Viewing entries posted in June 2025

Explore Folk Art and Craft through Primary Sources

Stone cabin-style building in the background with a signpost in the foreground that reads “Watauga Industries Handicrafts.”
Photo of Watauga Industries: Handicrafts, contributed to DigitalNC by Watauga County Public Library and Appalachian Regional Library.

What is now North Carolina has seen a variety of folk arts and crafts over the years, including paintings, pottery, wood carvings, sculptures, and even tombstones. Various cultural traditions can be found in the state, and some of these have been highlighted in this primary source set on folk arts and crafts.

Folklife and traditions like folk arts and crafts help people to form and define their identities and better understand how they relate to others. By examining folk arts and crafts, this source set aims to show the variety of folklife and traditions found in the state and asks us to examine our own relationship to folklife and each other. Below are some highlights of the types of folk arts and crafts that can be learned about in this new primary source set.

Folk music is one of the first examples of folk art and folklife that many people name. Recognized for their contributions to continuing folk music traditions, cousins Joe and Odell Thompson recount their experiences in this oral history transcript.

Cover page of a bound oral history transcript. Prominently on the cover is a picture of Joe and Odell Thompson; one is wearing a hat, button up short sleeved shirt, jeans, and glasses and is playing a fiddle and the other to the left is facing the camera wearing a button up short sleeved shirt, slacks, suspenders, and glasses and playing a banjo. They are both seated on chairs next to a picnic table outside.
Bound oral history transcript, contributed to DigitalNC by Alamance County Public Libraries.
Sophie Campbell shown in a black and white photo. She is an elderly woman with her hair pulled back and wearing a knit jacket. She is holding a clay pipe in one hand and posing for the photo as if she was taking a puff. The background is a wall with wooden planks.
Photo of Aunt Sophie Campbell, contributed to DigitalNC by Haywood County Public Library.

Another typical example people might think of would be pottery. Here, Aunt Sophie Campbell is smoking one of her clay pipes, which she would make and sell to tourists and hikers on the Appalachian Trail. People from both Western North Carolina and East Tennessee remember her as she lived along the border near Gatlinburg, TN.

Perhaps an atypical example, North Carolina has a tradition of folk art in tombstone carving. Tombstone makers took simple grave markers and created intricate ornamentation through images, embellishments, and long script carefully carved into stone. Here, Reverend Albert Clement’s granddaughters stand with his tombstone, an example of this folk art.

Reverend Albert Clement’s granddaughters, Dr. Abbie Clement Jackson and Ruth Clement Bond, stand on either side of his gravesite in the St. John's AME Zion Church cemetery. This tombstone shows a dove and ornamental design around it, as well as a script that covers the rest of the tombstone. It can clearly read his name, birth date, and death date, as well as that for his wife. There are carvings that appear to be script on the rest of the tombstone, but it is difficult to determine what it may say.
Photo of Dr. Abbie Clement Jackson and Ruth Clement Bond with their grandfather’s tombstone, contributed to DigitalNC by Davie County Public Library.

These primary sources seek to highlight a sliver of the folklife traditions around arts and crafts that people here have been developing. It also asks us to think more deeply about our own histories and what folk traditions mean to us today. Enjoy exploring some of the interesting folk arts and crafts that have been and continue to be practiced in our communities!


New Editions of the Transylvania Times Report on Library Construction and Opening

Thanks to our partners at the Transylvania County Library, new editions of The Transylvania Times are now available on our website! These new editions cover the years 1997 and 2005-2017, addressing life in the small town in southwestern North Carolina.

Image from the Transylvania Times showing the status of construction for the new county library.
Construction for the main study room at the new Transylvania County Library

One exciting story was the addition of the new library. The Times followed the construction and subsequent opening of the facility, reporting on all aspects of the building’s journey. The $7.5 million project included not only the new library but also an amphitheater and a community room, complete with a kitchen, movie screens, and seating for 200 people.

One fun way the library involved the community in the move was through the “Hand-to-Hand” event. On April 22, volunteers formed a human chain from the old library to the new one to help move 1,000 books from the children’s section of the old library to the new one. The new library opened on May 13 with a grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony, with the location’s first day of business being May 15.

Image from the Transylvania Times showing hundreds of people sitting in an amphitheater listening to a speaker in the center of the image.
Crowds gather for the grand opening of the new Transylvania County Library

According to The Times, construction on the new library had begun exactly two years and one week before the library’s grand opening. Hundreds of people packed the auditorium on May 13, eager to see the new facilities. This move was the fourth one in 90 years, each building increasing in size to accommodate the growing demand for books and space.

To learn more about the Transylvania County Library, please visit their website.

To view all issues of The Transylvania Timesplease click here.

To view more newspapers from around North Carolina, please click here.


New Issues of Three Western North Carolina Newspapers Added to DigitalNC Through Hurricane Helene Recovery Work

With the help of our partners at the State Archives of North Carolina, the Western Regional Archives (Asheville, N.C.), and the Watauga County Public Library we are excited to announce that new issues of three different newspaper titles are now available on DigitalNC. Represented in these most recent issues is news from Watauga County, Alleghany County, and Buncombe County. These batches are part of the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center’s effort to aid our partners and neighbors in western North Carolina as they continue to address the extensive damage caused by Hurricane Helene last fall. Along with checking in with partners in the immediate aftermath of Helene and creating a disaster recovery resource guide, the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center has prioritized working with new and current partners who have been affected by Hurricane Helene.

DigitalNC visitors can now browse new issues of the following newspapers:

More information about our partner, Watauga County Public Library, can be found on their website here. More materials, including more issues of the Watagua Democrat (Boone, N.C.), another newspaper title, yearbooks, and photographs, can be found on Watauga County Public Library’s contributor page, which is linked here.

More information about our partner, State Archives of North Carolina, can be found on their website here. More materials, newspaper titles, yearbooks, and moving images can be found on the State Archives of North Carolina’s contributor page, which is linked here.

More information about our partner, Western Regional Archives (Asheville, N.C.), can be found on their website here. More issues of The Black Mountain News (Black Mountain, N.C.) can be found on the Western Regional Archive (Asheville, N.C.) contributor page, which is linked here.


Bessemer City Celebrates 100th Birthday in New Newspaper Volumes

Thanks to our partner, the Bessemer City History and Art Society, four new volumes of the Bessemer City Record are now available on our website!

This is a banner that has a photo of an old-fashioned car on the left side above the year 1893. There is a picture of a woman playing the piano surrounded by a man playing the violin, a woman singing, and a young girl observing. These figures are above the year 1993.
The banner on the first edition of the March 3, 1993 paper.

These editions, covering the period from 1990 to 1994, detail local news, including weddings, funerals, and various events. The 1993 newspaper included a special spread on Bessemer City’s Centennial celebrations. The small town turned 100 in March 1993, and the Bessemer City Record printed three “Limited Collector’s Editions” to commemorate the occasion.

These editions were released on March 3, 1993, in anticipation of the March 6th celebrations. The first edition contained some of the regular town news, such as obituary notices, advertisements for a thrift store sale, and fire safety information from the fire department. However, the edition also teases the upcoming Centennial celebration events, such as a time capsule dedication and a large ceremony at Square Park, complete with a 100-shot salute, cake, and contests.

The second edition highlights the historic buildings in Bessemer City and the people who founded them. The paper also delves into Bessemer City’s past, examining important moments like the smallpox outbreak and ghostly encounters. Splashed between the pages are advertisements from local businesses thanking B-City for 100 years of service.

Image of important figures from 1893-1993 appear in this advertisement. Figures include Elvis, Nixon, World War II soldiers and the Statue of Liberty. This is an ad for the Home Savings Bank.
An advertisement for the Bessemer City Branch of the Home Savings Bank in the third edition of the March 3, 1993 paper.

The final edition of the Centennial celebration continues to report on Bessemer City’s landmark events. The paper reports on the weather conditions during the city’s charter, the great fire of 1918, and the founding of the first Black church, among other happenings. Advertisements from Bessemer City institutions are also woven throughout the edition.

Bessemer City was more than just a place to live; it was a home. These three special edition papers illustrate the small town’s strength and beauty, telling stories of resilience and growth.

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.


Highlighting how DigitalNC Supports Research At UNC and Across NC!

The North Carolina Digital Heritage Center recently got it’s time to shine in the spotlight on the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s main website as part of the school’s focus on how research happens and is supported at UNC. The article on the NCDHC highlighted the fact that our work is “powered by funds from the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Library Services and Technology Act, a federal program created to support libraries and the services they offer. [Lisa] Gregory estimates that the efforts of the librarians, digital archives specialists and graduate students on her team help save smaller libraries, museums and other community groups more than $2 million per year in costs that they otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford.”

You can read the whole article on UNC’s main website here.

And if you want a behind the scenes look at our work, check out the video UNC made for us back in 2018 that shows some of our spaces and staff at work to digitize more North Carolina history!


More Durham Urban Renewal Maps Detail the Development Project With a History of Displacement and Disappointment

With the help of our partners at Durham County Library, we are excited to announce the addition of dozens of maps from Durham County and hundreds of funeral programs from the R. Kelly Bryant Papers and Obituary Collection on DigitalNC. The largest addition of maps is from Durham’s Urban Renewal Project. The maps, primarily from the Hayti-Elizabeth Street Area, Crest Street Area, Willard-Cobb Street Area, and the Downtown Business District, join more than 1300 records related to Durham Urban Renewal Records that are already available on DigitalNC.

After the Durham Redevelopment Commission was founded in 1958 under the premise of rooting “urban blight” out of the growing city, work on renewal projects in seven areas of Durham began in 1961. Alongside the Downtown Business District, the six other renewal area projects were in historically Black neighborhoods across Durham. Although slated to last 10 years, the Durham Urban Renewal project continued for almost 15 years and was ultimately never fully completed. Projects in the six residential neighborhoods impacted over 9,100 people, or nearly 12% of Durham citizens at the time. In the wake of grand plans and promises of prosperity that went largely unfulfilled, over 4,000 homes and 500 businesses were destroyed. In its early days, the Urban Renewal Project found support from stakeholders across Durham, including over 90% of Black voters who voted in the 1963 referendum to approve and fund the official project. Many of these voters, who wanted to see new investment, improvement, and infrastructure in their neighborhoods and believed in the good faith of the promises made by their city government, were ultimately displaced as places like the Hayti neighborhood were never rebuilt as promised.

While Durham is not the only U.S. city with a history of urban renewal projects, the documentation of the project’s planning and progress has been extensively preserved and serves as evidence of the hope, betrayal, and displacement experienced by so many Durham citizens. The maps, photographs, and other records, saved by the Durham County Library and made accessible on DigitalNC, serve as important sources of a project that’s legacy has continued to impact generations of Durham families, businesses, and neighborhoods. Although at face value many of these records like the property disposal maps tell tales of destruction and loss, it is important to center the affected communities and their continued existence as we look at these maps in the present. Despite being uprooted and displaced, the communities targeted by urban renewal efforts did not disappear from Durham and still exist today as inerasable parts of the city’s politics, economy, culture, social fabric, and history.

In the past couple of decades, urban renewal records have become an increasingly important resource in community-led efforts to make histories of racial and housing injustice more visible, educate citizens on how these projects found support, reckon with present-day inequalities that exist as long-lasting legacies of urban renewal projects, and advocate for more just futures through educating and organizing. Projects like Bull City 150 and Open Durham employ government maps, images, and testimonies of residents affected by Durham’s Urban Renewal Program to create free online exhibits, interactive material, and educational information about the past, present, and future of housing justice in Durham. Additionally, materials related to the Urban Renewal Project in Durham can be found in the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center’s primary source set, Urban Development and Renewal, which can help educators create lesson plans related to local urban development projects.

The new addition of funeral programs from the R. Kelly Bryant Papers and Obituary Collection also serve as important sources of community history in Durham County. The new materials include 25 records that include the last names Tabon to Young and can be browsed, here.

More urban renewal records can be found in the Durham Urban Renewal Records exhibit linked here.

More funeral programs can also be found on the R. Kelly Bryant Papers and Obituary Collection exhibit page linked here.

More information about our partner, Durham County Library, can be found on their website here

Exhibits that also feature materials from Durham County Library include African-American Newspapers in North Carolina, which can be found here, and, the William Franklin Warren Durham City Schools Slide Collection, which is linked here.

More materials, including a newspaper title, yearbooks, maps, photographs, and government records can be found on Durham County Library’s contributor page, which is linked here.


New Issue of The Johisco Now Available!

The blue and gold cover of The Johisco, featuring a drawing of a honeybee.

Thanks to our amazing partners at P. S. Jones Alumni, Incorporated, DigitalNC is pleased to announce that a brand new (but still quite old!) issue of The Johisco is now available online! This issue dates all the way back to 1967 and will be the sixth issue hosted by DigitalNC, joining its 1968 sister-issue. These yearbooks chronicle the experience of students and faculty at P. S. Jones High School.

P. S. Jones High School, formerly located in Washington, N.C., was a historically African-American school that provided education to Washington County throughout much of the twentieth century. The school, which was originally a Rosenwald school, provided an essential educational service until 1969 when desegregation became law. This 1967 issue records some of the last students to attend the school shortly before it’s closure.

You can read the new issue of The Johisco available online now at DigitalNC here. Interested in finding more material from P. S. Jones High School? You can find each digitized issue online here. Thanks again to our fantastic partners at P. S. Jones Alumni, Incorporated for making these records available online. You can find their partner page online at DigitalNC here, or learn more on their website here.


New Issues of Burnsville’s Yancey Journal Now Available on DigitalNC!

Masthead for The Yancey Journal. Text in the photograph from top to bottom, left to right reads: "The Yancey Journal. Vol. 12, No 18. Burnsville, N.C. 28714. Thursday, February 23, 1984. 15c [cents]."

Thanks to our partner, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and funding from the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA), 270 issues of The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.) have been added to our North Carolina Newspapers collection. This batch not only fills in issue gaps from 1980 to 1982, but expands our holdings to include issues from 1983 to 1986.

In the wake of the damage caused by Hurricane Helene to the western part of our state, the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center has made an effort to prioritize partnering with cultural heritage institutions—both new and veteran—and materials related to affected areas. Our latest batch of microfilmed newspapers comes from one of the counties hit hardest by Helene—Yancey.

According to the National Hurricane Center and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, along with over 200 landslides, the highest observed rainfall total—not just in North Carolina, but out of every state hit by Helene—was found in Yancey County. Measuring in at 30.78 inches total, it beat the state with the second highest total (21.66 inches) by nearly 10 inches. At least 1,400 homes were destroyed and 2,300 badly damaged, and utilities not being restored for up to several months. With major roads in and out of the county swept away, the community could only receive supplies either flown in via helicopter or driven in on four wheel drive vehicles. Today, though roads have since been reopened and utilities restored, residents of Yancey County continue to work on rebuilding their community.

To view more materials from Yancey County on DigitalNC here.

To browse more newspapers from across the state, view our newspaper collection here.

Information about Hurricane Helene in Yancey County was taken from the report “National Hurricane Center Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Helene,” authored by the National Hurricane Center and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) currently hosted on the Come Hell or High Water community archives project website.


Jump for Joy! New Yearbooks Available on DigitalNC

Thanks to our partners, Chatham County Public Libraries and Chatham County Historical Association, our yearbook collection has increased by two! Both dating from 1975, this batch adds our 15th yearbook from Chatham Central High School (Bear Creek, N.C.) and our first ever from Northwood High School (Pittsboro, N.C.).

To view more materials from and learn more about the Chatham County Public Libraries and Chatham County Historical Association, view their contributor pages linked here and here.

To view more yearbooks from around the state, view our North Carolina Yearbooks collection here.


Scrapbooks and More From Queens Now Available!

Lined paper with the words FOR WOMEN ONLY written on it in big, black letters.
Page from The Princess [1919]

Thanks to our amazing partners at Queens University of Charlotte, DigitalNC is pleased to announce that over a hundred new literary journals and six new beautiful books are now available online! Four of these new books are scrapbooks created for and by Queens students, while the other two are administrative records. They span from as early as 1919 to as late as 1978; combined, the collection offers a cohesive glimpse into campus life on Queens during the twentieth century. This fantastic collection will join Queens University’s burgeoning presence on DigitalNC, which has added almost three hundred records in the last year!

The highlight of this collection is by far a scrapbook titled “The Princess,” created in 1919. Scrapbooks created by students are often artistic and unconventional, pushing the conventional boundaries of the scrapbooking medium, and this volume is no exception. It chronicles Ms. Effie J. Wall’s first year at Queens, from her arrival at orientation to her departure for summer recess. Ms. Wall’s freshman experience is not unlike many modern college students’ — she quickly forms a tightly knit group of friends, finds a “beau,” makes fun of her professors, and dives in to extracurriculars. Her handwriting fills the margins of each page, providing color commentary on clippings of newspapers and official campus publications. She also includes a variety of unconventional material in her book, including (but not limited to) peanut bags, candy wrappers, locks of her friends’ hair, and scorecards for bridge. The inclusion of these unusual materials hints at that wide-eyed fascination with the wider world many college students experience after moving away from home, even centuries ago. The Princess is an amazing example of humans remaining humans throughout the years (or, rather, teenagers being teenagers!).

Another excellent example of student creativity can be found in the wealth of literary journals included in this collection. Published under a variety of titles during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, these journals embody Queens student’s skills in written and visual art. Each issue contains poems, illustrations, and creative nonfiction created by and for Queens’ faculty and students. The issues span as far back as 1917 to as recently as 2024, meaning DigitalNC now has over a century of published material available online!

We are also pleased to announce that a brand new collection of the Queens University student newspaper has been digitized from microfilm for the very first time! The new issues will join an impressive collection of nearly 500 issues already online, ranging from 1920 to 2005. The papers chronicle campus life at Queens from 1961 to 1985, a period where Queens began accepting male students to its hallowed halls for the very first time. You can find the new issues of the Queens University student newspaper online at DigitalNC here.

You can find The Princess, along with the other scrapbooks and administrative records, online now at DigitalNC here. You can also find the literary journals online now at DigitalNC here. Interested in learning more about Queens University of Charlotte? Try exploring their records online at DigitalNC here, or visiting their website online here. Thanks again to our fantastic partners at Queens University for making this collection, and many other amazing pieces of history, available online at DigitalNC.


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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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