1 / 104

Reaching your local history patrons through the web

Learn about the Kimble Northwest History Database, Palouse Digital Project, and Oregon Historic Photographs Collection and their approaches to reaching local history patrons through the web. Topics covered include planning, funding, implementation, technical considerations, maintenance, and future plans/developments. Discover different ways to approach digital projects and consider the issues involved.

hectorj
Download Presentation

Reaching your local history patrons through the web

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reaching your local history patrons through the web OLA/WLA Conference April 18th, 2008 Vancouver, WA

  2. Overview of Program • Kimble Northwest History Database – Ingrid Mifflin • Palouse Digital Project – Marilyn Von Seggern • Oregon Historic Photographs Collection – Doug Yancey • Technical considerations for digital collections – Alex Merrill • Questions and Answers

  3. Issues We Will Cover • Planning • Funding • Implementation • Technical considerations • Maintenance • Future plans/developments • The Users & Publicity • Web Presence

  4. Similar but Different Approaches • The three projects we will demonstrate are all digital projects but their implementation are very different and will show you different ways to approach digital projects and different issues to consider.

  5. Reaching your local history patrons through the web Kimble Northwest History Database Ingrid Mifflin

  6. Getting Started • A desire to learn a new innovative way to present historic documents to library users • Select the material • Develop the scanning and metadata standards to follow • Make the Production Prototype • Test • Set up Production • Find Funding

  7. Original Paper Black Cardboard Boxes

  8. Finding Funding • Work with Library’s Development Officer • Put together a Proposal to Donor • Meet with Donor and Give a Demonstration • Grant funding, local historical societies, LSTA, National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)

  9. Production • Work with IT staff to configure software/hardware • Write a manual for staff/students/volunteers to use during the scanning and metadata input process • Hire and train staff/students/volunteers • Do quality control • Stay in close contact with IT staff to monitor server space, backups, software/hardware upgrades, problem solving, etc. • Design the web site

  10. Original Paper Black Cardboard Boxes

  11. Individual Newspaper Clipping with Guide Card • Date is at the top • Newspaper citation is at the bottom • Subject category is handwritten on the right side

  12. Student workers digitizing and inputting metadata

  13. The Online Version • Kimble Northwest History Database • 48,000 clippings in specific subjects • With added online access to resources relevant to the newspaper clippings • Links to documents referred to in the articles • Links to biographies of people mentioned

  14. Reaching your local history patrons through the web Palouse Digital Project Marilyn Von SeggernWashington State University Libraries

  15. The Palouse Bioregion The Palouse is a unique geographic region of wind blown loess hills in southeastern Washington and northern Idaho, bordered by the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, the channeled scablands created by the Great Missoula Floods, and the Snake River. The topography was created by silt dunes blown in from the west and south during the last ice age.

  16. The Palouse, known for… Bunchgrass prairie Paluus (Paloos) tribe Deep fertile soils producing grains and legumes: wheat, lentils, split peas, barley Appaloosa horses Giant Palouse earthworm

  17. U.S. Agricultural Research Service

  18. U.S. Agricultural Research Service Photo by Doug Wilson.

  19. WSU Alumni Assn

  20. U.S. Agricultural Research Service

  21. Barley harvest U.S. Agricultural Research Service

  22. Milwaukee Bridge from Steptoe Battlefield, Rosalia, 2003. Paul Henning photo; MASC, WSU Libraries

  23. WSU Libraries

  24. Library of Congress

  25. Library of Congress

  26. Library of Congress

  27. Library of Congress

  28. Library of Congress

  29. Library of Congress

  30. Peluse FallsU.S. Congressional Serial Set

  31. “Palouse Falls, 1932” Image from WSU Archives

  32. Palouse FallsPacific Northwest National Laboratory

  33. Development of the Palouse Digital Project • 1950(?)-1979 Card file • 1980-1989 Computer-generated bibliography with author and subject indexes • 2003 Went digital • 2008 Scanned Palouse Bibliography

  34. Prototype: Southern Oregon Digital Archives (SODA)

  35. SODA Title browse list

  36. Project Parameters • In-print resources—how many? • 930 articles, 102 research reports, 257 theses and dissertations • 760 articles in the public domain

  37. Getting started • Use of CONTENTdm software • Local funding for first 15 items to begin building test database • Took classes and workshops on getting grants • Began discussions with Libraries’ Development Officer • Expanded database

  38. Project Statement • Statement of purpose • Bioregion description • Project goals • Audience • Subjects and types of materials included

  39. Statement of Purpose The Palouse Digital Project will make accessible to students, researchers, and the general public a variety of resources about the Palouse bioregion. Documents…and other resources that are in the public domain will be digitized and included…for browsing, viewing, and searching.

  40. Project Goals • Provide access to resources in the public domain related to the Palouse bioregion of Washington and Idaho by creating a searchable digital collection of materials from the earliest publications to the present • Consolidate resources published over the course of a century and scattered over many collections and locations. The project will draw from the rich collections of Washington State University Libraries and seek to add relevant materials not already in the library • Make these resources freely and easily available on the Internet to students, researchers, and the public

  41. Audience • Secondary and higher education students • Researchers in many fields of specialization • The general public

  42. Subject inclusion Agricultural Economics Ethnology Agriculture Geography Anthropology Geology Archeology History Biology Hydrology Ecology Natural History Environmental History Zoology

  43. Types of materials documents reports books studies & surveys maps oral histories photos video websites

  44. Project Priorities • Phase I pre-1950 public domain documents • Phase II 1950-1970 • Phase III 1971-present

More Related