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Subject:
From:
David Lynx <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 27 Apr 1994 11:10:18 EDT
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[This announcement was originally posted to H-Post by <[log in to unmask]>]
 
 
 
 
                        THE HISTORY COMPUTERIZATION PROJECT
                   To Build a Regional History Information Network
 
         The History Computerization Project of the Regional History Center
         of the University of Southern California and the Los Angeles City
         Historical Society is building a Regional History Information
         Network for the exchange of information between historians,
         librarians, archivists, museum curators, preservation groups, and
         historical societies who share a common subject interest. The
         participating organizations will contribute copies of their records
         to a Regional Union Catalog for Southern California History,
         available for searching at the Regional History Center or over
         telephone lines by a computer attached to a modem.
 
         The project has created a database of more than 6,000 entries
         representing more than 3,000 historical organizations and
         repositories in California. In many cases the database also
         identifies the individuals in each organization who have the
         greatest interest in participating in a computer network. Entries
         for repositories include the historical subjects represented by the
         collections and the hours of operation. The database of
         repositories can be employed to provide a reference service to
         researchers. For example, one can do a search for all of the
         repositories with information on the author Jack London, and sort
         the search by zip code to find the repository closest to the
         researcher's location.
 
         The Los Angeles City Historical Society is using the same system to
         update a massive bibliography of the city published twenty years
         ago. The bibliography will be available in both printed and
         computer form in the Spring of 1994.
 
         We believe that the exchange of historical information between
         organizations and researchers will follow the pattern of computer
         bulletin boards, organized on a voluntary basis by those who share
         a strong interest in a particular subject. Local and national
         interests will overlap. For example, both the Southern California
         Jewish Historical Society and Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel are
         about to begin participation in our project. Their immediate desire
         is to share information with each other and with other local
         organizations. But ultimately they will also want to communicate
         with repositories possessing materials on Jewish history on a
         national or international scale. The same will hold true for the
         Santa Barbara Mission, which has joined the project, and which will
         eventually want to exchange information with other missions.
 
         The History Computerization Project is intended to serve as a pilot
         program for other local and regional historical organizations with
         similar objectives. The project has realistically faced the
         situation in which most historical organizations find themselves,
         and has therefore devised solutions with the intention of providing
         the easiest and the least expensive avenue possible at the present
         time. The plans made with regard to computer hardware, computer
         software, the training of staff and volunteers, and the sharing of
         data from many organizations through a regional history database,
         have all been propelled by the basic desire to bring the benefits
         of computer database management and standardized cataloging
         practice as far down as possible on the cost and experience
         spectrum.
 
                                   Free Workshops
 
         The History Computerization Project is now conducting free, one-day
         workshops for beginners featuring hands-on training in the use of
         computer database management for historical cataloging and
         research. No prior computer experience or skilled typing ability is
         required. The workshops give historical researchers and
         organizations a chance to see how easy it can be to build an
         historical database, at no cost or obligation.
 
         At the workshops, each student works with historical materials
         pertaining to his or her area of subject knowledge, drawn from the
         USC collections. We have found great advantages in tapping the
         knowledge possessed by historical society volunteers, when that
         knowledge is combined with national cataloging standards and the
         facilities of computer database management. For example, a recent
         workshop focused on the Los Angeles Harbor, for two historical
         societies located in that area. Only two of the twelve attending
         had ever used a computer before. By the end of the day they were
         all cataloging successfully. Most importantly, because they knew
         the harbor area thoroughly, they were able to contribute
         information which we would not have had otherwise.
 
         Another workshop had as its focus maritime history. When I look at
         a photo of sailing ship, I know that it's a ship, but not much
         more. For those attending however, the ship was a "brigantine," a
         "schooner," or another specific type. We are currently trying to
         bring in members of the Chinese Historical Society of Southern
         California, to read the Chinese characters in the background of the
         photographs of the Los Angeles Chinatown.
 
         The experience of conducting the workshops has been invaluable in
         learning how to extend computerization to those who are not already
         computer literate. After the first workshops we changed the screen
         messages, to assure the novice cataloger that his or her work had
         been saved properly. The result was that the workshop cataloging
         rate tripled, to the creation of 200-300 records per workshop.
         After each workshop, computer database utilities are used to make
         corrections to the records, to bring them into conformance with
         national cataloging standards. The database utilities will correct
         hundreds of records in one pass, it is not necessary to edit each
         record individually. As a result we have been able to justify the
         cost of conducting the workshops by the amount of cataloging
         produced alone.
 
                                 Computer Classroom
 
         At the Regional History Center of the University of Southern
         California we have set up a computer classroom with ten
         workstations for the History Computerization Project. In the
         computer classroom we teach one-day workshops free of charge to
         representatives of the local historical organizations.
 
         In the classroom we employ the History Database program for
         cataloging. The main computer employed is a medium-grade IBM PC
         compatible. (It is an Everex 80386, running at a speed of 25
         Megahertz, with four megabytes of memory, and a 160 Megabyte hard
         disk.) That is where the database resides. Vintage IBM PCs, without
         hard disks, were rescued from a warehouse and pressed into service
         as terminals connected to the main computer. All ten computers are
         connected to the database at the same time.
 
         The system ensures that users do not collide. For example, two
         novice catalogers cannot accidentally assign duplicate Record-IDs.
         The IDs are assigned by the system.
 
 
              Publicity through a Network of Historical Organizations
 
         As mentioned above, our project is a joint project of USC and the
         Los Angeles City Historical Society. It is through the historical
         society connection that the project generates publicity and draws
         in participants.
 
         The board members of the Los Angeles society include past and
         present officers of the Associated Historical Societies of Los
         Angeles County, the Conference of California Historical Societies,
         the Los Angeles Conservancy, and many organizations. Through these
         connections we have access to all of the historical society
         newsletters for publicity.
 
         We encourage the individual societies to organize their interested
         members to come in for a special workshop, specific to that
         society's subject interest. That is how the Harbor Day workshop,
         the Maritime Day workshop, and many others came about. This method
         shifts the burden of organization and publicity from us to the
         society.
 
         The response that we have received confirms our belief that there
         were many in the historical organizations who wanted to computerize
         their collections, but who simply did not know where to start. When
         we had an Open House inaugurating the project, over two hundred
         people came.
 
                                For More Information
 
 
         For more information on the History Computerization Project and a
         free copy of the 80-page workshop tutorial, please contact:
 
         David L. Clark
         History Computerization Project
         24851 Piuma Road
         Malibu, California 90265
         (818) HISTORY, (818) 591-9371

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