Harford County Public Library Makes the Past More Accessible for Genealogists & Local History Researchers

I did some fieldwork in Bel Air last week, and that investigation took me to the Harford County Public Library (HCPL).   Over the decades, I have used this branch many times to access research materials, such as newspapers on microfilm and resources in the local history room.  These include a long run of the Aegis, the Baltimore Sun starting in 1959, and a number of helpful materials in the local history room.

At the Harford County Public Library, a new state-of-the-art Image Data ScanPro 2000 makes it easy to ready the county, the Aegis.

This is a fine Harford County agency, which has always provided excellent service.  So I shouldn’t have been surprised to find that they had replaced a cranky, decades old analog microfilm reader with a state-of-the-art device.  The aging analog machine was in constant use by genealogist, local history researchers and curious types.

HCPL unveiled the new digital microfilm reader/scanner, sometime during the past year.  It doesn’t look anything like the old clunky ones most researchers have used somewhere.  It consists of a computer, image management software, a small desktop scanner, and a large horizontal monitor, which allows you to see the full-page.

It not only reads and prints the microfilm, but allows for extensive image manipulation and creation of PDFs and JPGS, which you may save to a flash drive.  You may also enhance the image digitally, an important addition as most of us are familiar with the eye strain created by trying to read film that is too light or too dark.

The new unit makes the data collection process much easier, and it is a user-friendly machine.  Without any instruction I was effortlessly using it and acquiring the evidence I needed for my study.  There are a number of models of the digitally units in the marketplace, and this one was easy to use so I could speed through the reading and image manipulation.

Since many titles were published in Harford County over the centuries, there are literally hundreds of rolls of microfilm.  Researchers are going to be using this tired 1950s era analog technology for a long time as archives and special collections institutions transition to the next generation products.  These state-of-the-art readers bridge the gap as our heritage materials become more widely available in special online repositories.

More broadly, there is good news on the horizon as the virtual research revolution continues.  The University of Maryland libraries are working to have newspapers made available online.  In the upcoming year, there are plans to have the Aegis (Bel Air), the Cecil Whig (Elkton), the Banner (Cambridge) and other rural Maryland newspapers made available on the Library of Congress website.  Already some Western Maryland and Baltimore serials are there.

But this work takes time and each county has many titles, the various serials all being important to the study of our past.  Meanwhile Harford County Public Library has taken an important step, helping patrons with family or local history bridge the gap as the research revolution advances.

Other helpful locations for working with Harford County newspapers include:

Historical Society of Harford County – The Society  has the largest collection of county newspapers available to researchers.  According to the Maryland Archives, weeklies were published in Aberdeen, Abingdon, Bel Air Darlington, Havre de Grace and Joppa and many of those titles are available at the Society, either on film or in bound volumes of broadsheets.  You should check with the Society for details on exact inventory and availability.

Aberdeen Room Archives & Museum – One of the major strengths is the newspaper collection. Bound volumes of the “Harford Democrat and Aberdeen Enterprise” (1919 to 1986) are available and patrons may take photographs of the pages.

Historical Society of Cecil County – The Havre de Grace Republican is available on microfilm from 1868 to 1946.

 

Large Collection of Online Historic Delaware Maps Help Researchers

Part of the 1859 Map of Kent County Delaware (French), showing Leipsic.  Source:  Library of Congress
Part of the 1859 Map of Kent County Delaware (French), showing Leipsic. Source: Library of Congress

Over the past several years there has been an enormous increase in the number of historical maps that are available online.  These digital, on-demand collections are a great aid for those seeking to understand the past, whether it is for a scholarly investigation, local history study, or genealogy project. While the

 

Part of the 1859 map of Kent County Delaware showing Smyrna and part of Camden.  Source:  Library of Congress
Part of the 1859 map of Kent County Delaware showing Smyrna and part of Camden. Source: Library of Congress

maps, many centuries old, have always been available in special collections repositories around the nation, access was limited as trips to widely scattered archives and access rules created obstacles for some researchers.

Here are a couple of general starting points.  One of the best is  Old Maps Online, an easy-to-use web portal to historical maps in libraries around the globe.  It allows users to search across a number of collections, via a user friendly geographical search interface.  Another strong one is the Library of Congress.  The products can be downloaded and the scans, which are of high quality, can be magnified, in most instances.  Some of repositories require you to register to get full free access.

These and other research e-resources are revolutionizing the way we conduct historical research and are invaluable for those working in the past.  Here are some specific online Delaware resources, which you should find helpful.

  • The Library of Congress has the J. H. French Map of Kent County Delaware (1859), It can be downloaded in a large format in order to magnify the product.  There is also the Birds-Eye View of Wilmington Delaware (1874) in addition to over 30 more products.
  • Old Maps Online provides a portal to the full Beer Atlas of 1868, a most valuable product for researchers.  Here is the link to Georgetown Hundred but the other plates are there too.  
  • The USGS Historical Topographic Map Collection provides acce3ss to more than 193,000 topograph maps published by the USGS since the inception of the national mapping program in 1884.  It includes the Delaware products.  Also here is another free source for these maps.  
  • Historic aerial maps of Delaware, beginning in the 1930s and running to the present, are available online through a service provided by the Delaware Geological Service’s Delaware DataMil (Data Mapping and Integration Laboratory).  This virtual service allows researchers to easily acquire detailed visual representations showing the nature of development on parcels at specific points in time.
  • On one of the local heritage weblogs we follow, the Mill Creek Hundred History Blog, we found out about some great e-cartographic content at the “New Castle Community History and Archaeology Program” site.  The publisher of that site, Jim Meeks, has made some great produts available, including a zoomable copy of the Rea & Price Map of New Castle County (1849).

You will also find a collection of historic First State Maps at the Delaware Public Archives, as well as Official Highway Maps provided by DelDOT.  The first e-product there was published in 1906 and the Official Highway Maps start in 1920.

Check these site out the next time you are working on a Delaware project, regardless of where your inquiry takes you around the State.  You will find many other maps of interest once you start searching these and other databases and with each passing year more of these resources are open sourced, greatly expanding efficiencies for those studying the past.

A plate from the Pomery & Beers Atlas of Delaware (1868) showing White Clay Creek and Newark.
A plate from the Pomery & Beers Atlas of Delaware (1868) showing White Clay Creek and Newark. Source: David Rumsey Collection via oldmapsoline.org

 

 

 

Presentation on Research and Writing About History

On the day the Digital Public Library of America opened its virtual doors to the public, I was in Havre de Grace to do a talk with author Heidi Glatfelter on “Researching and Writing about the War of 1812.”   We took a team approach to the program as I focused on new methods of doing digital research, while Heidi discussed how she accumulated information to produce her just released title, “Havre de Grace in the War of 1812:  Fire on the Chesapeake.”   We both drew on our experience in working as consultants on the 1812 Bicentennial celebration that is taking place this spring in the beautiful community at the top of the Chesapeake.  Heidi was the grant administrator and I served as a consulting public historian. 

Online research has made a broader universe of information easily available to anyone studying the past.  So for this community-oriented audience I talked about some of the basic virtual repositories such as the Internet Archive, the American Memory and Chronicling America collections at the Library of Congress, and Project Gutenberg.  As old maps are of interest, we took some time to examine some of the portals for cartography such as Old Maps Online.  Of course, in the age when we all Google our information, we took a little deeper look at some of the tools in that massive index, such as Google scholar and newspaper archive.   These were free resources, but we also talked about the commercial content providers.

Once Heidi finished talking about how she accumulated her body of data and developed the narrative for the enjoyable and informative work, we turned to the audience for questions.  They were interested in discussing how to use the online tools and other topics such as derivative digital copyrights.

Here is a link to online research resources you may find helpful.

The Digital Public Library of America
The Digital Public Library of America