UA Libraries Grant to Pave the Way
for Low-Cost Digitization of Cultural Heritage Materials
-----Original Message-----
From: Jody DeRidder [mailto:jody@jodyderidder.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2010 4:29 PM
To: diglib@infoserv.inist.fr
Subject: [DIGLIB] UA Libraries Grant to Pave the Way for Low-Cost Digitization of Cultural Heritage Materials
Press Release
The University of Alabama Libraries has been awarded a grant from the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) to digitize a large and nationally important manuscript collection related to the emancipation of slaves: The Septimus D. Cabaniss Papers. This digitization grant (NAR10-RD-10033-10) will extend for 14 months beginning January 1, 2010 and will provide researchers online access to an estimated 44,563 images for the minimal total cost of only $71,516, only $1.87 per page.
The model to be used for digitization is designed to enable institutions to mass-digitize manuscript collections at a minimal cost, leveraging the extensive series descriptions already available in the collection finding aid to provide search and retrieval. Digitized content for the collection will be linked from the finding aid, providing online access to 31.8
linear feet of valuable archival material that otherwise would never be web-available. Every month the newly digitized content will be added to the online finding aid to provide improved access. Software and workflows
developed to support the process are made freely available from the grant website:
http://www.lib.ua.edu/libraries/hoole/cabaniss
The Septimus D. Cabaniss Collection (1815-1889) was selected as exemplary of the legal difficulties encountered in efforts to emancipate slaves in the Deep South. Of particular interest are the materials related to the estate of Samuel Townsend, a heavily litigated estate where practically all associated materials were used as evidence in the courts.
In 1853, S.D. Cabaniss, a Huntsville, Alabama, attorney, was employed by the wealthy unmarried Samuel Townsend to draft a will that would allow him to manumit and leave property to a selection of his slaves, many of whom were his children. Townsend was concerned because the will left by his
brother Edmund, seeking to do something similar, had been held void by the courts. Townsend was concerned that his own will could be held void, and hired Cabaniss to draft a will which would protect the interests of his chosen heirs.
In part, the will would provide for the emancipation and removal of forty
of his slaves to a free territory, where they would be educated. This will, and the litigation surrounding it, are exemplary of the struggle between the ruling pro-slavery sentiment of the Deep South during this time, and the more humanistic sentiment of actual slave-owners seeking to free their own children.
As such, the Cabaniss papers are a rich resource for cultural, historical, sociological, psychological, legal and political science researchers of this time period. These papers were recently processed under another NHPRC grant, NAR06GRANT-048 "Bringing Alabama's African American History to Light."
Already several thousand images of these valuable materials are online, and can be accessed from http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/u0003_0000252 More content will continue to be added monthly until the project is complete in February 2011. Usability testing is included in the grant project, and results will be publicized.
Jody DeRidder
Digital Services
University of Alabama Libraries
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487
(205) 348-0511
jody@jodyderidder.com
jlderidder@ua.edu