Viewing entries posted in 2014

Yearbooks and City Directories from High Point now online

Cover page of the 1947 Pemican yearbook, High Point High School

Cover page of the 1947 Pemican yearbook, High Point High School

Thanks to two new contributing institutions to the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center, the High Point Museum and the Heritage Research Center at High Point Public Library, yearbooks from High Point High School covering 1916-1964 and High Point city directories covering the 1930s – 1950s are now available on DigitalNC.  In addition to information about the students and faculty, each yearbook includes a history of High Point High School and a history of High Point itself.

High Point on the Map, advertisement from the 1916 Atelier yearbook, High Point High School

High Point on the Map, advertisement from the 1916 Atelier yearbook, High Point High School

 


Announcing Our 150th Content Partner: The East Bend Public Library

img_EastBend_031412Big news! We are very pleased to announce the East Bend Public Library as the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center’s 150th content partner. The library, part of the Northwestern Regional Library system, is located in the Yadkin Valley town of East Bend (named for the east bend of the Yadkin River).

The Digital Heritage Center worked with the East Bend Public Library to digitize a scrapbook documenting the celebration of the town’s centennial in 1987. The volume contains a wealth of information about local and community history, including photos and clippings about churches, businesses, schools, and organizations.  It’s a terrific resource for anyone interested in exploring their own history in East Bend or looking to learn more about the community.

We are thrilled to be able to share the history of East Bend as well as the images and memories of the communities represented by all 150 of our partners. We’re looking forward to continued work with these important cultural heritage institutions and at the same time we’re eager to work with the next 150.

View a map of all of the Center’s content partners online at http://www.digitalnc.org/institutions/. If your library or community is not yet represented there, get in touch with us and we’ll talk about how we can help.


Yearbooks from Asheville, Raleigh, Cary, and Washington now online

Lake on Asheville School's campus, from the 1928 Asheville School yearbook

Lake on Asheville School’s campus, from the 1928 Asheville School yearbook

Yearbooks from the following schools are now on DigitalNC.  All are available through the North Carolina Collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

To view more yearbooks from across North Carolina, visit our North Carolina Yearbooks collection.


More Than Portraits: Possibilities High School Yearbooks have for Historical Research

As the school year comes to a close across the state, it seems like a good time to take a more in-depth look at the wealth of information that can be found in the more than 1,600 high school yearbooks that we have scanned and made accessible on DigitalNC in the past year.  While the most obvious use of these yearbooks is for genealogical purposes, they contain much more than just portraits and can tell a lot about the towns and time periods they come from.

As our high school yearbooks are only available through the year 1964, there is not a lot of integration of North Carolina schools evident in the yearbooks.  However, the yearbooks available in DigitalNC do come from both white and Black schools, often in the same towns, dating back to the early 1900s.  This can allow comparison of how the schools operated and a view into life in segregated schools in North Carolina.  For example, in Tarboro, there was Tarboro High School, the white school, and Pattillo High School, the Black school.  Our yearbooks from both cover the 1940s-1950s.

from 1949 Chapel Hill High School yearbook "Hillife"

from 1949 Chapel Hill High School yearbook “Hillife”

In many of the yearbooks in the North Carolina High School Yearbooks collection there are extensive sections dedicated to both the clubs and the athletics at the school.  These sections, with many group portraits, action shots, and sometimes even added explanation, provide a glimpse into what extracurricular activities students participated in throughout the years.  For example in the 1949 Chapel Hill High School yearbook  there is a babysitter’s club pictured, and in the 1929 R.J. Reynolds High School Black and Gold yearbook, there is a photograph of the “Salemanship club.”  Beyond being interesting in their own way, this information shows how priorities for school age children and the expected responsibilities they have shift over time.

from 1929 R.J. Reynolds High School yearbook "Black and Gold"

from 1929 R.J. Reynolds High School yearbook “Black and Gold”

Most of the yearbooks contain information on the teachers at the school and the courses and subjects they taught.  Again, like the clubs, this information provides insight into how subject emphasis in school has changed over time.  The page below from the 1963 Lion yearbook from P.W. Moore Junior-Senior High School in Elizabeth City includes photographs from classes that are not often seen anymore, including agriculture, typing, and guidance class.

Some of the classes offered at P.W. Moore Junior-Senior High School in 1963

Some of the classes offered at P.W. Moore Junior-Senior High School in 1963

The yearbooks also contain a lot of images of events that occurred at the schools.  A few weeks ago we pointed out the wonderful May Day images from across the decades.  Other events such as prom, homecoming, and school specific traditions are included in the yearbooks.  Below is a schedule of events from the 1941-1942 school year at Hickory High School.

1941-1942 Hickory High School schedule, from the "Hickory Log."

1941-1942 Hickory High School schedule, from the “Hickory Log.”

Current events of the day are also featured in these yearbooks.  For example, those published during World War II often have heavy patriotic themes and some, such as the High Point High School yearbook from 1945, have whole spreads dedicated to those lost from High Point, particularly fellow classmates, in the war.

Dedication page to those killed in World War II from High Point High School, from the 1945 Pemican

Dedication page to those killed in World War II from High Point High School, from the 1945 Pemican

The advertising section at the back of the yearbooks offer a glimpse at the businesses of the town the school is in, which can be particularly useful for small towns that may not have had their own city directories.  The listings usually include addresses for the businesses, and sometimes, as is the case in the 1960 Pittsboro High School yearbook, photographs of the businesses themselves.  These photographs can be the only images of businesses that shut down years ago.

 

City Electronics Shop ad in Pittsboro High School's 1960 The Dragonian

City Electronics Shop ad in Pittsboro High School’s 1960 The Dragonian

henrysrestaurant_pittsborohighschool

Henry’s Restaurant ad, in Pittsboro High School’s 1960 The Dragonian

C.E. Jones Co. Bridal Headquarters ad, in the Pittsboro High School 1960 The Dragonian

C.E. Jones Co. Bridal Headquarters ad, in the Pittsboro High School 1960 The Dragonian

As graduation approaches for high-schoolers across the state, spend some time looking through our high school yearbook collection  and take a peek into life as a high school student fifty years or more ago.  If you know of high school yearbooks at a local institution in North Carolina that are not currently included in our collection, go here to learn more about how to get them included on DigitalNC.


The Rudolph Jones Scrapbook Collection from Fayetteville State University

Rudolph Jones crowns Homecoming Queen Helen Moore, 1965

Rudolph Jones crowns Homecoming Queen Helen Moore, 1965

We’ve just posted 13 scrapbooks that describe the life and career of Dr. Rudolph Jones, North Carolina native, life-long educator, and sixth president of Fayetteville State University. These scrapbooks were published on behalf of our partners at FSU’s Chesnutt Library.

A World War II veteran and graduate of Shaw University, Dr. Jones served as college president from 1956-1969, during which time Fayetteville State Teachers College (FSTC) became Fayetteville State College. Jones had a long and distinguished career as an educator, beginning as a high school teacher, moving on to school principal and college dean before becoming FSTC’s President. During his tenure as president, the College saw increased enrollment and robust campus growth. In 1969, Dr. Jones went on to teach in and chair the Business Department at Elizabeth City State University, where he received the Distinguished Teacher of the Year Award. He retired in 1975.

Poet Langston Hughes and Rudolph Jones, 1960

Poet Langston Hughes and Rudolph Jones, 1960

Spanning 1930-1978, these scrapbooks are full of photos, clippings, and documentation related to Dr. Jones’ career, Fayetteville State University, Fayetteville area high schools and churches, as well as organizations like the North Carolina Teachers Association, now the North Carolina Association of Educators. Dr. Jones also kept greeting cards from birthdays and holidays. In addition to Jones’ career highlights, there are documents relating to segregation at educational institutions during the 1960s, including a position paper from the “five state-supported negro colleges of North Carolina” entitled “Dilemmas in the Higher Education of Negroes: A Challenge to North Carolina.”

The Rudolph Jones Scrapbook Collection can be viewed on DigitalNC. Yearbooks, newspapers and catalogs from Fayetteville State University are also available.


Yearbooks from Alamance County Public Libraries now online

Student studying at Southern High School in Graham, NC. From the 1961 Southerner yearbook

Student studying at Southern High School in Graham, NC. From the 1961 Southerner yearbook

Yearbooks from the following schools in Alamance County are now available online on DigitalNC courtesy of Alamance County Public Libraries. The yearbooks added cover the early 1960s at these schools.

Eastern Alamance High School
Graham High School
Haw River High School
Mebane High School
Nathanael Greene High School
Southern High School
Williams High School

To view more North Carolina High School yearbooks, visit here.


North Carolina newspapers for the troops

In honor of Memorial Day weekend, we are highlighting the newspapers in DigitalNC that were created for or by soldiers, the majority of whom were fighting in World War II at the time.

ORDNews1944_NoonCokeHour

Entertainment at the ORD in May 1944

The “B.T.C. 10-Shun,” later “The ORD News,” was a weekly paper published by and for those at Basic Training Camp No. 10 in Greensboro, North Carolina.  The papers available online* cover the whole time the base was open, 1943 to 1946 and covers lighthearted topics such as film reviews for the free films on base and information about activities happening on base to more serious information such as vaccination advancements for the soldiers and where fighting was happening overseas.  To learn more, read our previous post on the paper.

Cloudbuster_1943comic

Comic drawn by a cadet, featured in the June 26, 1943 Cloudbuster

Another paper in the North Carolina Newspapers is “The Cloudbuster,” which was published for and by those at the U.S. Navy Pre-Flight School in Chapel Hill.  Similar to the B.T.C. 10-Shun, the Cloudbuster focused on a mix of topics from sports statistics and articles titled “What to expect with blind dating,” to flights records and aeronautical advances, as well as general war news.  It also featured a number of comics, with focuses on sports and patriotism as the main themes.  See previous posts on this paper here.

Cover of the January 1944 Hot Off the Hoover Rail.  The image is of the power company that sponsored the publication.

Cover of the January 1944 Hot Off the Hoover Rail. The image is of the power company that sponsored the publication.

In addition to many soldiers coming from across the United States to train in North Carolina for World War II, many natives of the state were sent overseas to fight in the war.  Many small towns in the state produced special newspapers to keep “their boys abroad” informed about the news of the town.  Two such papers are included in DigitalNC, one being the Hot off the Hoover Rail, published in Lawndale.  monthly news bulletin published by Cleveland Mill and Power Company during World War II.  Each issue included a “salute of the month,” a letter from a mother and father of the month, church news, columns called “Old Maids Row” and “Lawndale Party Line,” letters from soldiers and a list of soldiers who had been promoted or were home on furlough.  This publication gives much information about individual citizens of Lawndale and the goings-on at the time.  The other is the Homefront News from Tarboro, which we wrote about earlier this year here.

To view more newspapers from across North Carolina, visit North Carolina Newspapers.

 *[Update, January 2015. This newspaper can be viewed online in the Greensboro Historical Newspapers collection, hosted by UNC-Greensboro.]


Yearbooks from Charlotte-Mecklenburg County Schools now available on DigitalNC

Acorn 1941

From Harding High School’s 1941 Acorn
Left: Superlatives, Right: Athletics

Over 100 yearbooks from eleven high schools in the Charlotte Metro area are now available on DigitalNC.  Included are yearbooks from Charlotte’s first high school, Charlotte High School, with yearbooks dating from 1909.

The collection also includes six yearbooks from two African-American high schools: West Charlotte’s The Lion and York Road’s Wapiti.

Lion 1960

West Charlotte High’s 1960 band from the Lion

The yearbooks are available courtesy of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library and the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System, and all the schools that are available are listed in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Yearbooks digital exhibit.  To view more North Carolina High School yearbooks, visit DigitalNC.


More Yearbooks and Scrapbooks from Northwestern Regional Library System now Online

Students heading to a day of school at Jonesville High School, as featured in the 1956 East Bend Whispers yearbook.

Students heading to a day of school at Jonesville High School, as featured in the 1956 East Bend Whispers yearbook.

Yearbooks from several libraries in the Northwestern Regional Library System are now online.

From Danbury Public Library, yearbooks from Sandy Ridge High School, Pinnacle High School, Francisco High School, Nancy Reynolds High School, Germanton High School, Walnut Cove High School, and London High School are available.

From Alleghany County Public Library, yearbooks covering 1959-1961 at Sparta High School are online.

From Elkin Public Library The Elk yearbook, from Elkin High School, is now online.

From East Bend Public Library, the town’s scrapbook celebrating their centennial in 1987 is available.

And from Yadkin County Public Library, over 50 yearbooks from East Bend High School, West Yadkin High School, Yadkinville High School, Jonesville High School, and Courtney High School are now online.

To view more materials from across North Carolina, visit DigitalNC.


Obituaries, DAR Records and More from Rockingham County now Online

North Carolina Public School Register, Rockingham County

Example page from the Public School Register, showing list of students in attendance as well as general school information at the top.

We’ve just added a mixture of items from Rockingham County Public Library to DigitalNC. Of interest to genealogists will be an early public school register that lists students from 1891-1897, along with the names of their parents/guardians. At the top of each two-page spread is a list of textbooks used by the class, and the school teacher’s salary (usually around $22.00).

We’re also excited about providing full-text searchability to seven volumes of obituaries clipped from the Madison Messenger as well as other newspapers. See links to these items below.

Finally, this batch includes a number of ledgers documenting activity at Rockingham libraries, and records of a local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

These items are all a part of the Rockingham County Legacy Project, which brings together resources from several institutions in that county.


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This blog is maintained by the staff of the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center and features the latest news and highlights from the collections at DigitalNC, an online library of primary sources from organizations across North Carolina.

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