LC National Digital Library Program announces new online

From: Tamara Swora-Gober (tswo@LOC.GOV)
Date: Wed Feb 16 2000 - 11:48:47 CST

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    Message-Id: <200002161739.KAA74622@dns.ccit.arizona.edu>
    Date:         Wed, 16 Feb 2000 12:48:47 -0500
    From: Tamara Swora-Gober <mailto:tswo@LOC.GOV>
    Subject:      LC National Digital Library Program announces new online
    To: mailto:IMAGELIB@LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU
    

    <pre> This message is being widely posted

    ********************************************** The Library of Congress National Digital Library Program announces the release of two new collections at American Memory where over 70 online collections are now available.

    “From Slavery to Freedom: The African-American Pamphlet Collection, 1824-1909” at

    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aapchtml/aapchome.html

    “Omaha Indian Music: From the American Folklife Center” at

    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/omhhtml/omhhome.html

    ************************************************************
    “From Slavery to Freedom: The African-American Pamphlet Collection, 1824-1909” contains 397 pamphlets written by African Americans and others on a variety of subjects relating to African-American history, including slavery, African colonization, Emancipation, and Reconstruction, all from the Rare Book and Special Collections Division.
     The materials range from personal accounts and public orations to organizational reports and legislative speeches. Authors include Lydia Maria Child, Alexander Crummell, Frederick Douglass, Kelly Miller, Charles Sumner, Mary Church Terrell, and Booker T. Washington. The collection offers page images of each pamphlet as well as fully searchable transcribed texts and browse lists organized by author, title, and subject. Although they do not offer a comprehensive history of African-American life, these pamphlets provide insight into the ideas and events of their day in a historically important physical format that often fails to survive the test of time. Those interested in publishing will enjoy the variety of papers, type faces, and printing methods used to produce these materials. The collection complements the American Memory Daniel A.P. Murray Pamphlet Collection at http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aap/

    Building the Digital Collection

    The digital images that make up “From Slavery to Freedom: The African-American Pamphlet Collection, 1824-1909” were created at the Library of Congress by contract staff using a variety of capture devices. Most pages were scanned as bitonal TIFF images using a Bookeye overhead scanner. Pages with illustrations and significant handwriting were scanned as 8-bit grayscale TIFFs. Color graphs and color covers that were too dark for bitonal scanning were scanned as 24-bit color TIFFs. Grayscale and color scanning was performed on two devices. Small disbound or single-leaf items that could be inverted were scanned on a UMAX 11 x 17-inch flatbed scanner. Items that could not be inverted or that were larger than 11 x 17 inches were scanned with a PhaseOne Photophase Plus digital camera back mounted on an overhead Toyo 4x 5-inch studio camera.

    The preparation of the searchable texts occurred offsite, where a subcontractor rekeyed the documents from the page images.. The text was transformed with an OmniMark program to HTML 3.2 for indexing and viewing with Web browsers, including links from the text to the page images. MARC records were enhanced to provide access to the collection, with links either to the full text or to page images. In addition, a page-turning feature allows consecutive viewing of the page images.

    From Slavery to Freedom: The African-American Pamphlet Collection, 1824-1909 can be found at http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aapchtml/

    **********************************************************
    “Omaha Indian Music from the American Folklife Center” documents the music of the Omaha Indian Tribe. It includes 44 recordings made by Francis La Flesche and Alice Cunningham Fletcher between 1895 and 1897, as well as recordings made by staff of the American Folklife Center at the 1983 Omaha harvest celebration pow-wow and the 1985 Hethu’shka Society concert held at the Library of Congress. Also included with this collection are interviews with members of the Omaha tribe that provide background information about the songs performed, field notes and tape logs made by Center staff during the 1983 pow-wow, and photographs and related publicity materials from the various performances.

    Digitizing the Sound Recordings

    The wax cylinder recordings presented in the online collection were taken from the Omaha Indian Music: Historical Recordings from the Fletcher/La Flesche Collection (AFC L71) preservation tape copy recordings. The cylinders were played back onto magnetic tape using a modified Edison Home Phonograph. The analog preservation copy tapes were recorded in a half-track format at 7.5 ips. These preservation tape copies served as the source for the digital audio tape (RDAT) copies which were, in turn, used to produce the digital files presented online.

    The original recordings for the 1983 Omaha harvest celebration pow-wow, the 1983 interview, and the 1999 interview sound recordings are analog recordings made on Nagra tape recorders, generally in a stereo mode and recorded at 7.5 ips. At the pow-wow, a variety of microphone configurations was used, some of which are documented in photographs and fieldnotes included in this presentation. The original 1985 Neptune Plaza Library of Congress recording is also analog, recorded at the concert on ten-inch open-reel tape. Each of these analog recordings was transferred to digital audio tapes (RDAT) that served as the source for the production of the digital files presented here. The WAVE files were created from the RDAT tapes at a sampling rate of 22,050 samples per second, 16-bit word length, and a single (mono) channel. The RealAudio files were derived from the WAVE files by digital processing and were created for users who have at least a 14.4 modem.

    Digitizing the Photographs

    The original negatives and color transparencies in the Omaha collection consist primarily of 35mm black-and-white negatives and color slides. In order to provide researchers with access to the entire body of photographic documentation from the 1983 pow-wow and the 1985 concert, the online collection includes both blocks of images and individual selections. For the black-and- white negatives, the blocks represent original camera rolls and are the digital equivalent of a contact sheet.
     For the color slides, the blocks represent the storage holders used by the American Folklife Center to archive the photographs. Each holder contains up to twenty images as selected and identified by the photographer. These photographer's selections are more or less in
    "shooting order," with only the most redundant or poor-quality photographs discarded. Taken together, the digital proof sheets and color storage units present all of the 1,090 photographs in the collection. The online collection also includes 326 individually digitized black-and-white and color photographs. These images were selected by the team that assembled the online collection.

    Digitizing the Manuscripts

    Manuscript materials were scanned onsite by the NDLP paper scanning and text conversion contractor. UMAX flatbed scanners were used to produce the images of most of the manuscripts. The Library's online presentation of the data pages also employs a "page turner" or
    "electronic binder" that permits the user to navigate the manuscript pages, turning to the next or a previous image, or selecting an image by number. The inline service images displayed in the browser are GIF images with a spatial resolution of about 495 x 640 pixels; a hyperlink on the image provides access to the master image.

    “Omaha Indian Music from the American Folklife Center” can be found at http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/omhhtml/

    ************************************************* Please direct any questions about these collections to mailto:ndlpcoll@loc.gov

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