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Artist Aaron Wallace casts the hand of veteran Will A. Harrison from Guilford County.
Veteran Timothy Morton from Stanly County pictured with the cast of his hand at the North Carolina Veterans Park.
Materials from our new partner, the Arts Council of Fayetteville/Cumberland County, are now available on DigitalNC. These materials document the creation of installations for the North Carolina Veterans Park. The park is located in downtown Fayetteville, and was formally dedicated on July 4, 2011. Installations and plazas in the park explore the theme a “Veteran’s Journey: life before, during, and after service.”
The materials on DigitalNC concern the creation of the Oath of Service Wall and the Community Columns that are located in the Community Plaza of the park. The Oath of Service Wall includes
Materials from each county are represented individually on DigitalNC, and include information about the veterans, community members, and artists that facilitated the casting. Many include photographs of the hand molding process and biographical details.
To browse materials in the North Carolina Veterans Park collection, click here. To learn more about the Arts Council of Fayetteville/Cumberland County, take a look at their partner page, or visit their website.
This holiday season join us here on the blog for the 12 Days of NCDHC. We’ll be posting short entries that reveal something you may not know about us. You can view all of the posts together by clicking on the 12daysofncdhc tag. And, as always, chat with us if you have questions or want to work with us on something new. Happy Holidays!
Day 10: Community Scanning Days
Community scanning days are a popular way for many of our partners to bring historical materials into their collection from their community without needing to take physical possession of the objects. Instead, the community is invited to come in with their personal collections related to the town, or a particular historic event, or from a particular group, and have it photographed or scanned. Information about the object, as well as information about the owner, is recorded at the time of scanning as well. Then, depending on the infrastructure at the institution, the digital files and associated metadata are saved for research in the reading room or somehow made accessible online. Community scanning days are often a really good way to engage the community with their local history collection while at the same time filling in holes in that collection.
Where does the NCDHC come in? Well, we can help with these events in a variety of ways. One way is to come and offer technical support the day of the event, including bringing our scanners and doing a lot of that work. We are also happy to consult with partners who are planning such events and pass along metadata templates and scanning specifications we would suggest using. We can take the images and metadata from the scanning day and host those on DigitalNC. If you are interested in us hosting the materials, we do ask that you talk to us before your scanning day so we can be sure the image quality and metadata collected fit with our system. This page on our site is a good run down of what we’ll provide during and after scanning days.
We have had the pleasure of working with several institutions already with community scanning days, including the Hmong Keen Kwm: Hmong Heritage Project by Catawba County Library and the Massey Hill Heritage Discovery Project by the Arts Council of Fayetteville/Cumberland County.
If your institution is looking to do a similar scanning project, please get in touch!
Check back on Friday as we reveal Day 11 of the 12 Days of NCDHC!