Canada’s National Heritage Digitization Strategy Approves 21 Projects For Funding
From the National Heritage Digitization Strategy:
The National Heritage Digitization Strategy (NHDS) is providing $1 million to support 21 projects by archives, libraries and documentary heritage institutions throughout Canada. The recipients of the Digitization Canadian Collection funding call were announced today in an event held at the Vancouver Public Library.
This opportunity was made possible thanks to a generous gift from a private foundation.
The following 21 projects will be funded by the NHDS:
- Colony, Confederation and Country: Accessing the National Story Through the Lens of Prince Edward Island’s Historical Newspapers (Robertson Library, University of Prince Edward Island), Charlottetown, Prince Eward Island ($45,685)
- The Robin Collection: Digitization, Access and Preservation (Musée de la Gaspésie), Gaspé, Quebec ($43,742)
- Early Photographs of the Innu and Atikamekw Peoples (Université Laval Library), Québec, Quebec ($28,742)
- Forging Fur-ways: the North West Company Fur Trade Collection (McGill University Library) Montréal, Quebec ($15,963)
- Set of 146 Early Books in Indigenous Languages (1556-1900) (Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec), Montréal, Quebec ($22,511)
- Digitizing Past Issues of Bulletin d’histoire politique (Association québécoise d’histoire politique), Montréal, Quebec ($6,525)
- Le Son des Français d’Amérique : Mixed Traces and Memories of Continents (Cinémathèque québécoise), Montréal, Quebec ($86,812)
- Digitizing and Publishing Heritage Collections on Canadian History (Document Management and Archives Division, Université de Montréal), Montréal, Quebec ($81,141)
- Discovering the Heritage of the Association canadienne-française de l’Ontario (1910–1990): A Living Memory! (Centre for Research on French Canadian Culture, University of Ottawa), Ottawa, Ontario ($86,805)
- Digital John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir (Queen’s University Library), Kingston, Ontario ($65,033)
- The MacGregor Collection (The Canadian Canoe Museum), Peterborough, Ontario ($9,925)
- Digitizing Inuit Artistic Heritage (Inuit Art Foundation), Toronto, Ontario ($80,786)
- Healing and Education Through Digital Access (Algoma University), Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario ($86,890)
- First Nations and Métis Oral History Digitization Project (Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan), Regina, Saskatchewan ($8,700)
- Indian History Film Project Digitization (First Nations University of Canada), Regina, Saskatchewan ($19,414)
- The Idea of the North: Exploring Evidence of Resilience and Change (University of Saskatchewan), Saskatoon, Saskatchewan ($83,058)
- Smoke Signals, Satellites and Servers: Digitizing the ANCS Television Archive (Sound Studies, Faculty of Arts, University of Alberta), Edmonton, Alberta ($36,744)
- Chambermaids to Whistle Punks: The Labour and Lives of B.C. Women, 1890–1970 (Satellite Video Exchange Society), Vancouver, British Columbia ($16,098)
- BC Gay and Lesbian Archives Audiovisual and Graphic Material Digitization Project (City of Vancouver Archives), Vancouver, British Columbia ($71,015)
- What Becomes Canada: Digitizing Narratives of Exploration, Settlement, and Contact (Vancouver Island University Library), Nanaimo, British Columbia ($17,015)
- Native Communications Society Digitization Project (Northwest Territories Archives), Yellowknife, Northwest Territories ($86,796)
Quick facts
- The NHDS envisions a future in which digital access to Canada’s diverse documentary heritage is comprehensive, ubiquitous and has a profound impact on our country’s culture, education, research and innovation.
- Launched in 2016, the NHDS engages Canadian memory institutions and Canadian creators in leveraging expertise and resources to facilitate the digitization, preservation and discovery of Canadian documentary heritage.
- Archives, libraries, historical societies, Indigenous organizations and governments, genealogical organizations, universities and colleges, professional library and archival associations, and museums with an archival component were eligible to apply for funding.
- Eligibility criteria for the funding call were developed by the NHDS Steering Committee, and the proposals were evaluated by an independent advisory committee of nine experts from academic and documentary institutions in Canada and abroad
- Library and Archives Canada (LAC) provides secretariat support to the NHDS and administered the funding call on behalf of the NHDS
Filed under: Academic Libraries, Archives and Special Collections, Associations and Organizations, Digital Preservation, Funding, Libraries, Management and Leadership, News, Preservation, Public Libraries, Publishing
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.