Aditions to American Memory

From: Elizabeth L. Brown (ebro@loc.gov)
Date: Wed Jan 19 2000 - 11:37:54 EST

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    Sender: American Memory Fellows <AMFELLOWS@RS8.LOC.GOV>
    Poster: "Elizabeth L. Brown" <ebro@LOC.GOV>
    Subject: Aditions to American Memory
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    This announcment is being posted to a number of lists.
    Please accept our apologies for any duplication

    Three More Ameritech Grant Winner Collections
    Now Part of American Memory

    It is with pleasure that the Library announces the most recent
    collections to be released as a part of the LC/Ameritech National
    Digital Library Competition: “First-Person Narratives of the
    American South, 1860-1920", by the University of North Carolina
    at Chapel Hill, “Small-Town America: Stereoscopic Views from
    the Dennis Collection, 1850-1920", by The New York Public
    Library, and “The African-American Experience in Ohio, 1850-1920",
    by the Ohio Historical Society. With a gift from the Ameritech
    Corporation, the Library of Congress sponsored a three-year
    competition to enable public, research, and academic libraries,
    museums, historical societies, and archival institutions (except
    federal institutions) to create digital collections of primary resources.
    These digital collections complement and enhance the collections
    of the National Digital Library Program at the Library of Congress.

    “First-Person Narratives of the American South, 1860-1920" is a
    compilation of printed texts from the libraries at the University of
    North Carolina at Chapel Hill which documents the culture of the
    nineteenth-century American South from the viewpoint of
    Southerners. It includes the diaries, autobiographies, memoirs,
    travel accounts, and ex-slave narratives of not only prominent
    individuals, but also of relatively inaccessible populations: women,
    African Americans, enlisted men, laborers, and Native Americans.
    The award from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital
    Library Competition supported the digitization of 101 titles; the
    university supplemented these with another 40. The presentation
    through American Memory links to the digital texts mounted at the
    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where they form part of
    a larger digital collection titled Documenting the American South
    <http://metalab.unc.edu/docsouth/index.html>. The larger collection
    has four other components: Southern Literature, North American
    Slave Narratives, the Southern Home Front, 1861-1865, and, most
    recently, the Church in the Southern Black Community. Conversion
    has recently begun for texts in this last collection, which earned the
    university a second LC/Ameritech award in 1998/99. (Information on
    that award can be found at the following url:
    <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award/99award/unc99.html >.
    “First-Person Narratives of the American outh, 1860-1920" can be
    found at the following url:
    <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/ncuhtml/>.
    Information about the 1997 award can be found at
    <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award/97award/unc.html>.

    “Small-Town America: Stereoscopic Views from the Robert Dennis
    Collection, 1850-1920" contains 12,000 photographs of New York,
    New Jersey, and Connecticut from the 1850s to the 1910s from the
    collections of the New York Public Library. The views show buildings
    and street scenes in cities, towns, and villages as well as natural
    landscapes. They also depict agriculture, industry, transportation,
    homes, businesses, local celebrations, natural disasters, people,
    and costumes. In general, stereoviews are more journalistic than is
    formal photography, and they feature subjects and interpretations
    not readily available in other formats (local history, for instance).
    Stereoviews were most popular between the 1850s and the 1910s
    as they were a principal form of home entertainment, perhaps second
    only to reading as a personal leisure activity. Small-Town America
    can be found at <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/nyplhtml/>.
    The announcement of The New York Public Library award can be
    found at <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award/97award/nypl.html>.

    The African-American Experience in Ohio, 1850-1920 is a selection of
    manuscript, printed texts and images drawn from the collections of the
    Ohio Historical Society. The digital reproductions document the
    history of black Ohio from 1850 to 1920, illuminating the story of
    slavery and freedom, segregation and integration, religion and politics,
    migrations and restrictions, harmony and discord, and struggles and
    successes. The manuscript materials include the personal papers of
    prominent individuals, association records, a plantation account book,
    ex-slave narratives, and documents relating to the freeing of individual
    slaves. Photographs depict ex-slaves and African Americans serving in
    the army, the police force, and the Ohio House of Representatives. In
    addition, roughly 15,000 articles relating to African Americans have been
    scanned from Ohio newspapers. The African-American Experience in
    Ohio can be found at <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/ohshtml/>.
    The announcement of the Ohio Historical Society Award can be found at
    <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award/97award/ohio.html>.

    Information about the Ameritech competition can be found at the
    competition home page which is located at
    <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award/index.html>.

    Questions about the collections should be directed to
    <ndlpcoll@loc.gov>.

     _________________________________________________________

       Elizabeth L. Brown
       Automated Reference Services Librarian
       National Digital Library Program, LIBN/NDL/LC(1330)
       Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20540-1330
       ebro@loc.gov telephone: 202/707-2235

       Library of Congress American Memory Home Page:
       http://memory.loc.gov/
    _________________________________________________________



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