Hometown News Finds New Home on DigitalNC

The title block of the Hometown News, underlined with a green bar
Welcome home, Hometown News! This title is the earliest we have currently online, from October 2007

Thanks to our partners at the W. B. Wicker Alumni Association, DigitalNC is proud to announce that a brand new title, the Hometown News, is now available online! This is the debut batch for the Hometown News, and what a collection it is! This amazing collection includes thirteen years of monthly issues, from 2007 to 2010 — when you do the math, that adds up to over 140 issues spanning 1,628 pages.

Each issue of Hometown News is an amazing record of events and stories from Lee, Moore, and Chatham counties, areas that encompass the central Sandhills and include major towns such as Pinehurst and Sanford. Over the last thirteen years, the region has seen rapid growth and development, due in part to its proximity to Fort Bragg and the attention gained from hosting events such as the US Open. Despite the region’s growth, the News’ attention to local figures and community events retains a familiar and local quality to the paper, which often feature events such as the annual Jabberwock Pageant.

Hosted by the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, the Jabberwock Pageant is a cultural enrichment event inspired by Lewis Carroll’s poem “The Jabberwock.” Each year, the Hometown News advertised the local pageant hosted by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chapter of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, and every year the winner of the pageant (known as Miss Jabberwock) would be featured by the Hometown News. Many other events often ignored by larger and more conventional publications can be found within the Hometown News, which covers each corner of the Sandhills with a special care and attention.

You can find each issue included in this extraordinary collection online now at DigitalNC here. Thanks again to our fantastic partners at the W. B. Wicker Alumni Association for making this title available on DigitalNC. If you’re interested in learning more about Lee County history, you can find a host of amazing materials at the W. B. Wicker Alumni Association contributor page on DigitalNC here.


Browse New Yearbooks and Newspapers from Edenton Now!

Thanks to the help of our partners at Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library, we are pleased to announce that two new years of The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.) and six new volumes of Edenton High School’s yearbook, Edentonian, are now available to browse on DigitalNC. The 101 newly-added issues of The Chowan Herald span from 2020 to 2021. These two years of weekly issues add to the 85 years of issues already available on DigitalNC!

Newly added years of the Edentonian include:

More information about our partner, Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library, can be found on their website here

More materials, including more yearbook titles and issues of The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.), can be found on Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library’s contributor page, which is linked here.


Bring the Beach to the Mountains With the Latest Yearbook from Blowing Rock Historical Society

With the help of our partners at Blowing Rock Historical Society we are excited to announce that the 1965 volume of Blowing Rock High School’s yearbook, The Breezes, is now available on DigitalNC. This new addition joins DigitalNC’s pre-existing collection of the The Breezes, which goes back to 1949. Most significantly, The Breezes [1965] represents the memories, goodbyes, and reflections from Blowing Rock High School’s last graduating class.

Although sea motifs are common across yearbooks from North Carolina’s coast, seeing images of ships and anchors is far more unexpected when opening a yearbook from a mountain town. The final students of Blowing Rock High School, however, brought the beach to mountains to pay homage to the beloved school that provided them a safe harbor as they prepared to embark on their own voyages across the seas of learning and life. Scattered amongst the illustrations of anchors and ships in The Breezes [1965] are sentiments on new beginnings, old friends, and bittersweet goodbyes.

More information about our partner, Blowing Rock Historical Society, can be found on their website here. 

More materials, including more yearbook titles, ledgers, voting lists, and two newspaper titles, can be found on Blowing Rock Historical Society’s contributor page, which is linked here.


Plan Your Visit to the Coast with Our Latest Materials From Hyde County!

With help from our partners at Friends of Hyde Countys Historic 1854 Courthouse, we are excited to announce dozens of brochures, maps, and other materials related to local Hyde County history, events and sites are now available on DigitalNC!

When planning your next visit to the coast, look no further than the information-packed brochures and maps that represent a long history of tourism in Hyde County. In addition to these materials, four binders document the history of Mattamuskeet Lodge from 1990-2000 to 2001-2017, publications featuring the lodge, and the history of the lodge’s annual event, Swan Days. Also in this batch is a 1960s guidebook that features information about activities such as bird watching, hunting, and fishing around Lake Mattamuskeet, Ocracoke Island, and Hyde County.

The final gem in this newest batch of materials from the Friends of Hyde Countys Historic 1854 Courthouse is a chattel mortgage book from the end of the 19th-century. This ledger book, used from 1877 to 1899, records the mortgage contracts and agreements brought before judges and officials across Hyde County. The more than two decade span of entries in this book makes its an incredibly rich source of information about Hyde County in the late 19th-century. It includes mortgage agreements documented by many individual officials who held different posts. Importantly, this can tell us not only the names of officials in Hyde County, but also the structure of the local government during this time. In addition, the agreements recorded in the chattel mortgage book provides a glimpse at the relationships that existed between the residents of Hyde County and offers potential insight into the economic and material realities of the time.

More information about our partner, Friends of Hyde Countys Historic 1854 Courthouse, can be found on their Facebook page here.

More materials, including an report on the historic Hyde County 1854 Courthouse, can be found on the Friends of Hyde Countys Historic 1854 Courthouse’s contributor page, which is linked here.


Catch Up on Some Waves With the Latest Issues of Pine Knoll Shores’ Newspaper, The Shore Line

With the help of our partners at the History Committee of the Town of Pine Knoll Shores, we are excited to announce that the latest year of The Shore Line is available to browse on DigitalNC. With this addition of 12 monthly issues from 2024, DigitalNC now has 51 years worth of beachside community history to peruse! Be sure to check out exciting stories in these issues like the Pine Knoll Shores Garden Club’s golden anniversary, a Christmas-time pet reunion, “Downright Unbelievable Historical Events in PKS”, and quotes of inspiration from the community!

More information about our partner, the History Committee of the Town of Pine Knoll Shores, can be found here.

More materials from the History Committee of the Town of Pine Knoll Shores including maps, correspondences, and booklets can be found here.

More issues of The Shore Line can be explored here.


Publications and Posters from Forsyth Tech Community College!

With help from our partners at Forsyth Tech Community College, we are excited to announce that dozens of new materials including newsletters, commencement programs, handbooks, and posters are now available on DigitalNC! This latest batch of materials includes publications from and about Forsyth Tech Community College from 1991 to 2024. Be sure to check out new issues of Information Weekly, the weekly newsletter published by the college, and new issues of InTouch, the faculty and staff newsletter!

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 Primary Source Set on the Eugenics Movement in North Carolina

We have another new primary source set on DigitalNC. This new set focuses on the eugenics movement and selective sterilization in North Carolina, and is largely composed of newspaper articles and advertisements that discuss eugenics or sterilization. Other than the sources themselves, the set includes background information, discussion questions, outside resources, a timeline, and context statements for each source. Here’s a brief introduction to the Eugenic Movement in North Carolina set:

Eugenics in North Carolina

Time period: 1913-2014

Eugenics is the theory that humankind can improve itself by selectively breeding out what are considered undesirable traits, while selectively breeding for what are regarded as desirable traits. Eugenics was first proposed by a mathematician, explorer, and anthropologist named Sir Francis Galton, whose ideas helped spread eugenicist thought and practices into widespread popularity, even in North Carolina. Through the early to mid-twentieth century, a practice known as sterilization played a key part in the state’s own eugenics movement.

Sterilization is a medical procedure that impedes a person’s ability to reproduce. Through sterilization, North Carolina prevented people who were considered undesirable from having children. “Undesirable” people included individuals with mental disabilities, who were often referred to as “mentally defective” or “feebleminded.” Eugenics supporters believed that the children of such people could inherit their “inferior” traits, causing a “burden” on the parents, the public, and the state. By sterilizing these individuals, they thought the burden could be eased. While groups like the Human Betterment League claimed that the procedure was done with the consent of the patient or their family, many individuals were forced or coerced into sterilization.

Official apologies for sterilization were made in 2002, but it was not until 2010 that North Carolina created a compensation plan for victims of forced sterilization. Victims received $20,000 as payment, but many have criticized the program for its eligibility requirements and for coming too late; by the time the program was established, many victims were thought to have died.

Teacher, students, researchers, and anyone interested in learning more about the eugenics movement in North Carolina can find the primary source set on our resources page. If you would like to give us feedback on the sets, please contact us here.


Scrapbooks, Newspapers, and More From High Point!

With the help of our partners at High Point Museum and the Heritage Research Center at High Point Public Library, we are excited to announce the addition of new scrapbooks, programs, newsletters, and newspapers to DigitalNC. New issues of several newspaper titles include the Penn-Griffin School for the Arts Student Newspaper The Students’ Pen, the Adams-Millis Corporation’s Amco News, Melrose Hosiery Mills’ Mel-Rose-Glen, the High Point Junior High School Student Newspaper the Junior Pointer, and the High Point High School Student Newspaper The Pointer.

Along with several newspaper issues, this latest batch of materials from our partners also includes various religious publications. Local religious history can be seen through programs related to Saint Mary’s Episcopal Church and B’Nai Israel Synagogue. Additionally, The New Tar Heel Bulletin, the newsletter published by the North Carolina Christian Endeavor Union, and The C.E. News Reel, published by the High Point City (Christian Endeavor) Union Executive Committee, represent both local and state chapter publications of the international organization the Christian Endeavor.

New materials available on DigitalNC also relate to other community organizations such as a 1941-1942 directory for the Alpha Art Club, which, founded in 1924, is the oldest-known African American women’s club in the Piedmont Triad area. Additionally, two scrapbooks from the High Point Exchangette Club covers twenty years of the group’s community service activities. A final item, from the Heritage Research Center at High Point Public Library, is a Farm Plat Book and Business Guide of Guilford County that includes maps and the names of landowners around Guilford County.

More information about our partner, High Point Museum, can be found here

More scrapbooks, newspaper titles, yearbooks, and church records can be found on the High Point Museum’s contributor page linked here

More information about our partner, Heritage Research Center at High Point Public Library, can be found here. 

Additional materials, including scrapbooks, yearbooks, and directories can be found on the Heritage Research Center at High Point Public Library’s contributor page linked here.


Community Theater Comes to Life in New Little Theatre Posters

Thanks to our amazing new partners at the Little Theatre in Winston-Salem, DigitalNC is proud to announce that hundreds of new show posters and playbills are now available online! Little Theatre’s debut batch on DigitalNC features colorful, bombastic history across nearly a century of play-making. The Little Theatre of Winston-Salem is one of the oldest theatrical associations in Forsyth County, and has continuously produced nearly a century of community theater. This year, the Little Theatre celebrates its ninetieth season of operation; and what better way to celebrate a storied history, than by sharing it online?!

This brand new collection features nearly two hundred individual records, many of which include multiple playbills arranged by season. The earliest playbills hail from as early as 1937 to as recently as 2023. Topics range from serious straight plays by Tennessee Williams to children’s Christmas pageants and musicals. Anyone interested in theater, Winston-Salem, or dramaturgy is sure to find something of interest in this collection.

Looking through show posters and playbills is an amazing way to watch art and design develop across the decades. Each playbill and show poster feature extensive illustrations that demonstrate contemporary design sensibilities. Playbills from the 1960s and 1970s often feature beautiful hand-drawn illustrations, while playbills from the 1990s and 2000s showcase artistic interest in digital art and Photoshop. Arsenic and Old Lace, an Agatha Christie murder mystery, looks drastically different in 1950 than it does five decades later. And while the design of playbills changes through the decades, Little Theatre grows and changes in perfect parallel. The theater’s 1937 season only featured four straight plays put on by a limited cast of actors. In 2023, the Little Theatre produced multiple feature length musicals, organized children’s acting programs and productions, and hosted a variety of acting troupes on its stage in Winston-Salem. However much design and programming may change, a commitment to local artists and entertainers runs through each record in every decade.

You can find these brand new show posters and playbills online now at DigitalNC here. Thanks again to our amazing partners at the Little Theatre of Winston-Salem for making this amazing debut collaboration possible. You can find out more about the Little Theatre at DigitalNC’s partner page here, or online at the theatre’s website here. Here’s to an amazing 90th Season!


The Transylvania Times Celebrates America’s 200th Birthday

Thanks to our partners at Transylvania County Library and funding from the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA), new editions of The Transylvania Times are now available on our website!

These new editions cover the years 1975 to 1996 and explore life in southwestern North Carolina. Residents of Transylvania County received their local, state, and national news from The Transylvania Times, which was faithfully updated semi-weekly.

The early July 1976 issues cover Transylvania County’s plans for the Bicentennial anniversary of America’s independence. The celebrations lasted three days and included free watermelon, a flag-raising ceremony, a softball game, relay races, and fireworks, among other events. The Transylvania community united to celebrate the birth of America through family-friendly events, although summer showers delayed some of the festivities.

The birthday celebration’s main event was burying a time capsule on the courthouse lawn. Inside, community members buried twenty-eight items, including the centennial issue of The Transylvania Times, documents from the Transylvania County Historic Properties Commission, and thirteen postcards printed with scenes and buildings of local interest.

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.


DigitalNC Blog Header Image

About

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.

Social Media Policy

Search the Blog

Archives

Subscribe

Email subscribers can choose to receive a daily, weekly, or monthly email digest of news and features from the blog.

Newsletter Frequency
RSS Feed