily a university and a professor, that, instead, all it really takes is your interest, a library card, nowadays a computer with internet access, and some people with whom you can talk or correspond, whether or not they have a formal degree. And he brought this moment of reflection about his role, about authority, and about the sense of formal education, into the classroom and into his interactions with his students, and served as a facilitator rather than as the instructing authority. He was particularly good at facilitating discussions, which he moderated with a keen sense of fairness -- if someone didn’t get the chance to say anything or needed a little support, he often sensed that, said something supportive, or just gave people a little more time and opportunity to speak up. Roy managed to open up the classroom, with its often alienating rules and regulations, and to turn it into a pleasant opportunity to get together -- he provided space, structure, and ideas, and everybody could meet, discuss, build websites, watch movies, have guests, and, of course, eat and drink.&#13;
&#13;
Clio Wired, the course on history and new media that Roy developed and taught, and which I took in the fall of 2001, perfectly reflected his spirit that everyone should help each other: ”Unlike a conventional class where almost all the advice and assistance comes from the instructor, in a seminar everyone will take a hand in shaping our discussions and helping fellow class members,” he had written in the online syllabus, http://chnm.gmu.edu/courses/rr/f01/cw/, a work in progress that he frequently updated. The course was, “experimental,” and he advised that, “we need to be open to changes in schedule, format, and requirements.” There was always a moment of curiosity and excitement in his assignments – do the scavenger hunt, explore this site, check out that online community, spend a significant amount of time at a website of your choice. In his assignments, in the questions he posed, he often offered options, as if he didn’t want to constrain his students to his suggestions -- if you don’t want to do this, try that, if not that, try something else. Including your own ideas for assignments was usually an option, too. I didn’t get the impression he ever came up with any assignments that he didn’t like to do as well. In more than one way, he also didn’t want to constrain the students to the classroom, and I remember one night when he must have thought that we all seemed knocked out by the computer lab, and when, in the middle of the class, he said let’s get up and go next door, and we all walked out of the classroom and sat down in the adjacent room, just to continue our discussion in a different environment.&#13;
&#13;
Roy, as busy as he always was, regularly attended the PhD colloquium, which was entirely voluntary for faculty members, and, I think, he always attended when students presented their dissertation proposals and offered suggestions, whether he was the dissertation advisor of the students who presented or not. Last fall, he served as the coordinating instructor of the colloquium until he died. Before taking over as the instructor in the fall semester, he had sent out a survey to all of us PhD students to collect feedback on the colloquium, making sure that he planned the sessions together with us, and not for us. I think as one of the results of the feedback he received, he set up a blog for the colloquium (together with Jeremy Boggs of the CHNM), so that we could have and extend our discussions online. Very much Roy, he put technology to its best use and served as facilitator and host, online as well as offline. When he was too ill to come to the colloquium, he continued to post questions on the blog, once again always offering options, thinking of what we and he might enjoy to do. And I remember the last colloquium he was able to attend, with filmmaker (and Mason professor) Carma Hinton, as the guest, and we were talking about historical documentaries, and he was really interested in the discussion and then said that he feels like going out and seeing all those movies...So, in his spirit, I fill up my Thanks, Roy mug with coffee, drink it in his memory, go see a movie, and look forward to the next refill.</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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              <text>Coffee with Roy&#13;
March 29, 2008&#13;
&#13;
In thinking about what to say this morning, in thinking about Roy and the Center for History and New Media, I looked through the hundreds of entries on the Thanks, Roy website, many from former and current CHNMers, and was once again struck by the eloquence, the humor, the passion for social justice, and the incredible work ethic that comes through—all things that Roy both embodied and fostered in others.&#13;
&#13;
I also looked at the tags and the themes that had emerged. Some were to be expected—coffee, history and digital history, the ever-present red (or maroon) shirt and jeans. Many others were also no surprise to those who knew and worked with Roy—decency, kindness, generosity, humility.&#13;
&#13;
One tag that drew my attention was “driving.” It reminded me of a drive I took with Roy shortly after I started working at CHNM. We were flying to New York City to meet with Josh, Ellen, and Pennee about History Matters. Roy and Deborah lived close to National Airport, so I drove from my home in Maryland, parked at their house, and Roy drove us to the airport. On the way, Roy started telling a complicated, engaging story about the “ins and outs” of publishing Who Built America—the curious twists and turns, the quirky individuals and intrigues along the way. Somewhere in there, we exited the GW Parkway and entered the airport, the circular drive that takes you past the various parking garages, the passenger drop off, the rental cars. And as Roy talked and drove, we passed the rental cars, the departures and arrivals, and the parking terminals A, B, and C. And we drove right back out of the airport and onto the parkway.&#13;
&#13;
Roy was a devoted storyteller and deeply engaged in many interesting, intellectual ideas at any given moment. In this case, Roy’s passion for making history public, making it available and accessible, for telling the stories of ordinary people, and his fascination with the sometimes convoluted path that it took to do so led to a new way of reaching the airport, but one that worked in the end nonetheless. We found our way back to the airport and made the plane in plenty of time.&#13;
&#13;
Working with Roy for more than 7 years at CHNM, I came to appreciate and cherish that some days were like this. That getting from point A to point B might take an unexpected path. But whatever the path, Roy had the remarkable ability to stay focused on the important things in life—people, history, and open access to the past—through untold histories as well as through technology. In day-to-day work, sometimes get distracted by annoyances or minor setbacks, but Roy always had the truly admirable ability to keep things in perspective, to focus on the larger meaning of the work. &#13;
&#13;
In a discipline known for the work of individuals, Roy was dedicated to collaboration (another popular tag on Thanks, Roy) and to breaking down traditional boundaries. Roy remained committed to the process of collaboration, even when it was slower and messier than working alone, as it usually is.&#13;
&#13;
In part, I think it is because Roy knew the advantages of bringing together a range of minds and ideas, of sharing and discussing. But he also truly enjoyed working with people—talking, listening, developing ideas collaboratively. As CHNM grew from one full time employee, Elena, and a few graduate assistants to a staff of more than 40, this got harder to do. Roy’s days were filled, truly packed from beginning to end, with email, meetings, problems to be resolved, grants to be written, and ideas to be grappled with. But he always made time to get to know each person who was hired, to help them make connections and plan their futures; to make sure that they felt welcome and a part of the larger purpose of CHNM and its work.&#13;
&#13;
Roy signed his emails “Take Care, Roy” and this he always did—of the past and of the present, of the stories and the people.&#13;
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&#13;
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              <text>It has been a very sad week for us in the History Department at George Mason. Roy’s death has left a hole in our hearts as well as in our intellects. So many wonderful things could be said about him, and many of them already have been said by others. So, in this time of grieving, I want to reminiscence on a happier time, indeed one of the happiest times I ever experienced with Roy. It was on Saturday night, February 20, 1999. The setting was a colleague’s home, where most of the department and their spouses had gathered to honor Roy, accompanied by lots of food and drink. The occasion was his appointment as a College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Scholar, the closest thing the college had to an endowed chair at the time, and the highest honor the college could give him. As I was also on the review committee appointed by the dean to advise on this appointment, I recall with pleasure one of the dozen or so outside letters by the some of the most distinguished historians in the country whom the dean solicited for their evaluations of Roy’s scholarly accomplishments. One of them began her letter with a striking statement: “Roy is a national treasure!”  I had never thought of Roy in this way (Roy as Grand Canyon? Roy as Julia Child?), but it certainly rang true then, as it still does. But on the night of February 20, 1999 we were gathered in a spirit of fun, pleasure, and boundless admiration for a colleague whom everyone adored. One of our former chair’s, Marion Deshmukh, had started the tradition that on such occasions we should endeavor to create some doggerel, scribbled verse, or other creative party piece to honor the occasion. So on that night, I read aloud a limerick I had jotted down earlier in the day. It seemed fitting for the occasion and made me very proud and privileged to call Roy my friend and colleague. Upon re-reading it this week as I have been reflecting on Roy, it still seems fitting and says (in its own abominable way) what I still feel about him, indeed what we all feel.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A  ROYAL  LIMERICK&#13;
&#13;
There was once a historian named Roy&#13;
Who was very perceptively coy.&#13;
He wondered why history&#13;
Was always a mystery&#13;
In all that he heard as a boy.&#13;
&#13;
So he decided to make history a vocation,&#13;
And studied the American nation.&#13;
Though much to his surprise&#13;
He discovered all the lies&#13;
That had been spread since the beginning of creation.&#13;
&#13;
From Columbia to Harvard he ascended,&#13;
Where he his dissertation defended.&#13;
He looked at workers' leisure&#13;
And all they did for pleasure&#13;
Eight hours every day, so he contended.&#13;
&#13;
But he also met a lady from Brandeis&#13;
Whose hold over him began to aggrandize.&#13;
So he decided to woo her&#13;
And eventually pursue her,&#13;
Which made quite a match woman and man-wise.&#13;
 &#13;
So he set out in earnest to give chase,&#13;
But his beloved was setting the pace.&#13;
He found that too often&#13;
She was thinking of Jane Austin,&#13;
So he rarely made it to first base. &#13;
&#13;
But wedlock and marriage are the ultimate blessing&#13;
Despite all the statistics so distressing.  &#13;
To Washington and George Mason &#13;
They both soon did hasten,&#13;
Where they began a new life of professing.&#13;
&#13;
Then Roy took off into Central Park&#13;
Which became his next major lark.&#13;
From the Tavern on the Green&#13;
To the eastern ravine,&#13;
He recorded it all, even muggers in the dark.&#13;
&#13;
Then he launched the Center for History and New Media,&#13;
Which would transform poor old Clio he decreed. He, uh,&#13;
Made a CD-ROM that offended,&#13;
So the Wall Street Journal contended,&#13;
Because of gay cowboys and other such tedia.&#13;
&#13;
But any distress Roy easily disguises &#13;
Because his CD-ROM won so many prizes.&#13;
And his history of the net&#13;
Will be his best work yet,&#13;
Or so one of his grad students surmises.&#13;
&#13;
But what one notices of Roy is how hard he works.&#13;
There's nothing or no one that he shirks.&#13;
The late hours he keeps&#13;
And rumors he occasionally sleeps&#13;
Are part of his charming quirks.&#13;
&#13;
But Roy is a friend always unfailing and just,&#13;
A constant someone we can always trust.&#13;
Even as CAS Distinguished Scholar&#13;
He's never too big for his collar,&#13;
Which makes Roy a King among us.&#13;
&#13;
So tonight we have all gathered to attest&#13;
That Roy stands out from all the rest.&#13;
And though a trite cliché,&#13;
It's true anyway:&#13;
We salute you Roy; you're the best.&#13;
&#13;
[February 20, 1999]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
And you are the best, Roy. Rest in peace, dear friend.&#13;
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You must be 13 years of age or older to submit material to us. Your submission of material constitutes your permission for, and consent to, its dissemination and use in connection with Thanks, Roy in all media in perpetuity. If you have so indicated on the form, your material will be published on Thanks, Roy (with or without your name, depending on what you have indicated). Otherwise, your response will only be available to approved researchers using Thanks, Roy. The material you submit must have been created by you, wholly original, and shall not be copied from or based, in whole or in part, upon any other photographic, literary, or other material, except to the extent that such material is in the public domain. Further, submitted material must not violate any confidentiality, privacy, security or other laws.&#13;
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You will be sent via email a copy of your contribution to Thanks, Roy. We cannot return any material you submit to us so be sure to keep a copy. Thanks, Roy will not share your email address or any other information with commercial vendors.</text>
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              <text>In various venues, friends and colleagues have remembered Roy for the myriad of qualities he possessed.  Let me reiterate what I wrote for the History News Network and add a few more points:&#13;
&#13;
Roy's untimely death will leave an incredible void personally and professionally.  Roy was instrumental in creating so many programs in the History Department and the university, from crafting courses leading to doctoral programs in cultural studies, in community college education, and in our PhD program in History and the New Media, one of the most innovative in the country.  He directed our MA program for many years and hundreds of students admired, respected, indeed, loved Roy for caring so much about their intellectual development and treating them as colleagues.  Roy rarely turned down any request to colleagues or students, however burdensome.  We always wondered when (and if) Roy slept--in his abbreviated life, cut short at its prime, Roy accomplished more than most of us can or will if we had ten lives.  &#13;
&#13;
Despite his many accomplishmemts: superb researcher and scholar with highly acclaimed and prize-winning books; a pioneer in digital history, a terrific teacher, again receiving the highest award from the state of Virginia for his efforts, he was uncommonly modest and unassuming.  He shunned the limelight, giving othrs far more credit for what he actually created, conceived, or wrote.  His work for the AHA, the OAH and countless othr professional organizations attest to the wide respect he garnered from colleagues in the US, and indeed, throughout the world.&#13;
&#13;
We had been close friends from the start of his career at George Mason and it will be terribly difficult to conceive of the department without his incredible presence.  I recall, when he gave me a tour of the Center for History and New Media after moving to its new, shiny location in Research Building I, that he was obviously proud of the offices, the computers and the latest technology.  However, he was equally proud of the newest office coffee machine and took positive delight in demonstrating its many attributes.  So, to dear Roy--let me raise my cup and know that your good name, many accomplishments and creative ideas will, indeed, MUST live on.</text>
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You must be 13 years of age or older to submit material to us. Your submission of material constitutes your permission for, and consent to, its dissemination and use in connection with &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; in all media in perpetuity. If you have so indicated on the form, your material will be published on &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; (with or without your name, depending on what you have indicated). Otherwise, your response will only be available to approved researchers using &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt;. The material you submit must have been created by you, wholly original, and shall not be copied from or based, in whole or in part, upon any other photographic, literary, or other material, except to the extent that such material is in the public domain. Further, submitted material must not violate any confidentiality, privacy, security or other laws.&#13;
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By submitting material to &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; you release, discharge, and agree to hold harmless &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; and persons acting under its permission or authority, including a public library or archive to which the collection might be donated for purposes of long-term preservation, from any claims or liability arising out the &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt;\'s use of the material, including, without limitation, claims for violation of privacy, defamation, or misrepresentation.&#13;
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              <text>Note: Prodded by the Digital Campus broadcasts, I had finally set up a blog on wordpress when I learned of Roy's death.  This was my first post.&#13;
&#13;
Roy Rosenzweig, Mark and Barbara Fried Professor of History and New Media at George Mason University, was a mentor and generous friend to those at a distance as well as to his many colleagues, collaborators, and students at George Mason University. We were saddened to hear of his death this past week.&#13;
&#13;
I have long counted myself lucky to have invited Roy to come to Miami University almost a decade ago. I had read his work in labor history and followed the development of the American Social History Project and Center for History and New Media initiatives. Teaching at Miami University’s regional campus in Middletown, Ohio, I worked with area teachers and coordinated the local National History Day competition. With generous support from both the Ohio Humanities Council and Miami University, I was able to invite Roy through the OAH Distinguished Lectureship Program, to spend two days in Ohio. He presented a workshop and discussion for local social studies teachers in Middletown and a lecture on history and new media on the Oxford campus. My great good fortune was to spend the two days with Roy, introducing him to colleagues, learning about the Center for History and New Media initiatives, discussing his book, with David Thelen, The Presence of the Past: Popular Uses of History in American Life, and talking over my own research and interests in digital media projects. We rambled around the Oxford campus, stopping to talk with faculty at Miami’s former College of Interdisciplinary Studies and then having lunch with Juan Gilbert, a professor in computer sciences who is now at Auburn University. I felt a bit like an outsider looking in on their conversation but I enjoyed every minute. Roy was an exciting speaker and a generous listener and mentor.&#13;
&#13;
Following his visit, Randy Bass came to the Middletown campus and the conversations that I had with both Roy and Randy inspired much of my subsequent work both directing a graduate program in public history at Wright State University and collaborating with educators on TAH grants. They helped me to see both my profession and the scholarship of history in a new way.&#13;
&#13;
Roy was a pioneer; he embraced the enduring value of the paperback book while moving beyond the narrower confines of print scholarship. And Roy always carried others forward with him. The ubiquitous red Z for Zotero in Firefox will remind many of us of Roy’s impact, through the Center for History and New Media, on our work. This June, not knowing that Roy was ill, I asked him to meet with my husband Gary Greenberg about a public television project. Once again, he gave generously of his time and his insights. Roy Rosenzweig has cast a wide net through his influential writing and the enduring value of the Center for History and New Media resources as well as through all of the colleagues he has listened to and inspired.</text>
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                <text>You must be 13 years of age or older to submit material to us. Your submission of material constitutes your permission for, and consent to, its dissemination and use in connection with &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; in all media in perpetuity. If you have so indicated on the form, your material will be published on &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt; (with or without your name, depending on what you have indicated). Otherwise, your response will only be available to approved researchers using &lt;em&gt;Thanks, Roy&lt;/em&gt;. The material you submit must have been created by you, wholly original, and shall not be copied from or based, in whole or in part, upon any other photographic, literary, or other material, except to the extent that such material is in the public domain. Further, submitted material must not violate any confidentiality, privacy, security or other laws.</text>
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