NEW YORK, NY.- The New York Public Library will soon digitize and make more accessible to the public 50,000 pages of historic early American manuscript material, courtesy of a $500,000 grant from The Polonsky Foundation.
The material held primarily in the Librarys renowned Manuscripts and Archives Division will include portions of the papers of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, John Adams, Noah Webster, James Madison, James Monroe and others, as well as other important items documenting life in the early United States.
The materials will be digitized over the next two years, preserving them for future generations and making them more accessible to the public through the Librarys new Archives Portal, developed by the Librarys NYPL Labs under the Leadership of Collections Strategy, and located at archives.nypl.org.
The portal brings together the descriptions of every archival and manuscript collection at the Library, including those held by the Manuscripts and Archives Division, The Billy Rose Theatre Collection at the Library for the Performing Arts, The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, The Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle, and The Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature. It allows researchers to search across the Librarys unique holdings for the first time.
The portal also provides direct access to digitized material directly via the online description. The digitized content can be discovered and viewed anywhere online, allowing the reader to zoom in to view minute page details, recreating the intimate experience of browsing boxes and folders in a physical archive.
So far, the Archives Portal includes descriptions of nearly 10,000 collections, representing over 50,000 feet of material. The comprehensive access to the archival and manuscript collections at NYPL made possible through the portal is a result of NYPLs concentrated efforts over the last decade to make sure all of its unique archival collections are described and that the guides to these collections are available online. Since 2003, nearly 50% of the Librarys archival holdings have been described for the first time and nearly 80% of its collection descriptions were put online for the first time.
The portal also includes over 120,000 pages of digitized manuscript material from, 20 collections [listed at http://archives.nypl.org/collection/digital]. Digitizing these materials not only allow scholars working around the world to study them remotely, but makes them more broadly accessible for the general public and easier to use for educational purposes.
We couldnt be more pleased with The Polonsky Foundations backing of our efforts to make all of our unique manuscript and archival collections more accessible, said Bill Stingone, the Librarys Assistant Director for Manuscripts and Archives and Charles J. Liebman Curator of Manuscripts. With their help we have begun the enormous task of digitizing our most important collections and built an online platform through which to serve them to anyone, anywhere, anytime. Now the Librarys most important resources are better positioned than ever to support the investigation and teaching of American history.
"Were delighted to support the digitisation of the New York Public Librarys great American history collections, said Dr. Leonard Polonsky, CBE, Trustee of The Polonsky Foundation. We have worked with several major libraries around the world to promote the democratisation of knowledge and making library collections freely available for a global public in this way. Digitizing these collections increases their potential audience exponentially, said Foundation Trustee Dr. Georgette Bennett, and also helps secure their availability for posterity.
The NYPL Archives & Manuscripts portal not only allows researchers to search for collections and engage with digitized materials, said Ben Vershbow, Director of NYPL Labs, it also allows them to read across collections at a distance. Were developing new features on the portal that allow researchers to view networks of relationships across collections, enabling serendipitous discoveriesfor example, tracking an individual name across multiple collections. Eventually, we imagine these networks extending outward across archival repositories globally, tying millions of documents together, and allowing curators and researchers to identify new relationships.
The Librarys manuscript material preserves evidence (often unique and unpublished) of human activity and achievement that forms a basis for the study of political, social, economic, and cultural history. Each year, these collections inform and inspire the work of scholars, writers, artists, filmmakers, family historians, and other advanced researchers who seek and then share the new knowledge and perspectives revealed to them through these resources.
Archives and manuscripts are also used by the Library and other institutions to exhibit, teach, and build educational toolsall of which provide the general public and students of all ages the opportunity to learn about the human experience through primary sources.
The effort to process and digitize these materials is ongoing, with generous funding from The Polonsky Foundation, The Robert W. Wilson Charitable Trust, and The Hermione Foundation.