I just saw a link to the news below (original here) and had to share. A great big congratulations to the University of North Texas Libraries (UNT Libraries) for their work and making this possible!
Newspaper collection marks 1 million digitized pages
By Nancy Kolsti, News Promotions
The Jan. 9, 1836, issue of The Telegraph and Texas Register, right, the newspaper of the Provisional Government of Texas, included an ordinance and decree passed by the government to create a “regular army” consisting of 1,120 men in one regiment of artillery and one regiment of infantry.
Less than four months later, the army’s work was finished after it surprised the Mexican forces at the Battle of San Jacinto and Texas was granted independence.
Those interested in Texas history can go online to read firsthand reports of the war against Mexico, thanks to 1 million pages of historical Texas newspapers, includingThe Telegraph, right, now available on the University of North Texas’ Portal to Texas History.
The UNT Libraries, which administers the portal, will celebrate this achievement at Million Page Milestone Feb. 27.
The celebration will be from 2-4 p.m. in the Forum on the first floor of UNT’s Willis Library. Several UNT administrators will speak, and tours will be offered for theDigital Projects Unit, which digitizes the original copies of the newspapers for the portal.
Beginning in 2007, UNT Libraries received funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities to digitize pages of Texas newspapers for the National Digital Newspaper Program, “Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.” UNT was one of eight U.S. universities, and the only one from Texas, to receive funding.
The National Digital Newspaper Program, or NDNP, is a long-term effort from NEH and the Library of Congress to develop an Internet-based, searchable database of U.S. newspapers with select digitization of historic papers. During the next 15 years, NDNP will create a national digital resource of historically significant newspapers published between 1836 and 1922 in all 50 states and U.S. territories.
Since receiving the initial two-year, $397,552 grant, the UNT Libraries have received more than $2.4 million in funding for the newspapers and have digitized 118,783 Texas issues. More than 960,000 newspaper pages have been digitized, and the UNT Libraries staff expects to reach 1 million pages by the end of February.
The oldest newspaper on the portal is a Sept. 25, 1829, issue of the Texas Gazette, which is the earliest Texas newspaper for which more than one issue exists. Writings of Stephen F. Austin were published in the paper.
Other historic newspapers on the portal include late 19th- and early 20th-century issues of theJefferson Jimplecute; 19th-century issues of the Neu-Braunfelser Zeitung, the German language predecessor to the current New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung; early 20th-century issues of the Brownsville Daily Herald, Snyder Daily Signal and several newspapers published in Galveston; and the defunctDallas Daily Herald, which was the first newspaper in Dallas and later became the Dallas Times-Herald.
Dreanna Belden, right, assistant dean for external relations, said the newspapers provide eyewitness accounts from those who lived through major events in Texas history, including the Texas fight for independence against Mexico and the forming of the Republic of Texas; the state’s involvement in the Civil War, World War I and World War II; and the 1900 Galveston hurricane.
“A large part of the reason we started the portal was for education. We developed Newspaper Narrative lessons as resources for teachers who want to use the historic newspapers to bring history to life for their students, and we even created posters on different events as captured by the newspapers that teachers can hang in their classrooms,” she said.
The Newspaper Narrative lessons cover topics such as cotton farming, the Texas oil boom and the Suffrage Movement. Each lesson includes a PowerPoint lecture, links to corresponding articles in newspapers and engaging activities for students.
The newspaper digital library also appeals to amateur historians like Dallas attorney William D. Elliott. Elliott is writing a biography of a Texas historical figure and wanted to learn as much about the era in which the person lived as possible. He calls the portal and the newspaper digital library “the singular most valuable resource for research.”
The Jan. 9, 1836, issue of The Telegraph and Texas Register, right, the newspaper of the Provisional Government of Texas, included an ordinance and decree passed by the government to create a “regular army” consisting of 1,120 men in one regiment of artillery and one regiment of infantry.
Less than four months later, the army’s work was finished after it surprised the Mexican forces at the Battle of San Jacinto and Texas was granted independence.
Those interested in Texas history can go online to read firsthand reports of the war against Mexico, thanks to 1 million pages of historical Texas newspapers, includingThe Telegraph, right, now available on the University of North Texas’ Portal to Texas History.
The UNT Libraries, which administers the portal, will celebrate this achievement at Million Page Milestone Feb. 27.
The celebration will be from 2-4 p.m. in the Forum on the first floor of UNT’s Willis Library. Several UNT administrators will speak, and tours will be offered for theDigital Projects Unit, which digitizes the original copies of the newspapers for the portal.
Beginning in 2007, UNT Libraries received funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities to digitize pages of Texas newspapers for the National Digital Newspaper Program, “Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.” UNT was one of eight U.S. universities, and the only one from Texas, to receive funding.
The National Digital Newspaper Program, or NDNP, is a long-term effort from NEH and the Library of Congress to develop an Internet-based, searchable database of U.S. newspapers with select digitization of historic papers. During the next 15 years, NDNP will create a national digital resource of historically significant newspapers published between 1836 and 1922 in all 50 states and U.S. territories.
Since receiving the initial two-year, $397,552 grant, the UNT Libraries have received more than $2.4 million in funding for the newspapers and have digitized 118,783 Texas issues. More than 960,000 newspaper pages have been digitized, and the UNT Libraries staff expects to reach 1 million pages by the end of February.
The oldest newspaper on the portal is a Sept. 25, 1829, issue of the Texas Gazette, which is the earliest Texas newspaper for which more than one issue exists. Writings of Stephen F. Austin were published in the paper.
Other historic newspapers on the portal include late 19th- and early 20th-century issues of theJefferson Jimplecute; 19th-century issues of the Neu-Braunfelser Zeitung, the German language predecessor to the current New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung; early 20th-century issues of the Brownsville Daily Herald, Snyder Daily Signal and several newspapers published in Galveston; and the defunctDallas Daily Herald, which was the first newspaper in Dallas and later became the Dallas Times-Herald.
Dreanna Belden, right, assistant dean for external relations, said the newspapers provide eyewitness accounts from those who lived through major events in Texas history, including the Texas fight for independence against Mexico and the forming of the Republic of Texas; the state’s involvement in the Civil War, World War I and World War II; and the 1900 Galveston hurricane.
“A large part of the reason we started the portal was for education. We developed Newspaper Narrative lessons as resources for teachers who want to use the historic newspapers to bring history to life for their students, and we even created posters on different events as captured by the newspapers that teachers can hang in their classrooms,” she said.
The Newspaper Narrative lessons cover topics such as cotton farming, the Texas oil boom and the Suffrage Movement. Each lesson includes a PowerPoint lecture, links to corresponding articles in newspapers and engaging activities for students.
The newspaper digital library also appeals to amateur historians like Dallas attorney William D. Elliott. Elliott is writing a biography of a Texas historical figure and wanted to learn as much about the era in which the person lived as possible. He calls the portal and the newspaper digital library “the singular most valuable resource for research.”
- Learn more: Caroline Booth, director of communications and marketing for UNT Libraries, 940-369-7573.
- Above, from left, Ann Howington, project coordinator, National Digital Newspaper Program, Texas; Andrew Weidner, project coordinator, National Digital Newspaper Program, New Mexico;Trista Barker, digital imaging technician; Sarah Lynn Fisher, project coordinator, National Digital Newspaper Program, Oklahoma; Ana Krahmer, coordinator, Digital Newspaper Program.
(Photo by Michael Clements)