Have you ever wanted to catch a ride on the Flying Dutchman? Or wondered what people ate at Faneuil Hall to celebrate the 4th of July? Would you like to attend a nineteenth-century séance? Earn ten cents from your teacher? Or shop for a tombstone?
You can learn about all those activities (and more) from the collections at the American Antiquarian Society – and now, you can view images of ephemera related to these topics online, for free! With the completion of a recent project, more than 40,000 new images of ephemera were linked to records in the AAS online catalog. Read more about the project below!
Historical material is considered ephemera if it was intended to be discarded after a specific use. This includes objects such as menus, concert programs, broadsides, photographs, and trade cards.
the role of Digital Librarian in June 2024, Vice President for Collections and Curator of Graphic Arts Lauren Hewes knew just the thing for me to tackle first. A backlog of approximately 43,000 unorganized and unprocessed scans needed to be checked for quality and arranged to match up with the scanned item’s catalog record. These scans were captured in 2005 and 2006 as part of a larger commercial project, and AAS received copies of the scans.
Though you can’t hold a digital file in your hand, I approached the project just as I would a basic archival accessioning and arrangement project for physical materials. Imagine you’re an archivist and your institution has received a giant box of “stuff” from a donor. The “stuff” in the box is comprised of loose files, all in different physical formats, and terribly unorganized. Looking at it, you might not know where to begin! But to make the materials available to users in your archive, you have to organize the files. With a (virtual) pile of files in front of me, I began sorting through them all to identify which files belonged where.
I started to inventory and organize the scans in late August 2024. I worked through the “pile” by sorting out groupings based on the type of material captured in the scan – for example, broadsides, Civil War envelopes, and photographs were all sorted separately. I finished the project in early November.
In total, I uploaded 40,394 new scans to GIGI, the Society’s digital image repository. With the help of Information Systems Librarian Kathleen Haley, new links to digital surrogates were added to 29,015 individual records in the General Library Catalog, making these files instantly available and downloadable, for free.
The objects scanned span a huge variety of materials in the AAS graphic arts collection, including broadsides, ballads, rewards of merit, and myriad other types of ephemera. These pieces give us a fascinating glimpse into the details of life in the nineteenth century across the country.
Some groupings of scans were small, and some were very large – As I went through, I kept track of the number of titles and number of scans for each collection. See the chart below to learn which collections were added to, and for the corresponding numbers of newly accessible images!
To view the images, click on “View Records” in the table below. This will take you to the online catalog. Select a record by clicking on its title. Then, click the “Scanned image available here” link on the right-hand side of the catalog record display to see the freely available image(s) for that title.
Collection | Number of Titles | Number of Scans | Catalog Records |
---|---|---|---|
Advertisements | 708 | 1,289 | View Records |
Ballads | 2,470 | 2,672 | View Records |
Billheads | 695 | 715 | View Records |
Boston Museum | 370 | 502 | View Records |
Broadsides | 12,307 | 17,442 | View Records |
Cartes de Visite | 6 | 10 | View Records |
Charts | 12 | 12 | View Records |
Civil War Envelopes | 2,532 | 2,708 | View Records |
Concert Programs | 444 | 868 | View Records |
Invitations | 714 | 830 | View Records |
Lottery Advertisements | 60 | 94 | View Records |
Menus | 392 | 752 | View Records |
Popular Entertainment | 195 | 288 | View Records |
Rewards of Merit | 1,930 | 2,187 | View Records |
Ship Cards | 358 | 362 | View Records |
Stock Certificates | 179 | 265 | View Records |
Textile Broadsides | 87 | 87 | View Records |
Theater Programs | 683 | 1,156 | View Records |
Trade Cards | 841 | 946 | View Records |
Transportation | 113 | 145 | View Records |
Worcester Concert Programs | 457 | 878 | View Records |
Worcester Popular Entertainment | 286 | 460 | View Records |
Worcester Theater Programs | 415 | 564 | View Records |
Late Trade Cards | |||
Late Trade Agriculture | 98 | 183 | View Records |
Late Trade Art | 120 | 190 | View Records |
Late Trade Chemicals | 63 | 112 | View Records |
Late Trade Clothing | 398 | 648 | View Records |
Late Trade Death | 10 | 15 | View Records |
Late Trade Education | 15 | 25 | View Records |
Late Trade Electricity | 17 | 27 | View Records |
Late Trade Entertainment | 96 | 159 | View Records |
Late Trade Extermination | 10 | 16 | View Records |
Late Trade Eyewear | 23 | 42 | View Records |
Late Trade Food | 215 | 395 | View Records |
Late Trade Footwear | 367 | 651 | View Records |
Late Trade Horticulture | 21 | 41 | View Records |
Late Trade Hotels | 365 | 640 | View Records |
Late Trade Livestock | 20 | 37 | View Records |
Late Trade Medical | 174 | 329 | View Records |
Late Trade Merchandise | 26 | 40 | View Records |
Late Trade Military | 14 | 24 | View Records |
Late Trade Mills | 35 | 59 | View Records |
Late Trade Music | 121 | 211 | View Records |
Late Trade Personal | 103 | 194 | View Records |
Late Trade Printing | 160 | 205 | View Records |
Late Trade Publishing | 128 | 210 | View Records |
Late Trade Religion | 4 | 7 | View Records |
Late Trade Scales | 42 | 66 | View Records |
Late Trade Ships | 99 | 192 | View Records |
Late Trade Soaps | 195 | 346 | View Records |
Late Trade Travel | 59 | 98 | View Records |
Total: | 29,252 | 40,394 |
References:
For more information on some of the types of items included in this post, please visit these pages: