Boston Public Library Partners with Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) to Make Historical Images Available For Use in Wikipedia; Single Largest Batch of Uploads Ever Contributed to Wikimedia Commons
From a Boston Public Library Announcement:
In celebration of Wikipedia’s 20th anniversary on January 15th, Boston Public Library has uploaded more than 8,000 historical photographs from its archival collections to Wikimedia Commons. These images include some of the library’s most important photographic collections, and contribute to the single largest batch of uploads ever contributed to Wikimedia Commons. By uploading these public domain images, BPL is making them available so that they can be freely used to enhance Wikipedia articles, re-printed in publications, or incorporated in student projects and papers.
“What really makes this effort a game-changer is that we’re not just making these materials available within our own digital collections or on our own website – we’re actively adding these images to a larger worldwide collection that has an incredibly broad audience,” said BPL’s Chief of Collections Laura Irmscher. “This is going to make these photos much more easily discoverable, whether it’s people using Google Image Search to find historical materials, or dedicated Wikipedians looking to add high-quality, trusted image content to the world’s largest encyclopedia.”
The upload is a part of a broader effort being coordinated by the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) to increase public access to historical materials from libraries and museums across the country, which has resulted in the single largest batch of uploads to Wikimedia Commons ever contributed.
“I am so happy that DPLA has been able to help create pathways for the riches of collections like BPL’s to reach the essential collaborative information source that is Wikipedia,” said DPLA Executive Director John Bracken. “The DPLA partnership with Wikimedia is central to our mission of democratizing access to knowledge for all, and it has already vastly expanded discovery and use of 1.3 million DPLA artifacts.”
The BPL items uploaded to Wikimedia Commons represent some of the library’s most significant photographic collections, including photos documenting the early history of the Boston Red Sox and their Royal Rooters fan club; 19th-centry daguerreotypes of prominent abolitionists such as Theodore Parker and William Lloyd Garrison; portraits of indigenous peoples taken during government-sponsored expeditions and surveys of the American West in the late 1800s; photos of the construction of the historic McKim library building in Copley Square; and many other newsworthy photos of Boston’s people and places previously published in the Boston Globe, Boston Traveler, and Boston Herald newspapers.
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This upload is just the first of BPL’s contributions to Wikimedia Commons; the library will be adding thousands more images periodically throughout the year, including maps, illustrations, photographs, and manuscripts.
Access the Collection
Visit the BPL’s Wikimedia Commons page or the DPLA’s Wikimedia Commons page, and visit DigitalCommonwealth.org to view to BPL’s full digital library.
Filed under: Digital Collections, Interactive Tools, Journal Articles, Libraries, Maps, News, Public Libraries
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.