Proposal
Table of Contents
Significance
History
Methodology
and Standards
Revised
Plan of Work
Dissemination
Significance
Background
The New York
State Archives, in partnership with Cornell University,
the New York State Library, the Adirondack Museum, the
State University of New York College of Environmental
Science and Forestry, and Warren and Ulster County governments,
seeks funding to create a World Wide Web-based research
resource on environmental history. The Web site will
link MAchine-Readable Catalog (MARC) records, Encoded
Archival Description (EAD) finding aids, and digitized
reproductions of archival material to create a virtual
research collection focusing on a pivotal facet of America's
environmental history: the Adirondack and Catskill Parks.
This innovative access tool will provide the basis for
access to information about, and reproductions of, the
holdings of hundreds of non-profit, academic, and local
and State government repositories. It will be freely
available to scholars, students, and citizens throughout
the world via the World Wide Web.
The ultimate
goal of this cooperative project is to further expand
accessibility by developing a single point of access
to information about archival material in repositories
throughout New York State, and to create a virtual research
collection that will serve as a model for generating
additional collections in the future. This project will
enable the State Archives to construct a Web site that
brings together access tools ranging from a traditional
Online Public Access Catalog (OPAC) to a union database
of EAD-encoded finding aids. It will also lay the foundation
for future growth by developing standards for finding
aid content, EAD markup, and digitization that will
enable the State Archives to guide other repositories
wishing to contribute to the navigational system. Moreover,
it will help to move EAD implementation beyond the academic
realm. All of the EAD projects undertaken to date have
been initiated by academic institutions, and center
on the holdings of large, often university-based, manuscript
repositories. This project represents a necessary first
step in promoting implementation of EAD among government,
corporate, and non-profit repositories.
Establishing
partnerships with repositories around the State is critical
to developing a strong integrated virtual research collection.
The Archives will serve as the lead with six partners
on this project: the Adirondack Museum, Cornell University,
the New York State Library, the State University of
New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry,
and the archives of Ulster County and Warren County
governments. These repositories have committed significant
amounts of time and resources to assuring the success
of this project (see Appendix VI. Letters of Commitment
and Appendix II. Description of Participating Institutions).
These partners
bring expertise and experience gained from similar projects.
Through the Cornell Institute for Digital Collections
(CIDC), Cornell University has assumed a national leadership
role with its research into providing an optimal Web
environment for EAD-encoded finding aids. Based on the
research and implementation practices developed by CIDC,
Cornell University is converting all its existing finding
aids to EAD. These experiences will prove invaluable
to the project. In addition, CIDC Assistant Director
Cornell Peter Hirtle, who will serve on the Project
Partner Group, is a frequent speaker, author, and instructor
on issues relating to copyright and archives. The Project
Partner Group will draw on his copyright expertise as
they address copyright issues related to the digitized
images. The Adirondack Museum recently received a grant
from the General Electric Company to create a Web site
that will be incorporated into primary and secondary
school curricula, and its experience with digitizing
collections will also benefit this project. The New
York State Library's server will host the digitized
images, and Library staff will help project staff create
a structure for the image database and the Web interface.
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Significance
of Environmental History
Concern about
the conservation of natural resources and the preservation
of wilderness areas, wildlife habitats, and areas of
natural beauty has grown dramatically in recent decades.
Balancing human needs with the health of the natural
environment may be the most pressing global issue of
the twenty-first century. The history of environmental
affairs in New York State is the story of how New Yorkers
have used natural resources and how they struggle to
use soil, timber, water, air, and wildlife in ways that
do not do irreparable damage. Environmental policies
developed in New York State have in many cases set national
and international precedents. The government of New
York State was the first in the world to define parcels
of land that it owned as "wilderness area" requiring
permanent protection. This policy, enshrined in Article
14 of the New York State Constitution, inspired the
federal Wilderness Act and similar legislation in other
nations. New York State was also the first in the nation
to codify a Conservation Law, establish a sustained
enforcement system staffed by fish and wildlife officers
and forest rangers, and create a state park system.
At present, an array of federal, State, and local laws
shape New Yorkers' efforts to ameliorate the effects
of existing environmental damage, prevent further environmental
harm, and respect the rights of the people who live,
work, and play in the State.
The State Archives'
Strategic Plan for Documenting Environmental Affairs
in New York State has pinpointed the State's forest
preserves as a prime theme for development and delivery
as a virtual collection. These immense preserves-the
largest east of the Mississippi-are the birthplace of
the American environmental movement and at the crux
of the ensuing debates on preservation issues.
The
Adirondack and Catskill Parks . This project
will focus on documenting the environmental, cultural,
social, political, economic, and scientific history
of New York State's two great natural areas: the Adirondack
Park and the Catskill Park and the State-owned forest
preserves within their boundaries. The creation of the
Adirondack and Catskill Forest Preserves in 1885 was
the first major milestone in a long and contentious
struggle over the fate of New York State's forests.
Initially totaling 715,268 acres, the forest preserves
consist of State-owned land that "shall be forever kept
as wild forest lands" as mandated by an 1894 amendment
to the State's constitution. Presently, the Adirondack
and Catskill Forest Preserves embrace more than 3,087,000
acres and constitute the largest complex of wild public
lands in the eastern United States. Over the years,
the use and management of these preserves have shaped
the history of vast tracts of New York State lands,
public and private, throughout the State. They have
also set precedents for the policies adopted by other
states and at the federal level.
While the State-owned
forest preserve lands form the heart of the Adirondack
and Catskill Parks, much of the land within each park
is owned by individuals, corporations, or local governments.
Established respectively in 1892 and 1904, the Adirondack
and Catskill Parks presently total roughly 6,700,000
acres. The Adirondack Park is the largest parkland in
the contiguous United States, encompassing an area more
than two and a half times larger than Yellowstone National
Park. The parks are unique in that they have evolved
into a blending of public and private lands. The uses
of the privately held land within each park are limited;
park inhabitants live in a landscape in which historic
character and natural environment are legally protected.
Over the years,
the Adirondack and Catskill Parks have experienced,
and continue to experience, a variety of threats to
their integrity as protected areas. Balancing the needs
of the State's urban areas with preserving the agricultural
economy and rural ways of life within the parks has
engaged government at all levels as well as hundreds
of citizen groups and non-profit organizations. New
York City's use of water drawn from the Catskill watershed,
logging, and tourism have had complex and far-reaching
environmental, social, political, economic, scientific,
and engineering effects. Such issues have forced the
private and public sectors to work together to ensure
the protection of these nationally renowned resources.
Such problems
are not limited to New York State. The Great Smoky Mountain
National Park and Yellowstone National Park have faced,
and continue to face, the same threats. From Cape Cod,
Massachusetts to Mount Ranier National Park, other states
and localities face the same challenges that currently
confront New York State. The records at the heart of
this project provide extensive documentation of how
New Yorkers have met these challenges. As such, they
are of interest to scholars, state and local government
officials, teachers, scientists, and environmental historians
seeking to apply the lessons learned by New York State
to other areas of the country.
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Significance
of the Records
This project
will enhance access to a body of unique and unpublished
records documenting the relationship between New Yorkers
and land resources. The records were selected based
principally on their a high research value to investigators
of environmental history but also on their level of
use and extent of descriptive materials. The chosen
collections are all highly relevant to the theme, possess
historical value, and have enjoyed moderate to heavy
use by scholars. They were created and collected by
various individuals and agencies, including government,
private non-profit, and academic entities.
Selections draw
from the holdings of seven repositories in New York
State which are primary holders of records relating
to the Adirondack and Catskill Parks, and also representative
of the variety of public and private historical record
holders in New York State. Cornell University and the
New York State Library are members of the New York State
Comprehensive Research Libraries consortium, and the
College of Environmental Science and Forestry is representative
of the college and university archives. The Adirondack
Museum is typical of many of the historical societies
and museums across the State, and Ulster and Warren
Counties provide the perspective of the local government
community.A brief overview of each partner organization
and its related records is provided in Appendix II.
The records are in myriad formats, including manuscript
on bound and loose paper, glass negatives and lantern
slides, photographic prints on paper, aerial photographs,
and cartographic materials.
Collectively
these records document the wide array of public and
private perspectives on the acquisition, management,
and use of the Adirondack and Catskill Parks. They shed
light on the environmental, cultural, social, political,
economic, and scientific history of New York State's
two great natural areas. They provide a wealth of information
not only on the forest preserves, but the parks, their
inhabitants, and the millions of tourists who have visited
them for well over a century. Spanning the years 1732
through the present, these records collectively form
a body of unique and diverse primary research material
that is unparalleled for the study and interpretation
of the Adirondacks and Catskills and their impact on
society.
Although the
Adirondacks and Catskills have intense personal value
to many present day New Yorkers, these records-especially
those pre-dating 1925-have national research importance.
They document the environmental history of two mammoth
wilderness areas; the history of science and technology,
particularly 18 th and 19 th century cartography and
surveying; and the rise of wilderness exploration. They
also provide insight into changing popular and scholarly
beliefs about nature and humanity's relationship to
it as well as the birth of the conservation movement
that flourished in New York State and throughout the
nation in the late 19 th and early 20 th century. For
example, the Verplanck Colvin maps and field books and
the earlier James Frost field books constitute a rich
source of primary research material documenting the
largest and most comprehensive state-supported topographical
survey of the 19 th century. Colvin's work in the Adirondacks
had a profound influence on the growth of the conservation
movement at both the state and national level. The New
York State Library maintains the papers of Franklin
B. Hough, nationally renowned as the "Father of American
Forestry."
Scholars and
teachers seeking visual materials about the history
and development of the State's and country's environmental
movement will find thousands of photographs which provide
stunning visual documentation about the exploration,
conservation, and resource management of the Adirondacks
and Catskills. Photographs include those by naturalist
photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard, images of forestry
practices held by Cornell University, photographs taken
by students and professors at the College of Environmental
Science and Forestry, and photographic prints and negatives
from the New York State Conservation Department. For
those interested in mapping, surveying, and tracking
land use, the numerous maps and surveys maintained by
the Warren and Ulster Counties provide a wealth of information.
Records of the Ashokan Reservoir document the acquisition
and lawsuits resulting from the process which forced
hundreds of residents off of their land and submerged
entire villages to provide more drinking water for New
York City.
Post-1925 records
included in this proposal are equally historically significant
and of national relevance. They address issues of acquisition
(property seizures, legislation); management (shoreline
and wetland usage, construction of roads and highways
including the Adirondack Northway/Interstate 87, water
resource development, regulations); use by businesses
(lumber industry, forest products, development of ski
areas, Olympics); and use by individuals (recreation
activities, land ownership, property loss compensation,
great camps, limits on private land use, conservation
efforts). The Department of Environmental Conservation's
Executive Office files provide comprehensive documentation
of the department's extensive programs designed to protect
as well as manage the natural resources of the Adirondacks
and Catskills. Many of these programs, such as the reforestation
and endangered species programs experienced unparalleled
success (and continue to do so) and have served as models
for other states as well as the federal government.
Records relating to Cornell's "Adirondack Experiment,"
a clear cutting of land near Saranac Lake, raised such
a controversy that the College of Forestry was removed
from Cornell. Records from the Department of Environmental
Conservation and the Adirondack Park Agency provide
extensive documentation of the State's efforts to work
with the federal government, other states, localities,
and the private sector to study, contain, and mitigate
the harmful effects of acid rain.
Taken together,
the post-1925 records document what many consider to
be one of the most pressing global concerns of the 21
st century-balancing human needs with the health of
the natural environment and society's obligations to
future generations.
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Significance
of the Project
From the development
of the Iroquois Confederacy to the upheavals of the
late twentieth century, New York State has occupied
a pivotal position in American politics, commerce, and
culture. During the past two centuries it has given
rise to some of the nation's largest corporations and
most influential cultural movements and institutions.
At present, the State's boundaries encompass both the
nation's most populous metropolitan region and some
of its most rural areas.
Records held
by New York State's repositories document key developments
in American political, social, cultural, and economic
history, and this project will ensure that access to
them is improved. Currently, researchers seeking archival
material on a particular topic must undertake a complex
search process. Searches of collection-level records
within national databases, including OCLC and RLIN,
sometimes yield thousands of "hits" or uncover records
that are too old or too brief to be fully useful. As
a result, researchers often have to perform multiple
searches of institution-specific Web sites and OPACs.
This project will facilitate rapid access and retrieval
by creating a single point of access to relevant collection-level
records, EAD finding aids, and digitized reproductions
of archival records.
The research
resource will reflect both the current state of archival
descriptive practice and the recent archival information
retrieval experiments and user studies. Recent studies
have revealed that many end-level users prize precision
when conducting initial online searches, and that MARC
records yield the most precise search results. For professional
researchers, family and community historians, and many
other users, collection-level MARC records will remain
a basic access tool. But Web access has also heightened
users' expectations to know more specific information
- to go beyond the summary information found in the
catalog record.
A key goal of
this project is to make available a substantial body
of EAD-encoded finding aids. This will benefit scholars
and other researchers seeking comprehensive search results
and the ability to discern intellectual relationships
between physically distant collections. This project
will help the State Archives and its partners to upgrade
existing finding aids and to ensure more consistency
in content and structure. Each encoded finding aid will
be hyperlinked to its corresponding MARC record, so
that users can instantly review any finding aid uncovered
during a MARC records search. This feature will capitalize
on the richness of detail found within archival finding
aids and the enhanced searching made possible by EAD.
Another key goal
of the project is to make available a wide array of
digitized reproductions of archival documents and images.
The digitized material will constitute a virtual research
collection of regionally specific, yet nationally significant,
material. These multimedia resources, drawn from collections
for which EAD-encoded finding aids will be created,
will be both hyperlinked to the finding aids and separately
searchable. At present, only four online collections,
all of them part of the American Memory project of the
Library of Congress, specifically concern American environmental
history. Unlike three of these four collections, the
online collection proposed will focus on the environmental
history of a specific region and link it to that of
the nation as a whole.
Most virtual
research collections are created from the holdings of
academic institutions and large manuscript repositories.
In contrast, this project will also highlight the important
holdings of state and local government archives and
small repositories. It will make available material
that is seldom used by scholars but rich in research
value, such as local government records.
The virtual collection
will facilitate scholarly research. Researchers have
become increasingly accustomed to using online databases
such as OCLC, RLIN, and Archives USA , but
recent studies of scholarly archival users demonstrate
that many find these resources insufficient; crucial
information remains locked within paper documents kept
by individual repositories. At the same time, articles
in scholarly publications such as the Journal of
American History and the Journal for MultiMedia
History indicate that researchers are embracing
topically oriented Web resources such as the Cold
War International History Project, created by the
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Providing
streamlined, thematically oriented access to descriptive
tools and digital reproductions of archival material
will make it easier for scholars studying American environmentalism,
wilderness exploration, resource management, and public
policy to locate archival material pertinent to their
research.
Humanities researchers
and post-secondary educators will make use of the virtual
research collection and its underlying navigational
system. In recent years, a growing number of scholars
have identified the Web as the ideal means of enabling
undergraduates to analyze substantial bodies of primary
source material in physically distant repositories.
This project will make available a substantial body
of primary source material that can be incorporated
into undergraduate courses on the history of the environment,
social reform movements, economic development, and public
policy in the United States.
The virtual research
collection will also be of interest to teachers at all
grade levels. In 1996, the New York State Education
Department issued new Social Studies Learning Standards
that require every public school student to learn how
to analyze historical records such as diaries, letters,
photographs, account books, and census records. Many
other states, as well as the National Center for History
in Schools have adopted similar standards. Creating
a searchable pool of digitized archival material will
allow teachers and students to examine important yet
currently inaccessible archival material.
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History
This project
is at once the culmination of a decade of research and
partnership building, and the beginning of a paradigm
of resource delivery that we know the research community
awaits. The State Archives has conducted several documentation
as well as preservation and access projects, which have
positioned us to succeed at building and delivering
this virtual resource on environmental history. We have
done our research, listened to stakeholders, created
a documentation plan that satisfies public and private
needs, and tested some of the emerging delivery technologies.
Our past and continuing investment in documentation
planning, and archives preservation and access propels
us to this higher level of information and image delivery.
New York State
faces a unique challenge in providing access to its
historical records. It has more holders of historical
records-over 7,000-than in any other state. Approximately
2,700 are non-profit or academic institutions, and more
than 4,300 are local government entities. The level
of technical expertise, material resources, and technological
infrastructure varies widely. New York is at once the
home of members of the RLG (Research Libraries Group)-which
feature OPACs, EAD implementation, and digitized materials-and
of small volunteer-run historical societies that lack
computers.
During the 1980s,
Cornell University began addressing the State's access
needs by surveying all known historical records and
creating summary records for each collection. The resulting
catalog records were published in the Historic Document
Inventory (HDI). The New York State Archives recently
assumed responsibility for maintaining and updating
the HDI, and the resource is now available through the
Archives' Web-based catalog, Excelsior. The online HDI
catalog enables repositories without OPACs to make their
collection-level catalog records readily available to
researchers. At present, the HDI catalog contains more
than 23,000 MARC records describing material held by
approximately 1,250 repositories throughout the State.
These records are also included in the Research Libraries
Information Network (RLIN) database and plans are being
developed for loading the records into OCLC's WorldCat.
The New York State Archives recognizes that this resource
is incomplete and insufficient for today's researchers.
Missing from the HDI are records from repositories that
maintain their own OPACs as well as avenues to finding
aids and digitized images.
The New York
State Archives has already begun to address the needs
of scholars for a thematic approach to identifying research
collections by developing a series of new Web pages
on its Web site. Mounted in September 2000, the Rediscovering
New York History and Culture (RNYHC) pages aim to improve
the coverage and content of New York State's documentary
heritage, to ensure the documentary evidence is easily
accessible for research and learning, and to highlight
the holdings of smaller institutions. The Webpages serve
as a pathway directing users to historical records and
resources around the State. A variety of features tell
the stories of New York's communities and people, including
a statewide catalog of archival/historical collections,
a directory of historical records repositories, and
information on special groups and topics, such as African-Americans,
environmental affairs, and mental health. It provides
hyperlinks to related institutional Web sites, OPACs,
electronic finding aids, and digital exhibits.
In 1999, the
State Archives undertook a project to identify the issues,
people, organizations, and events in New York environmental
affairs that are most critical to document. The project
has clearly demonstrated New York's leadership in the
environmental movement as well as the value of historical
records of environmental affairs for scholars, activists,
lawyers, legislators, and teachers, both local and global.
Through the Archives' Documentary Heritage Program,
the State Archives itself has funded several documentation
projects that have identified and improved access to
collections relating to environmental affairs. Recent
grant projects include a survey of records relating
to New York City's Catskills watershed held by the Resnick
Library, State University of New York at Delhi, and
a documentation/preservation plan for records of the
Thousand Islands Land Trust. The Archives will continue
to stress environmental affairs as a funding priority,
and will integrate related grant products in the proposed
virtual research library, should it be funded.
Besides identifying
and supporting environmental affairs documentation,
the Archives is currently developing a Statewide Access
System that will bring together historical resources
and collecting organizations in a multi-faceted Web
navigational tool. Its key feature is to retrieve information
from multiple academic, government, and not-for-profit
information systems throughout the State without requiring
users to perform multiple disconnected searches. In
addition it will identify the necessary infrastructure
for housing the finding aids and making them available.
Developing this Web navigational tool is the Archives'
highest priority for the years 2000-2003. To date we
have drafted a framework, established partnerships and
completed a user study, committed funds to hire an information
architecture consultant, and allocated staff time to
begin developing the Web navigation system components.
Having begun the development of an access framework,
we are now ready to populate it with the products of
this project: a virtual collection of collections, including
finding aids and images, all available via the Web.
The project that we propose here would yield the content-images
and information about collections-with which to showcase
the features of Web navigation system, and the experience
from which to develop tools to help New York State's
historical record holders become part of the system.
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Methodology
and Standards
Project
outcomes:
This project
will undertake the following:
- Develop and/or revise descriptive tools for over
100 collections relating to the Adirondack and Catskill
Parks from seven partner institutions.
- Create encoded finding aids and provide links between
US MARC records, finding aids and digitized images.
- Produce and provide World Wide Web access to 3000
digital images drawn from partners' collections.
- Demonstrate the potential for developing rich research
resources based on major themes.
- Develop and publish guidelines and "best practices"
for selection of collections and images, and creation
of EAD-encoded finding aids, to serve as a model for
New York State repositories.
- Assess training needs of historical record holders
seeking to increase access to their holdings through
EAD and digitization.
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Methodology
and Standards for the Virtual Research Collection
The primary goal
of the project is to create a rich research resource
by unifying geographically distributed collections using
USMARC collection-level records, EAD-encoded finding
aids, and digitized images. We will provide access to
and control of digitized images through this three-tiered
archival access system, following the model established
by the Online Archive of New Mexico and the California
Heritage Digital Image Access Project.
The State Archives
and its partners recognize that the goal of developing
a single search interface will be accomplished gradually
and involve considerable experimentation. The first
stages of development, represented by the HDI, the Rediscovering
New York History and Culture Web pages, and other initiatives,
have allowed the State Archives to start developing
a more comprehensive Web navigational system. This system,
which will initially be rooted in centralized databases
maintained by the State Archives and its access partners,
will provide the means for users to navigate across
collections. For example, when a user encounters a collection-level
record that has a finding aid link, he/she will be able
to access that finding aid by clicking on the link.
The user will then navigate through the related finding
aid and find icons or in-line thumbnail images, which
represent full images or groups of images. Clicking
on the icon or in-line image will open the full-scale
image in the browser window. If users enter the virtual
research collection through the image or finding aid
database, they will have the option of following links
to either the collection-level record or the related
finding aid. Users will also have the option of searching
centralized finding aid and image databases.
The State Archives
and its partners will consciously strive to strike a
balance between centralized and local hosting of the
collection-level records, EAD-encoded finding aids,
and digitized images that will populate the Web navigational
system, and to develop mechanisms that make simultaneous
searching possible. In doing so, they will draw on the
technical infrastructure, guidelines, procedures, and
tools developed by the American Heritage Virtual Archive,
the Online Archive of California, the Virginia Heritage,
and the Online Archives of New Mexico.
USMARC
records . Most of the records that form
the core of this project currently have USMARC records
in at least one of the following: a local OPAC, the
HDI catalog hosted by the shared OPAC of the State Archives
and State Library, the Research Libraries Information
Network (RLIN), and OCLC. If the catalog record for
a given collection is outdated or missing, the State
Archives or one of its partners will create one, adhering
to USMARC, APPM, AACR2, and other descriptive standards.
This will assure that catalog records for project collections
can be integrated into institutional catalogs, the HDI,
and RLIN. Each USMARC record will contain links to the
corresponding finding aid and digitized images drawn
from the collection described.
Finding
aids . Unpublished finding aids
currently exist for the 102 project series/collections
but vary in structure and depth. Some contain extensive
administrative histories, scope and content notes, and
detailed container lists, while others consist of a
brief scope and content note and box listings. A few
of the finding aids are maintained in a database structure.
The Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 (this is a civil service title
used for all State Archives archivist positions) and
Clerk 2 will revise finding aids and catalog records,
working with staff and volunteers at the participating
institutions. To facilitate implementation of EAD, project
staff will standardize finding aid structure and content.
Scope and content notes and administrative histories
will be expanded, and subject and geographical references
will be enhanced. Finding aids will be created for approximately
one dozen collections and records series that currently
lack them. Project staff will provide progressive levels
of specificity for retrieval, including authority information
on organizations and institutions, contextual information
(provenance, administrative, biographical, scope and
content), and detailed series and container-level information.
Online access to finding aids in database formats will
be provided.
Finding aids
will be encoded using Standard Generalized Markup Language
(SGML)-based Encoded Archival Description Document Type
Definition version 1.0 (or the version current at the
time of encoding). The Society of American Archivists
and the Library of Congress support this standard, which
is platform-independent and thus facilitates maintenance
and migration of data. Owing to the amount of encoding
work to be done, the State Archives and its partners
will contract with a vendor. However, the Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 and other State Archives staff
will assume responsibility for establishing conversion
guidelines, ensuring that the vendor meets them, and
making local corrections as needed.
The vendor will
supply both Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) and Extensible
Markup Language (XML) versions of each finding aid.
This will enable the partner institutions to mount their
finding aids on their own Web sites and allow the State
Archives to make the finding aids broadly accessible.
To date, the only Web browsers capable of reading XML-encoded
documents are Panorama and Internet Explorer 5. The
majority of users of the New York State Archives Web
site have older browsers that are not XML-compatible,
and the State Archives is committed to ensuring that
its resources are accessible to the greatest possible
number of users. At the same time, the State Archives
recognizes that XML will in all likelihood supplant
HTML as the markup language of the World Wide Web, and
that the full potential of EAD encoding can be realized
within an SGML/XML environment. As a result, the State
Archives will furnish both HTML and XML versions of
each finding aid until the overwhelming majority of
its user population has ready access to XML-enabled
browsers.
Digitized images. The third component
of the project is to provide access to 3000 selected images
drawn from the seven partner collections. The State Archives
and its partners have chosen digital technology for its
broadcast ability; it is the only means by which we can
unite and make accessible important images that are geographically
scattered. Our motive in digitizing these images is access,
not preservation. We do not propose to reformat whole
series/collections, as is the preservation model. Rather,
our approach is to select individual images that aptly
illustrate or inform our theme. Our Scholars advisory
board will drive the selection process, which will itself
add value, through collaboration, to the end product.
Our pool of
candidates includes maps, glass negatives, field books,
aerial photographs, lantern slides, and broadsides.
Partners, scholars, and project staff will collaborate
to develop a conceptual framework for the image collection
and refine selection criteria accordingly. They will
consider criteria published by Columbia University Libraries,
RLG, the Digital Library Federation (DLF), the Library
of Congress, and others as models. Besides research
value and collaborative potential, criteria will likely
include the following:
- Appropriateness for unification with other collections
- Importance for understanding environmental history
- Relevance to and enhancement of proposed online
collection
- Content, especially information on underdocumented
topics
- Broad researcher interest /demand
- Level of accessibility
- Searchability
- Condition (sufficiently stable to allow transport
and handling)
- Copyright or privacy issues
In refining
digital benchmarks for conversion, access, and quality
control (QC), the State Archives will seek guidance
from Peter Hirtle, a member of the project partner group
and Assistant Director of the Cornell Institute for
Digital Collections. We are committed to developing
an institutional digitization plan that is informed
by resources, priorities, staffing, and mission. We
will look to institutions with advanced programs, such
as Cornell, as models.
We plan to contract
with an outside service provider for scanning services,
and will develop an RFP for digital imaging services
using the RLG Request for Proposal Guidelines (1997).
For each source image or document, we will purchase
a master image, a service image, and a reference image.
The master image will be an uncompressed TIFF delivered
on high-quality tape; the service image will be a compressed
JPEG delivered on CD. The reference image will be a
1K JPEG delivered on CD and publishable on the Web.
We will not seek to enhance any images.
Project staff
will develop and carry out a quality control (QC) program
based on the guidelines provided by Kenney and Rieger.
Our QC program will compare all deliverables (TIFF files,
JPEG files), any printouts, and the image database against
originals. We will work with New York State Education
Department information technology staff and New York
State Museum colleagues with experience in digitization
to establish the QC environment and ensure that minimally
acceptable technical standards are met or surpassed.
Just as the State
Archives recognizes the weakness of digitization as
a preservation tool, so it does the challenges associated
with keeping digital files usable. To respond to the
fragility of the medium and hardware/software obsolescence,
we will incorporate the digital masters in our existing
archival electronic records preservation program. They
will be stored on either optical or magnetic media in
our temperature- and humidity-controlled vault at the
State Records Center. Archival scans will be migrated
to new media every five years. Periodically, we will
review the efficacy of the uncompressed TIFF file format
to determine if changes are required for continued access.
The thumbnail and access images will be shipped on CDs,
in standard file formats, and moved to the RAID array
associated with our Web server.
Access to the
images will be provided through Hyperion, an image indexing
database added to our SIRSI catalog. Hperion provides
users with access to digital files via standard Web
browsers such as Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator.
The Project Partner
Group and project staff will design the image database.
Fields will likely include name of collection, host
repository, image title, ID number, format, subjects,
geographical location, and landmark. The image database,
searchable by format, will be not only integrated with
the online catalog records and finding aids, but also
available on the virtual research collection Webpages
as a discrete collection. Project staff will link the
images to the corresponding finding aids to enable users
can navigate among images, finding aids, and catalog
records.
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Plan
of Work ( Revised )
Advisory
Boards
Two groups will
provide direction at all the stages of the project.
The Project Partner Group will guide the technical and
archival operations of the project. The Scholars Advisory
Board (board members are listed in Project Participants
and Advisory Board Members) will assist in identifying
important research resources to be included, advise
on the priorities for digitization, and ensure that
the user's perspective informs project decisions.
Specifically
the Scholars Advisory Board will:
- refine the intent and purpose of the virtual research
collection, suggesting guidelines for finding aids
and images to include in the resource;
- review the list of proposed collections and make
recommendations for additions or changes
- establish selection criteria for digitization of
images;
- evaluate the proposed structure for the virtual
research collection and critique the contents and
navigation during its develop;
- identify additional materials to mount on the site
and possible future projects;
- suggest appropriate publicity routes for announcing
the resource to the environmental history, library,
and archival communities.
The Project
Partner Group will consist of representatives from each
partner institution-the New York State Archives, Cornell
University, the New York State Library, the Adirondack
Museum, the New York State College of Environmental
Science and Forestry, and Warren and Ulster County governments.
Group members will undertake these specific tasks:
- establish criteria for selecting images and draft
guidelines for selecting and mounting images on the
Web;
- develop an EAD style sheet for use in the project
and for statewide application, along with suggestions
for mounting EAD-encoded finding aids;
- identify the search fields for the image index
- schedule visits of the Archives/Records Management
Specialist 2 to the partner institutions;
- work with the project staff to finalize the proposed
collection lists, assess the quality of existing finding
aids, and create or refine finding aids;
- draft guidelines for what should be included on
a virtual research collection site.
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Stage
1: Planning and Start-up (December 2001 - July 2002)
On learning of
the grant award, the Project Coordinators will begin
the process of hiring the grant-funded positions: Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 and Clerk 2. Positions should
be filled by May 2002, when the project will officially
begin. Offices and processing areas for project staff
will be prepared, with computers, phone lines, data
lines, and LAN access. Orientation for all project staff,
both NEH- and State Archives-funded, on project purpose,
theme, and plan of work will take place immediately
following the start date.
The Project Director
will convene both the Scholars Board and the Project
Partner Group during the start-up stage. Meetings of
each will be scheduled for late June/early July. The
Scholars Board will refine the intent and purpose of
the virtual research collection, suggesting guidelines
for finding aids and images to be included in the resource.
Board members will also review the list of proposed
collections and make recommendations for additions or
changes. The Project Partner Group, composed of representatives
from partner institutions, will put the recommendations
of the Scholars Board into practice.
The Preservation
Administrator and Imaging Services Coordinator will
develop an institutional digitization plan, using the
Cornell University Libraries plan and others as models.
The plan will cover selection, digital benchmarks for
conversion and access, and quality control.
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Stage
2: Preparing Specifications for Outside Services (July-November
2002)
The project will
fund outside service providers to create EAD-encoded
finding aids and to digitize the images. The project
coordinators will develop detailed requests for proposals
(RFPs) for these services, as required by State purchasing
policy for services with costs exceeding $15,000. The
RFPs will include a description of the services to be
performed, submission requirements, evaluation criteria,
method of award, and submission documents such as references,
staff resumes, and certification that the vendor will
provide secure storage conditions for collections.
For imaging services,
published guidelines, including those established by
Anne Kenney and Oya Rieger will inform specifications.
For EAD encoding services, we will specify adherence
to EAD DTD and require demonstrable experience in producing
high quality EAD records. We estimate that the 102 collections
(2,791 CF) will generate 4,564 pages to be encoded (an
average of 2 pages/cubic foot for manuscript collections
and 1.5 pages/cubic foot for government records). The
Project Coordinators will work closely with SED contract
administration to oversee the bid, vendor selection,
contract, and payment processes.
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Stage
3: Preparing and Refining Finding Aids (July 2002-January
2004)
During this stage,
the project staff and individual partners will finalize
the proposed collection lists, assess the quality of
existing finding aids, and create or refine finding
aids. The Archives/Records Management Specialist 2 will
concentrate his/her efforts on partners' collections.
Approximately six months of the Archives/Records Management
Specialist 2's time will be spent in the field. The
remainder will be spent in Albany, refining finding
aids, preparing material for encoding, preparing or
updating MARC records, quality checking the encoded
finding aids, and preparing image entries.
The Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 will spend approximately four
weeks with each partner institution reviewing and assessing
existing finding aids, identifying images for digitization,
and preparing material for shipment. He/she will then
develop a detailed schedule for refining partners' finding
aids, based on their accuracy and compatibility with
the EAD style sheet. We anticipate the visit schedule
will need to be adjusted based on the condition of the
finding aids.
State Archives
project staff will focus on State Archives and State
Library collections in their review and improvement
of finding aids. To facilitate remote access, all project
staff will expand container lists to include folder
lists. They will also enhance, as needed, the existing
descriptions to provide improved geographical and subject
access. Project staff will also reformat finding aids
to match the EAD style sheet, evaluate existing MARC
records, create or update any MARC records that need
revision, and create links between the MARC record,
the EAD-encoded finding aid, and the image file. Project
staff will develop descriptions for the imaged materials
and enter that information into the Hyperion.
For database
access tools, the Archives/Records Management Specialist
2 will work with the host repository to assess the existing
structure of the databases and suggest standardizing
entries, improving functionality, and creating user
screens. The Archives/Records Management Specialist
2 and technical support staff will work with the repository
to determine how the database can be made Web-accessible
via the partner's Web site. Project staff will then
create links to those databases hosted elsewhere. Databases
created by the State Archives will be converted to Oracle,
mounted on the State Archives Web site, and linked to
the MARC record and image files, as available.
The Project Partner
Group will meet in April 2003 to review finding aids
created to date, refine the EAD style sheet, and confirm
the Archives/Records Management Specialist 2's visit
schedule for the second year of the project.
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Stage
4: Imaging Materials (July 2002 - March 2004)
The Project Coordinators,
Archives/Records Management Specialist 2, and partner
institutions will select the materials for imaging,
based on decisions by the Scholars Board and Project
Partner Group. The selected maps, microforms, and photographic
materials will be imaged in two phases. Images for the
first phase will be selected from State Archives and
State Library collections. The first batch of imaged
material will include 35mm, 70mm, and 105mm photographic
transparencies, and will be released to the successful
vendor between July - November 2002. At that time, will
also select materials from partners' collections for
the second phase.
Project Coordinators
will oversee the administration of the shipments, including
transportation arrangements and inventory and release
documentation. They will coordinate insurance coverage
for released collections, both during transit and at
the vendor's facility.
Material to be
digitized during imaging phase 2 (October 2003 - March
2004) will consist of photographs, maps, and broadsides
held by partner institutions. At its April 2003 meeting,
the Project Partner Group will discuss and finalize
the imaging selections. The Archives/Records Management
Specialist 2 and Clerk will create index entries using
the Hyperion to develop a searchable database. The Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 will also work with the partner
repositories to ensure that the necessary release and
insurance documents are prepared.
Under the direction
of the Preservation Administrator, project staff will
implement a quality control program on all imaging deliverables.
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Stage
5: Creating EAD-encoded Finding Aids (August 2003 -
February 2004)
The finding aids
created during Stage 3 will be sent to the selected
EAD vendor. The Archives/Records Management Specialist
2 will work closely with the vendor to ensure that he/she
understands project goals and technical requirements.
On receipt of the encoded finding aids, State Archives
Information Technology staff will write any necessary
Java script to format finding aids access from the Web
site. The Archives/Records Management Specialist 2 and
Clerk will also conduct quality checks on each encoded
finding aid.
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Stage
6: Mounting the Virtual Research Collection on the Web
(October 2003 - May 2004)
The Scholars
Board will meet during October 2003 to evaluate the
proposed structure of the virtual research collection.
At that time board members will also suggest additional
materials to mount on the site, recommend future projects,
and to identify appropriate publicity routes for announcing
the resource to the environmental history, library,
and archival communities. Once the pilot site is available
for viewing on the Web, the board will critique the
contents and navigation routes.
The Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2, working with the State Archives
Webmaster and technology staff, will map out the contents
and navigation needs of the virtual research collection
Webpage. Once the structure is finalized, the Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 will write any necessary introductory
text and explanatory notes. He/she will create the necessary
metadata for the various components of the site, as
well as the hyperlinks that will connect the MARC records,
the EAD-encoded finding aids, and the digitized images.
The challenge
in New York State is to meet the needs of all users
and holders of historical records (whether governments,
not-for-profit historical repositories, or private archives)
at their level of sophistication. To this end, the Project
Partner Group will meet in March 2004 to draft a number
of products, including:
- Guidelines for selecting and mounting images on
the Web
- An EAD style sheet that can be used statewide, along
with suggestions for mounting EAD-encoded finding
aids
- Guidelines for what should be included on a virtual
research collection site
The Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 and Clerk will finalize the
guidelines and style sheet, then draft press releases
to announce their availability via the State Archives
Web site and other means. In cooperation with State
Archives Public Programs and Outreach personnel and
project staff, the Project Director and Project Coordinators
will announce the availability of the virtual research
collection to the environmental, environmental history,
archival, and history communities. Finally, the Archives/Records
Management Specialist 2 will work with State Archives
staff to propose workshops and publications to encourage
use of the Virtual Research Collection and participation
in the Statewide Access Navigational System.
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Dissemination
From the start,
promotion and facilitation of access to archival material
have been the overarching goals of this project. The
Internet emerged as the dissemination vehicle of choice
during the initial phase of project planning because
it is employed by users from many walks of life: primary
and secondary educators, community and family historians,
scholars, and environmental and legal professionals.
The bulk of the
material selected for digital access will come from
State and local government records series and material
produced during the mid-nineteenth century, all of which
are in the public domain. Currently the New York State
Education Department's Office of Counsel is researching
how best to safeguard the rights of copyright holders;
Counsel's findings will inform the partners on how to
mount materials that still remain under copyright.
In the last
months of the project, the project staff will prepare
press releases and articles announcing the results,
including the establishment of the Virtual Resource
Collection for national and regional publications such
as:
- NYHIST-L (New York History Electronic Discussion
List), maintained by the New York State Archives;
- H-Net discussion groups: HmH-Amstdy (American studies),
H-Environment (environmental historians), H-High-S
(secondary school teachers), H-Local (state and local
history and museums), H-Public (public history), H-SHGAPE
(historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era),
and H-Teach (college instructors);
- Dispatch (American Association for State
and Local History);
- Environmental History;
- History Matters (National Council for
History Education)
- Journal for MultiMedia History ;
- Journal of American History ;
- New York History ;
- Perspectives (American Historical Association);
- Archives and Archivists listserv, maintained by
Miami University of Ohio;
- NYLINE, listserv for New York's Libraries Information
Network.
The project
will also be highlighted on the New York State Archives
Web site and in its publications New York Archives
(quarterly journal) and In the Field
(a newsletter sent to all local governments and historical
record holders in New York).
As a member of
the RLG's Cultural Materials Alliance, the State Archives
will make the finding aids available in conjunction
with the RLG finding aid project, either by mounting
them on the RLG site or by creating a link to our Web
site. We will also offer the digitized images for inclusion
in the Cultural Materials site.
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