Sorry no search results for "{{searchterm}}"

Salt Story Archive Launches

An extensive digital collection of Maine stories is now available to the public.

Extensive digital collection of Maine stories launches

Salt Story Archive the result of partnership between renowned documentary studies institute and innovative digital history company

PORTLAND, Maine, May 16, 2016

Photos of a wild blueberry harvest

A radio piece about “the boogie man of Ocean Point

A written account of the closing of Dexter Shoe factory

These are just a few of the extraordinary Maine stories that are now available to anyone with access to the Internet, thanks to a collaboration between the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies at MECA and HistoryIT, a Portland-based technology company that creates state-of-the-art digital historical collections.

The Salt Story Archive, a digital collection that contains works by more than 1,000 Salt students – many of whom have gone on to successful careers at places like NPR and National Geographic – launched today.

“A 40-year-long dream to showcase our student work has been achieved,” said Donna Galluzzo, Salt’s executive director. “We are so grateful and so proud to be able to share this phenomenal achievement.”

When Salt was looking for a partner to complete the digitization of its vast collection — 16,000 images, 495 radio stories, 849 writing projects, 251 short documentary video projects, more than 500 articles in 56 publications, and 3 books — they found in their backyard the national leader in digital history. HistoryIT helps clients maximize the impact of their collections by making them more shareable and more searchable. Their clients range from the Historical Society of Washington, D.C. to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

“It was an enormous pleasure to work with Salt, in part because its content is so familiar to us,” said HistoryIT CEO Dr. Kristen Gwinn-Becker, a Maine native. “As a digital innovator I am particularly proud of the Salt Story Archive because it exemplifies what is most important about public historical resources: that they must be made digital and available in a way that provides meaningful access to them, and that they are engaging and discoverable by diverse audiences.”

The Salt Story Archive is the result of a year dedicated to the digitization and creation of comprehensively searchable materials, which is available via HistoryIT’s Digital Platform Environment. The project required a team of historians, digital technicians, metadata specialists, and content experts to create a well-designed and intuitive site that invites the public to explore stories from New England’s recent past.

“Our archives hold the nonfiction stories of thousands of Maine and New England people and families — stories of survival, endurance, love, faith, discovery, perseverance and so much more,” Galluzzo said. “The public sharing of these stories had to be managed to the highest artistic and ethical standards that have made Salt’s reputation and legacy what it is today. HistoryIT not only met but also far exceeded our expectations in creating a digital story archive that our alumni and fellow Mainers and New Englanders can be incredibly proud of.”

The Salt Story Archive is available at www.saltstoryarchive.com.

About HistoryIT:

HistoryIT, Inc., a privately held international company based in Portland, Maine, provides clients with a new approach to making historical collections more accessible, discoverable and profitable. Owned and managed by professional historians and digital strategists, the innovative company brings industry-leading expertise to preserve historical collections of all types and sizes and to make them searchable in meaningful ways. Working with cultural institutions, universities, corporations, professional associations, sports teams, and others, HistoryIT leverages cutting-edge technologies and proprietary methodologies to create appealing, effective digital portals for historical resources.

Sharing the Legacy of Mayor Hudnut

I first got to know the magnetic William Hudnut, III not through that twinkle in the eye, the baritone voice, or the signature “Hudnut Hook.” Instead, I got to know this larger-than-life personality through historical documents preserved thanks to a visionary partnership between the University of Indianapolis and digital history pioneer HistoryIT .

Continue reading “Sharing the Legacy of Mayor Hudnut”

A Woman for President: 144 Years and Counting

Candidate Hillary Clinton stands on the shoulders of thousands of women who have run for political office since the nineteenth century. Newspaper publisher Victoria Woodhull ran for president of the United States in 1872. Twelve years later, attorney Belva Lockwood announced as the presidential candidate of the small Equal Rights Party. Unlike Woodhull, she ran a full campaign for the office with electors pledged to her and votes tallied.

Continue reading “A Woman for President: 144 Years and Counting”

Walter Johnson, Manager of the Cleveland Indians

As most baseball fans know, the Cleveland Indians are battling right now for their first World Series title since 1948.

That 1948 team was stacked with future Hall of Famers:  Larry Doby, Bob Feller, Lou Boudreau, Bob Lemon, Joe Gordon and Satchel Paige. But one Hall of Famer who wore the Cleveland Indians uniform in the first half of the 20th century doesn’t look natural in it at all.

Continue reading “Walter Johnson, Manager of the Cleveland Indians”

Honus Wagner and Hillerich Baseball Bats

Pittsburgh Pirates’ great Honus Wagner was known for his bat.  Not just figuratively–he led the National League in batting eight times and finished with a .328 career batting average–but for his actual baseball bat, the lumber he gripped in his hands.  He preferred a 33 inch bat weighing over 40 ounces, massive by today’s standards, with a thick handle and small knob.

Continue reading “Honus Wagner and Hillerich Baseball Bats”

Walter Johnson and his Fox Hounds

Even on its surface, it’s a compelling photograph. The inscription dates the image to 1926, but even without it, one could guess the era: the sepia finish, the rugged faces, the fedora on one man, the flat “newsboy” cap on the other. Even the weathered faces and wood-slat barn suggest an earlier age.

Continue reading “Walter Johnson and his Fox Hounds”

Jackie Robinson Scrapbook may include the most famous photograph ever taken at a minor league game

The Jackie Robinson Scrapbook, recently digitized by the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum and HistoryIT, is a collection of photographs, newspaper clippings, and even baseball cards compiled by a fan, Jack Donovan, during Robinson’s career.  Among the many illustrations is a photograph that is perhaps the most famous photos ever from a minor league game.

Continue reading “Jackie Robinson Scrapbook may include the most famous photograph ever taken at a minor league game”

The Digital Scrapbooks of Baseball

Baseballs, uniforms, gloves and bats—these are the types of artifacts that come to mind when thinking of the National Baseball Hall of Fame. But there’s another fascinating type of artifact that many people might not consider and haven’t been able to see: scrapbooks.

Today, when thousands of photographs and documents can be stored on our phone or on a thumbdrive in our pocket, it’s easy to forget the importance scrapbooks once had in preserving history. Photographs were difficult and expensive to obtain, and newspapers were bulky to store. If someone wanted to collect documents, newspaper articles, photos and other ephemera, the one of the best ways to compile them was in a scrapbook.

Continue reading “The Digital Scrapbooks of Baseball”