Viewing entries posted in October 2024

Halloween Decorations and Costumes Featured in Latest Bessemer City Record Issues

Thanks to our partner, Bessemer City History and Art Society, a batch containing an additional 3,500 pages of The Bessemer City Record and The Tri-City Record are now available on DigitalNC! These issues span from 1984-1985 and 1987-1989 and focus heavily on highlighting local news, events, and scenes about town. The issues in this batch published near Halloween feature fabulous costumes worn for the “Halloween social season” along with spookily decorated yards.

Bessemer City Record editor Lois Smith is seen here in her Egyptian Queen costume along with “Witch” Hazel Harmon, Ernie Kincaid as a California raisin, and first place costume winner Mrs. Florence Gossage. Mrs. Gossage, dressed as a flapper girl, designed and decorated her outfit with numerous handmade motifs.

In 1985, the title of Halloween House was given to a residence on Iowa Avenue in Bessemer City. The yard featured “everything that could be thought of with a Halloween theme” — which included a pumpkin man, corn stalks, jack-o’-lanterns, as well as a witch and some ghosts suspended from the roof. Featured in both 1987 (below) and 1989 (disgusted ghost), the residence at the corner of Texas and 11th Street appears to have taken the title of Halloween House.

House featuring Halloween decorations in the yard including ghosts and witches suspended from the roof, haybales, pumpkin man, pumpkins, and corn stalks.
Halloween House of 1985, November 13, 1985.

To view all digitized issues of The Bessemer City Record, please click here.

To learn more about the Bessemer City History and Arts Society, view their contributor page linked here.

To browse more North Carolina newspapers, view our newspaper collection here.


Poets Muse in the Mountains in New Southwestern Records

An illustration of two lovers united by a flaming heart. They watch over an ancient Greek landscape.
From Pen and Ink Vol 2, Number 2

Thanks to our partners at Southwestern Community College, DigitalNC now contains a new batch of records from the school spanning over three decades from 1967 to 2002. These records not only reflect the administrative and academic growth of Southwestern, but also the vibrant culture and community of its faculty and students. While administrative reports and meeting minutes paint a vivid picture of the financial and curricular development of the campus, a vast and varied collection of newsletters, brochures, and magazines reveal the beauty of living and working around Jackson County, North Carolina.

Perhaps one of the most entertaining and colorful reflections of mountain life can be found in the form of Pen & Ink, a literary magazine published by Southwestern students beginning in 1978. Each issue of this magazine contains poetry and art submitted by Southwestern’s very own students and faculty, reflecting their musings on life, love, and learning. Artistic subjects range from portraits of famous scientific thinkers to beautiful, airbrush-esque fantasy scenes that take up entire pages of the magazine. And, while many poems are devoted to loves lost or not yet earned, there’s a wonderful selection of poems to be found about mountain living or rock and roll. Earnest introspection splashes out from each page of Pen & Ink, reflecting the often pseudonymous or anonymous authors freedom during the end of the 1970s.

The title of "Horrorscopes" by staff writer Leslie Bachman. An illustration of a witch is included.
An example of the Halloween themed “Humorscopes” often featured in Cornerstone.

You can also find colorful examples of student life at Southwestern in newly digitized issues The Cornerstone, a regular newsletter published by and for students. Each issue of The Cornerstone contains photos of student life at Southwestern, from spring flings to Halloween celebrations, as well as a recurring section of “Humorscopes,” satirical predictions of students’ futures based on their zodiac sign. The Cornerstone also diligently worked to amplify student voices, providing a sections on the front and back page expressly for student feedback. The front page section, known as “The Colliquoy,” frequently cited students and their concerns on pertinent topics and stories, while the back-page section, titled “The Cornerstone Market” offered an open forum where students could post jobs, apartments, or school supplies.

Thanks again to our partners at Southwestern Community College for making this collection available online. You can find issues of The Cornerstone, as well as Pen & Ink and the rest of this amazing collection, online now at DigitalNC here. Interested in learning more about Southwestern Community College? You can find their partner page online at DigitalNC here, or visit their website here.


Catalogs from Rowan-Cabarrus Community College’s Earlier Years Now Available on DigitalNC!

Thanks to our partner, Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, a batch containing an informational bulletin for the school’s first year along with 12 catalogs dating between 1964 to 1978 are now online! These catalogs provide information about classes, programs, cost of attendance, and more, for Rowan Technical Institute during its earliest years.

To learn more about Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, visit their website here.

To view more materials from Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, please click here.

To view more materials from community colleges from across North Carolina, view our North Carolina Community College Collections exhibit here.


New Issues of the Olin News Offers a Unique Glimpse at a Mountain Community Built Around a Paper Factory

With the help of our partners at Transylvania County Library, we are excited to announce that new issues of the Olin News (Brevard, N.C) are now available on DigitalNC. Adding to our preexisting digital collection, which has issues from September 1967 to October 1979, this new batch includes 129 issues dating from November 1955 to July 1967.

Olin News was the publication of the Ecusta Paper Corporation, the first paper mill to manufacture cigarette papers in the United States. Located along the Davidson River in the Pisgah Forest, the Ecusta Paper Corporation was founded by Henry Straus in 1939 and became a major source of employment in Transylvania County. Before the company was sold to the Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation in 1949, the first iteration of the Ecusta Paper Corporation’s newspaper called The Echo, was published in February of 1940. After acquiring the Pisgah Forest plant, the new ownership maintained the tradition of publishing monthly newspapers for its employees with the Olin News.

Factory newspapers like the Olin News are often overlooked, yet uniquely rich resources for community news. Alongside the growth of the Ecusta Paper Mill, Olin News records the history of the Brevard, N.C. community that is inseparably connected with the successes, challenges, and life history of its local mill. The Ecusta Paper Mill brought families to Brevard and supported generations of residents as a major employer in the area. The mill’s monthly publication included the recurring section “Look Who’s Here,” which welcomed the arrival of Brevard’s newest residents who were born to families employed by the company. The company awarded scholarships to local students and announced the achievements of its employee’s children. Additionally, the newspaper routinely published an opinion section, prompting employees across different departments to share their thoughts on specific questions like “When you have a bad day, what do you do to get it off your mind?” and “Who has the hardest job, the housewife or the breadwinner?“.

The Ecusta Paper Corporation also ran Camp Straus, a company park named after its founder. The company park was open to employees and their families, as well as local community groups for special events. Amenities included swimming and fishing areas, a central lodge, a small golf course, and outdoor sports courts. Community members from Brevard gathered here for events like the annual company picnic, seasonal youth and adult sports leagues, community swimming and sports lessons, and simply just beat the summer heat. A favorite spot for many, the activities of Camp Straus are extensively chronicled throughout issues of Olin News. While the site of Camp Straus has been mostly demolished and repurposed as a housing development, pictures of the lodge and a sketch of the park’s original layout can be found on DigitalNC here.

Although the sun might have set on Camp Straus and the Ecusta Paper Mill, which closed operations in 2002, the long history of the company and its tight-knit community continue to live on through resources like DigitalNC’s collection of the Olin News and photographic collections from the Transylvania County Library. For DigitalNC visitors with family ties to Brevard or the Ecusta Paper Mill, or visitors simply interested in learning more about the community members of this factory town, DigitalNC allows users to easily find material related to specific individuals through our searchable text technology. Visitors can access this feature to search across issues of the Olin News by using the “Keyword(s)” search bar found here, and can learn more about this technology from a blog post found here.

DigitalNC also has more 20th-century company newspapers available to browse, including the titles featured below:

Visitors can view more issues of the Olin News here.

More information about our partner, Transylvania County Library, can be found here

More materials, including scrapbooks, yearbooks, photographs, maps, and six other newspaper titles can be found on Transylvania County Library’s contributor page linked here

Visitors can browse Transylvania: The Architectural History of a Mountain County, a digital exhibit featuring a curated selection of items from our partner here.


Introducing the World War II Primary Source Sets

We are pleased to announce the addition of two new primary source sets on our site, the World War II, Part 1: North Carolina Before Pearl Harbor set and the World War II, Part 2: North Carolina After Pearl Harbor set. While these sets are centered on different aspects of North Carolina in relation to the Second World War, they both use carefully selected primary sources from the DigitalNC collections, supplied from our partners across the state. World War II is a broad topic relevant to many other regions, but these sets focus on how North Carolina and its people were impacted by the war.

Making up each set is a variety of written (journal entries, newspaper articles, letters), visual (photographs), and audio materials (oral histories). General background information, an event timeline, discussion questions, and links to outside resources are available in both sets, as well as short context statements provided for each item. Here’s a look at Part 1 and Part 2 of the World War II primary source sets:

World War II, Part 1: North Carolina Before Pearl Harbor

Time period: 1940-1941

Although the United States did not enter World War II until the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the nation and the state of North Carolina were attentive to the ongoing conflict in the years before the U.S. entered the war. Using a photograph, journal entry, college publication, oral history, and several newspaper articles, this set focuses specifically on how North Carolina was impacted by nation-wide war preparations. Additionally, this set portrays the different perspectives that North Carolinians had on the war.

World War II, Part 2: North Carolina After Pearl Harbor

Time period: 1941-1945

Japanese military forces attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, drawing the United States into World War II and causing significant and lasting impact on the country as well as on North Carolina. This set uses photographs, newspaper articles, letters, and a scrapbook to explore North Carolina’s culture and economy as it was changed by the Second World War.

Teachers, students, researchers, and anyone interested in learning more about the Tar Heel state before and after the attack on Pearl Harbor can find the World War II primary source sets (as well other sets about different topics) on our resources page. To give us feedback on the sets, please contact us here.


Ridgeview High Mighty Panthers and Hickory High Materials Now Available!

Thanks to our partner, Hickory Public Library, a batch containing 18 new yearbooks from what is officially known now as Hickory High School, as well as a copy of Ridgeview High Mighty Panthers [1926-1966], is now available online.

The Hickory Log as a yearbook/annual refers to three different buildings used for Hickory’s high school between 1917 to today. The area’s high school was first named Hickory High School, but was changed to Claremont High School when the school relocated in the early 1920s. The name change brought about a period of skirting, parenthesizing and misuse of the high school name as people continued to refer to the school as Hickory High School. Nearly 50 years later, in 1972, the school was once again relocated. This time, however, the Hickory Board of Education agreed to officially name the new school Hickory High School.



The first school building, located at 432 4th Avenue SW Hickory, NC 28603, opened September 17, 1917. When the school relocated, the remaining building became the Green Park Elementary School before serving as the Hickory City Schools administration building.

The second of these buildings, named Claremont Central High School, was located at 243 3rd Avenue NE Hickory, NC 28601. In 1919, the former site of Claremont Female College (which operated from 1880 to 1916) was donated by the Corinth Reformed Church to the city contingent on the construction of a school. The deed was signed for the high school on January 26, 1924; however, it did not open until October 9, 1925 under the name Claremont Central High School. The school remained at this location for 47 years until it was again relocated in 1972. Twelve years after the relocation, the former Claremont Central High School was designated as a local landmark by the City of Hickory and listed on the National Register of Historic Places a year later.

In 1972, Hickory High School’s third building opened at 1234 3rd Street NE Hickory, NC 28601 and is still in operation today.

To learn more about Hickory Public Library, visit their website here.

To view more materials from Hickory Public Library, visit their contributor page here.

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


High Step Back to School with 30 New Chowan County High School Yearbooks!

Thanks to our partner, Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library, a batch containing 31 new high school yearbooks are now available on DigitalNC! Spanning 1924 to 1972, these yearbooks come from:

To learn more about Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library, visit their website here.

To view more materials from Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library, visit their contributor page here.

To view more yearbooks from across North Carolina, please view our North Carolina Yearbooks collection linked here.


New Issues of The Perquimans Weekly Now Available!

Thanks to our partners at both the Pettigrew Memorial Library and Perquimans County Library, over 100 more issues of the Perquimans Weekly are now on DigitalNC. The newest batch includes papers published from 2021-2023. The papers will extend DigitalNC’s collection of The Perquimans Weekly an additional three years, stretching all the way back to the paper’s debut issue in 1934 and joining a collection of over four thousand issues!

The front page of The Perquimans Weekly from December, 2023.

This astonishing temporal range allows for some truly amazing comparisons between the newspapers of today and those of centuries’ past.

Newer editions of The Perquimans Weekly also display many modern-day advancements in newspaper organization. While newspapers of century past arranged many articles closely together in defined and rigid columns, contemporary issues of The Perquimans provide margins between columns and articles, which are easier for the average readers’ eyes to follow. Articles are no longer rigidly slotted together, but are stacked and layered artfully with an eye for the overall composition of each page. The sections of each issue, too, are more defined and arranged. This century’s journalists have provided Perquiman County readers with signposted guardrails such as “Opinion,” “Sport,” and “Religion.” Gone are the days where letters to the editor had to fight for space with front page columns. Now is the time of reason, art, and effectively displayed journalism!

Interested instead in reading the paper’s previous pages from the twentieth century? Read each issue of The Perquimans online at DigitalNC here, or find their website online here.


The Boonville Herald Arrives Online

Thanks to a North Carolina Community partner, a new newspaper title is now on DigitalNC, the Boonville Herald. One issue of the paper, from 1911 was sent to us for digitization.

An etching of a jester above a blurb advertising a year of the Herald for 50 cents.
The Foole in question

This issue was the third published by The Boonville Herald, and its pages reflect the paper’s desire to serve the community of Boonville and its surrounding area. Stories featured in the daily news section involve personal updates from citizens of Boonville, as well as global news from the far-flung metropolises of London and New York. Updates on New York being attacked by locusts are nestled between updates on Mr. Graham Holcomb’s sawmill and the singing at Mrs. Wile’s. Though only a brief four pages, the paper’s balance between local and global focus reflects a desire to expand its readership by serving as many interested readers as possible. A highlight of the issue is the jester on the last page, advertising a year-long subscription to the Herald for only 50 cents!

To view more newspapers from across small North Carolina towns like Boonville, visit our North Carolina Newspapers page.


Resources for NC Cultural Heritage Organizations in the Wake of Hurricane Helene

Ford Model T driving on a road with Grandfather Mountain in the background, black and white photograph
Grandfather Mountain on Hwy 175 in 1926. From the Forest History Society

The strength of the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center are the connections and communities we have partnered with to share the history of our beautiful state, from the mountains, across the piedmont, and to the sea. Our staff has had heavy hearts for our fellow North Carolinians in the western parts of the state (WNC) since the devastating impact of Hurricane Helene on September 27th. The loss of life and communities, as well as the long road ahead for recovery and rebuilding is heartbreaking.

While there are many efforts to support this work, we cede information on how to help our western communities to organizations such as Blue Ridge Public Radio, the State of North Carolina, and local WNC libraries. The Blue Ridge Public Radio—who has been a voice for all the communities of WNC—along with the State of North Carolina have compiled great resources which can be viewed here and here. Local WNC libraries have shown the vitality and necessity of libraries in the wake of this tragic event by serving as a place for physical and internet connection, as well as a vetted source of information for the community to find where to get help, how to help, and how to move forward.

Resources for Libraries, Museums, and Other Cultural Heritage Organizations

The State Library of North Carolina has put together a comprehensive library guide on resources available to libraries, museums, and cultural heritage organizations – including information on the Heritage Emergency National Task Force (HENTF) which is co-sponsored by FEMA and the Smithsonian Institution and how to apply for assistance through them.

The Institute of Museum and Library Services sent out a bulletin with information and links to the Rapid Damage Assessment Forms from the Heritage Emergency National Task Force.

The NC Arts Disaster Relief Fund that is being run through the North Carolina Arts Foundation to provide funding and assistance to artists and arts organizations affected by Hurricane Helene.

ARTS North Carolina, with significant support from ARTSavl, has created a guide to Emergency Support Resources for Artists & Arts Organizations which includes Rapid Damage Assessment Forms for Cultural Institutions, Artists, and Arts Organizations from the National Coalition for Arts’ Preparedness and Emergency Response

The Society of American Archivists has shared the following resources:

Hurricane and Severe Weather Recovery Resources

For Immediate Advice or Assistance:

Contact the National Heritage Responders at 201-661-8068. 

Contact Northeast Document Conservation Center’s Disaster Assistance or call NEDCC’s 24/7 Emergency Hotline at 1-855-245-8303.

DISASTER RECOVERY RESOURCES

Disaster Response and Recovery Guides (FAIC)

Records Emergencies Guides (NARA)

Save Your Family Treasures (HENTF)

Salvaging Water-Damaged Family Valuables and Heirlooms (FEMA)

Members of the public with questions about saving family heirlooms can contact the National Heritage Responders at NHRpublichelpline@culturalheritage.org.

Review Documenting in Times of Crisis: A Resource Kit, which provides templates and documents to assist cultural heritage responders and archivists in collecting materials on tragedies within their communities. For direct assistance, contact the SAA Crisis Collecting Assistance Team (CCAT), which offers remote assistance and general guidance on crisis collecting. CCAT volunteers include expert archivists who have all faced similar situations in leading and supporting their staff through processing and documenting tragedies great and small. 

These resources and links are up to date as of October 10, 2024. We will update this post if more relevant resources come online for us to share. If our partners have any questions or need help navigating this time, please feel free to reach out to us at DigitalNC and we will help to connect you with the right resources.

We know that the materials that cultural heritage organizations steward do not compare to human lives and homes, but we also know that it is in these small community organizations that the in-depth local history of the mountains can be found. So many of the small towns in WNC that were impacted by the rising river and mudslides have collections up on DigitalNC, from yearbooks from Canton, Old Fort, Clyde, Black Mountain, and Waynesville to student newspapers from Hendersonville High School, to community scrapbooks from Cedar Mountain and Haywood County, to college collections from Brevard College, Montreat, and Lees-McCrae in Banner Elk, to photograph collections of local organizations held by UNC-Asheville, to the local newspapers that are still putting out issues today like the Watauga Democrat, and so many more.

As the lights come back on, roads are repaired, and water is restored, we wanted to help fellow North Carolina cultural heritage organizations by compiling a list of resources that provide information on getting help to repair damages to collections and the spaces that hold them when they are ready.


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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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