Digital Library of Georgia (original) (raw)
Find content from Georgia's 159 counties.
Browse collections from DLG partner institutions.
Eva Thornton scrapbook
Scrapbook compiled by Eva Thornton of Elberton, Georgia, from 1909 through 1922. This scrapbook contains postcards sent between residents of Elbert County to Thornton and her relatives. Thornton also received postcards from friends and family outside of Elbert County, including one relative stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, during World War I.
Leo M. Frank collections
William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum
Materials on Leo M. Frank, the superintendent of the National Pencil Company in Atlanta, who was convicted of the murder of factory worker Mary Phagan in 1913; then lynched by a mob in Marietta in 1915 after Governor John M. Slaton commuted Frank's death sentence to life imprisonment.
Civil Rights Digital Library
The struggle for racial equality in the 1950s and 1960s is among the most far-reaching social movements in the nation's history, and it represents a crucial step in the evolution of American democracy. The Civil Rights Digital Library promotes an enhanced understanding of the Movement by helping users discover primary sources and other educational materials from libraries, archives, museums, public broadcasters, and others on a national scale. The CRDL features a collection of unedited news film from the WSB (Atlanta) and WALB (Albany, Ga.) television archives held by the Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia Libraries. The CRDL provides educator resources and contextual materials, including Freedom on Film, relating instructive stories and discussion questions from the Civil Rights Movement in Georgia, and the New Georgia Encyclopedia, delivering engaging online articles and multimedia.
CRDL is a partnership among librarians, technologists, archivists, educators, scholars, academic publishers, and public broadcasters. The initiative received support through a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Visit the Civil Rights Digital Library
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Georgia Historic Newspapers
Georgia's print media history began in 1763 with the establishment of the state's first newspaper, the Savannah Gazette. Considered history's "rough draft," newspaper journalism has wide ranging impact. Beyond a reporting of facts, newspapers reflect the social and cultural values of the time in which they were compiled and as such, are invaluable to scholars and the general public alike. These publications document not only cities and counties throughout the state, but also record the activities of the state's various ethnic, religious, and educational groups.
The Georgia Historic Newspapers portal provides free, full-text searchable access to over 1 million pages of Georgia newspaper content dating from 1763 to 1968. Newspaper titles are regularly digitized and added to the archive.
The Georgia Historic Newspapers database is a project of the Digital Library of Georgia as part of Georgia HomePlace. The project is supported with federal LSTA funds administered by the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Georgia Public Library Service, a unit of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia. Additional support has been made available by the R.J. Taylor Foundation, Flint Energies, and a number of other local foundations and public libraries.
See all the newspaper issues or collections digitized by DLG.
Visit the Georgia Historic Newspapers site.
DLG and Me
How the DLG Helps the Georgia Senate Press Office Conduct Its Research
Andrew Allison, director of the Georgia Senate Press Office, describes how he and his staff use the Digital Library of Georgia to perform research to fulfill the communication needs of Georgia's fifty-six state senators and to produce the Parliamentary Inquirer, the monthly newsletter produced by the Senate Press Office.