Viewing entries posted in 2025

New Editions of UNC Charlotte’s 49er Times Available Now

Thanks to our partners at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, we are excited to announce a new batch of student newspapers available online. This new group of papers spans from March to December 1983 and covers topics ranging from current global events to campus sports news.

Amongst intense Cold War tensions and political strife, UNC Charlotte students proved they knew how to have fun in this edition of The 49er Times. Events like Jam Up, the annual spring concert series, provided students with unforgettable musical experiences and a space to let loose before finals. Performances by The Average White Band and Aviator rocked the stage and electrified the crowds.

Similarly, the 49er Times reported on the fall activities fair, which started the 1983-1984 school year with several free carnival games, snow cones, and cotton candy. The packed festival introduced new students to the UNCC campus and brought together returning undergraduates for a day of fun and connection.

These fun events also helped foster community across the UNC Charlotte student community. Programs like the International Festival allowed students to connect and learn about different cultures through music, food, and conversations.

Despite threats of war, global poverty, and nuclear bombs, Charlotte 49er students made sure their collegiate experiences were fun and new. They embraced the present, cherishing friendships, academic stimulation, and their vibrant campus life.

More materials, including photographs, catalogs, yearbooks, and directories, can be found on the University of North Carolina at Charlotte’s contributor page here

Visitors can view more issues of The 49er Times here.

More information about the University of North Carolina at Charlotte can be found on their website linked here.

To browse our entire collection of student newspapers, select the “Student Papers” filter on our “Newspaper Titles” search page linked here.


New Additions from Forsyth Tech Community College Span Across 36 Years of Campus History.

With help from our partners at Forsyth Tech Community College, we are excited to announce that over one hundred new records related to Forsyth Tech and its students are now available on DigitalNC! This latest batch of materials includes student publications, weekly newsletters, news clippings, and college press releases from 1984 to 2020.

Some highlights from the collection include:

More information about our partner, Forsyth Tech Community College, can be found on their website here

Information about Forsyth Tech Community College’s Library resources and offerings can be found here.

More materials, including yearbooks, scrapbooks, catalogs, and a newspaper, can be found on Forsyth Tech Community College’s contributor page, which is linked here.


New Issue of Mountain Xpress Highlights Beauty of North Carolina Arboretum

Mast head for the Mountain Xpress.

Thanks to our partner, Buncombe County Public Libraries, our newspaper collection has gained a new title, the Mountain Xpress published in Asheville, North Carolina. This batch includes 68 issues of the paper from its very first “opener” issue in July 1994 to November 1995.

In their opener issue, they announce that the Mountain Xpress is a paper people will “reach for with pleasure and anticipation, every week, for free; a paper that tells you what’s going on and what’s going down, that knows how to be lively, outspoken, authoritative and fair; a paper that is uniquely Western North Carolinian [July 1, 1994, page 3].” In addition to providing comprehensive calendars of events, the Mountain Xpress includes reports on local news written by professional and nationally recognized, WNC journalists.

Highlighting the beauty of the North Carolina Arboretum in their April 5, 1995 issue, the paper breaks their typical pattern of published predominately in black and white. Along with highlighting the arboretum as a whole, the feature details the construction and history of what becomes the North Carolina Arboretum. The land the arboretum is built on is referred to as Bent Creek and was inhabited by Native Americans around 14,000 years ago. The Cherokee visited a seasonal camp there into the 1830s before “Colonel W. H. Thomas persuaded them to relinquish the area [April 5, 1995, page 14].” Once the land was vacated, white settlers bought and worked the land until it was mostly an eroded watershed. Years later, George Vanderbilt bought the Bent Creek watershed as an addition to his Biltmore Estate. He used it to experiment with the the newly developing German scientific forestry methods at the time.

The land was purchased from Vanderbilt in 1917 to be part of the Pisgah National Forest. With the Bent Creek Research Forest established in 1921, restoration of eroded fields and replanting trees continues into the 1930s. A majority of this restoration work was completed by the Civilian Conservation Corps, specifically the individuals who worked at CCC Vance.

In 1984, local civic leaders in Buncombe County, garden groups, and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill managers, submitted a proposal for an arboretum in the Asheville area. Recognizing the value it would have in the western part of the state, the North Carolina General Assembly allotted $250,000 for the development and building of an arboretum. The Bent Creek site was chosen from 25 candidates in the region, but won because the area was unrestricted by urban development; accessible to attractions such as the Blue Ridge Parkway and Biltmore Estate; it formed its own watershed; and, of course, the land was “free” (available from the federal government on a long-term lease). Today, the North Carolina Arboretum boasts 65 acres of cultivated gardens along with 10+ miles of hiking and biking trails, rotating exhibits, a variety of family-friendly nature activities.

To learn more about Buncombe County Public Libraries, visit their website here.

To view more materials from Buncombe County Public Libraries, visit their contributor page here.

To view more newspapers from across North Carolina, visit our newspaper collection here.

To learn more about the North Carolina Arboretum, visit their website here.


Celebrating Sixty Years of Richmond Community College with Brand New Records

Richmond Community College written out next to its logo, a torch and gear symbol that are surrounded by a red circle.

First and foremost, a big congratulations is in order for our partner Richmond Community College, who celebrated their 60th anniversary in 2024! Richmond Community College was founded as Richmond Technical Institute in 1964 to provide technical, vocational, and higher education for students across Scotland and Richmond Counties. Although Richmond Community College might have had a couple of name changes, campus development projects, and major expansions in curriculum over the past 60 years, its core mission to serve the students of Richmond and Scotland Counties has always rung true. Richmond Community College, along with the 57 other community colleges in the state of North Carolina, play invaluable roles in providing high-quality, accessible education and opportunities for the people in the communities they serve across our state.

The cover illustration for the 1967-1968 Catalog of Richmond Community College (then Richmond Technical Institute). An aerial color drawing depicts a large rectangular white building. Trees and a small lake are seen behind the building, while a large parking lot with cars is in the foreground in front of the building.
Illustration of the Lee building from the 1967 General Catalog

At DigitalNC, some of our favorite moments are when we get to celebrate our partners, whose collaboration helps us show DigitalNC visitors all of the communities and collective histories we share across our beautiful state. As we ring in Richmond Community College’s six decades of service to students in North Carolina, we are excited to announce that new records documenting Richmond Community College’s more recent history are now available on DigitalNC. Course catalogs from 2010 to 2023, as well as student handbooks from 2016 to 2024, join our digital collection from Richmond Community College that spans back to 1967.

More information about our partner, Richmond Community College, can be found here

More materials, including yearbooks, handbooks, and even more course catalogs can be found on Richmond Community College’s contributor page linked here

Visitors can also find materials from Richmond Community College and other community colleges across the state in DigitalNC’s exhibit, North Carolina Community College Collections.


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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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