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In the late 1980s, an Ad Hoc Committee formed to preserve Nova Scotia's newspaper heritage led to a province-wide project focused on digitizing historical and current newspapers. In March 2009, a consultation brought together libraries, archives, and historical societies to assess the status of newspaper preservation. With a $24,000 grant from the Nova Scotia Community Access Program, 19,000 pages of historic newspapers were scanned, including unique publications from various cultural backgrounds. This collaboration fosters broad public access to valuable Canadian historical resources.
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Nova Scotia Historical Newspapers www.nsnewspapers.ca
History of the Newspaper Project • In the late 1980s, an Ad Hoc Committee for the Preservation of/Access to Nova Scotian Newspapers was formed • Goal of establishing a province-wide collection, preservation, and access approach for newspapers (current and historical)
March 2009 Consultation • 20 years later, a consultation was held at the Nova Scotia Archives • Brought together libraries, archives, and historical societies • Explored the current status of collecting, preserving, providing access to the province’s newspapers
Findings of Consultation • Strong interest in collaborative digitization strategies • Digitization facilities existed, but no funding available • Newspapers lie outside of institutions’ mandates
Start of the Newspaper Project • Libraries Nova Scotia (a consortium of academic, college, special, and public libraries)takes the lead • Funding provided by Nova Scotia Community Access Program (CAP) • Steering committee included: Libraries Nova Scotia, NS Provincial Library, Nova Scotia Archives & Records Management, Beaton Institute, CBU, Legislative Library and Western Counties Regional Library
Funding • Received $24,000 grant from Nova Scotia Community Access Program • Two “scanners” employed: one at the Nova Scotia Archives, and one at the Mi’kmaq College Institute, CBU • Over the course of seven months, 19,000 pages of historic newspapers were scanned
Selection Process • Early and unique newspapers • Representing different regions, both urban and rural • Including different cultural groups (Gaelic, Mi’kmaq, African Nova Scotian) • Preservation: Some papers had to be digitized or their content would be lost • Originals (not microfilm)
Where did the newspapers come from? • Nova Scotia Archives & Records Management • The Beaton Institute, Cape Breton University • Cape Breton Regional Library • Private donors
Digitization Process • Scanning done from originals • “Digital repair” and paper conservation for papers in poor condition • Optical Character Recognition used for Cape Breton papers
Digitized Newspapers • Nova Scotia Chronicle and Weekly Advertiser (Halifax, 1769-1770) • The Port-Roseway Gazetteer and the Shelburne Advertiser, 1784-1785 • The Royal American Gazette (Shelburne), 1785 • The Nova-Scotia Packet and General Advertiser (Shelburne), 1786 • Pictou Bee (1835-1838) • The 4th Estate (Halifax, 1969-1978) • The Tiny Tattler (Central Grove, Digby County), 1934-1943 • Billa Na Queg (A New Day), 1964 • Micmac News, (Membertou), 1965-1992 • The Thermometer (Sydney), 1899-1900 • The Nova Scotia Gleaner (Sydney), 1929 • The Cape Breton News (Sydney), 1850-1852 • The Daily Advocate (Sydney), 1878 • The Cape Breton Advocate, (Sydney), 1899 • The Daily Times (Sydney), 1878 • The Sydney Booster (Sydney), 1935 • Glace Bay Enterprise (Glace Bay), 1896 • Semi-Weekly Express (Sydney), 1879
Communities Shelburne Halifax Central Grove Pictou Sydney Membertou Glace Bay Eskasoni
Websites • Nova Scotia Archives hosting “mainland” Nova Scotia newspapers • Memorial University hosting Cape Breton newspapers • Newspapers searchable by date • Cape Breton newspapers full-text searchable • Images viewed in high resolution with ability to zoom and pan
Outcomes • Enabled broad public access to several outstanding examples of Canadian newspapers • Fostered a broad partnership of organizations with expertise, infrastructure and interest in historical newspapers • With a small amount of funding, produced a considerable product in a very short time frame
Next steps • Potential continuation of the project • Only a fraction of historical Nova Scotian papers have been digitized