Local History Publication & e-Publication Awards – nominations open now

It is that time of year again when the CILIP Local Studies Group start calling for submissions for the Alan Ball Award for Local History publishing. Once again there are categories for the best printed and the best digital publications released, this time published in 2015 and the first half of 2016.

Last year, we judged entries for 2013 and 2014, catching up after a hiatus in the award. There were 5 high quality entries in the hard copy category, and 16 exceptional and innovative entries in the e-publication category. The winners of the hard copy award were Martin Hayes and Emma White (ed), West Sussex Remembering 1914-18, History Press in Association with West Sussex County Council, 2014, ISBN 978-0-7509-6065-6. Joint winners of the e-publication were The Buxton Museum App, produced by Derbyshire County Council’s Buxton Museum & Art Gallery & Milford Street Bridge Project Website – produced by the Milford Street Bridge Community Project.

Background

The Alan Ball Local History Awards were established by the Library Services Trust in 1985 to encourage local history publishing by public libraries and local authorities. The awards were named after Alan W. Ball, a former Chief Librarian of the London Borough of Harrow, and author of many local history publications.

CILIP LSG has taken on the administration, judging and promotion of the award. This has always been a prestigious award within the library and information community, especially for Local Studies services, and the LSG is honoured to be involved with it. Traditionally, the award had been for printed materials, although more recently electronic information such as websites was considered. It is now updated, with expanded the criteria, so like last year we are hoping for a bumper crop of submissions! It is a great opportunity for the heritage community to celebrate and promote so many wonderful activities and research. Last year there were no submissions from Scotland and Northern Ireland, so it would be great to see the whole of the UK represented.

Criteria 

Once again, there will be two awards this year, one for printed material and another for digital. Printed material might include books, pamphlets and guides etc.; while digital submission might include websites, apps, video, animation and some aspects of social media, such as blogs. We are interested in both the quality and usefulness of the content, and also how it engages the reader or user, especially new users.

The award is now be open to all heritage and community organisations involved with some aspect of Local History and who receive or have received public funding. This also includes lottery funding, e.g. Heritage Lottery Fund and Awards for All. In addition to local authority libraries, archives, museum and archaeology services; it includes small local museums, heritage centres and community history projects.

Submitting your entry

We will need submissions to be with us by 31st October 2016.

For the hard print prize, we would like a hard copy of any printed item you submit together with a paper entry form to: Terry Bracher (Chairman of CILIP LSG) c/o Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Cocklebury Road, Chippenham. SN15 3QN

For online resources, please complete this e-form, or send any CDs or DVDs together with a paper entry form to Terry Bracher (Chairman of CILIP LSG) c/o Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Cocklebury Road, Chippenham. SN15 3QN

The Prize

Winners will be given a certificate, the use of a winner’s logo and accorded the title of Alan Ball Award winner, which can be used on promotional material. Sadly, there is no trophy or cash prize, but as previous award winners will confirm, it is a prestigious award that is very meaningful within Local History community.

We expect judging to take place in November 2016.

Any other questions?

Contact Terry Bracher (Chairman of CILIP LSG) c/o Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Cocklebury Road, Chippenham. SN15 3QN, email: terry.bracher@wiltshire.gov.uk or telephone: 01249 705515.

Local Studies Librarian of the Year 2016 – nominations now open

Do you know a Local Studies Librarian that has gone the extra mile? Have they pioneered an amazing project or given a career of excellent service to their community?

If you do, nominate them for the 2016 McCulla Prize, the annual Local Studies Librarian of the Year Award.

We welcome nominations from colleagues, local historians, family historians and anyone who knows a local studies professional who has made a difference.

To nominate, please complete form below.

Any questions? Please contact Alice Lock via alicelocalstudies@outlook.com

Nominations close on 30th September 2016 and nominations received after this date will be considered for the 2017 award.

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So, what does happen when you lose a local studies librarian?

As everybody knows, as the cuts have been hitting public libraries the number of qualified librarians employed by local authorities has dive-bombed. Though I once heard the refrain, they would never get rid of those local studies librarians, that is sadly not the case. Just as West Sussex’s Local Studies guys engaged over one hundred volunteers to record and widen understanding on how World War I affected their county, the local studies guys in East Sussex were given the heave ho.

So what does happen when local studies professionals are given the boot? Well, sometimes nothing much. I know of one authority who had a first class assistant who took over the reins – to be frank they are a first class professional, just they never got a CILIP accredited MA or applied for an ACLIP. Sadly, this is the only case I know.

Other times a volunteer helps out….. but how long do they stick around? Who is there to replace them?

Okay, the cut is made, what happens? Here is some of what I have heard through the grapevine:

  • Regular users come in and ask to see the thing they have used for years and they are told the library does not have it. Even though, when they return a few weeks later, they see it locked away.
  • New people come and, when they turn up, there is nobody who can help and faced with this wall of mysterious stuff and locked cabinets they quickly give up and go away. Good libraries and good librarians gain a good reputation and more readers, but a bad library loses many more and they do so very quickly.*
  • Volunteers slowly drop away as they get less motivated and projects finish. I have seen volunteers who start working at a library who have very little confidence and within a year or two they are flourishing members of the society.
  • There are not so many events. A few class visits will not happen (they will probably be doing a visit to Tesco or Waterstones instead), the Ancestry usage figures will go down as there is no one to do intro sessions, etc. Again, I have seen people who attend such start off with very little confidence and within a year or two they are flourishing members of the society.
  • Things do not make their way into the collection. Those little local publications that are priceless are real pains in the neck to buy as big organisations like invoices and do not like petty cash….. can you see these being purchased! Those who receive a good service will not donate a copy of their work and more amazing collections will be placed into the bin rather than being donated to a local studies collection.

Ah, I hear you cry, can we afford it? Yes! I have just had a letter from my Councillor saying that my Council Tax is being frozen again, when I walk into my local library I get free reservations and free audio books and…… okay, I am still one of the very lucky ones, I still have a local studies librarian in my Borough.

Do you have any tales of what happens when your local studies librarian is given the heave ho? Leave a comment below.

* There are a few things you need to master to be able to make use of a local studies collection. What can you tell from a Kelly’s Directory, how do they fit together with OS maps, how on earth do you find out the number of the OS map to the south of the one I have in front of me, how does the microfilm reader work etc. Okay, an experienced user will know this – but, that is only a small percentage of the user groups. Even then, when the experienced reader is using a collection there are often gems hidden in a plain binding or a pamphlet box that they would not know about unless they have someone who has worked with that collection. These librarians love their collections and this love rubs off onto their readers.

Local Studies Group South Forum 2016, Thursday 21st April

Past into future: making local history accessible for current and future generations

Thursday 21st April at Morden Library, London.

Cost: Free

Local Studies Collections are vital repositories which need to be preserved, protected and promoted. We have a shared interest in safeguarding what may sometimes be an undervalued part of our cultural heritage. Join us on Thursday 21st April for some positive thinking and encouragement!

There will be a chance to be inspired by the winner of the 2015 CILIP LSG McCulla Lifetime Achievement Award Winner, Christoph Bull, learn more about the digitisation, volunteer and HLF funded projects run by Sarah Gould of the London Borough of Merton’s Heritage and Local Studies Centre. The day will end with a tour of the Heritage Centre.

The day will also include a short presentation from Martin Hayes of the Great War West Sussex 1914-18 project, which won the Alan Ball Award for the best Local Studies Book published in 2014 & 2015. The day will end with a tour of the Merton Heritage and Local Studies Centre.

Most importantly, there will also be a chance to share your own successes and concerns with other practitioners during discussion sessions and a networking “packed lunch”. We will ask you to give an update about your service and your concerns as part of the booking process.

Please note, lunch is not provided though lunch can be purchased from shops close to Morden Library.

To book, please visit: https://localstudiesforum2016.eventbrite.co.uk and if you have any questions please contact Norma Crowe via norma.crowe@medway.gov.uk.

Victorian poor in their own words talk, 3/12/2015, library tour & LSG South AGM – Non-member tickets now available

The National Archives, Kew
Thursday 3rd December 2015, 1.45-4-15pm
LSG Member & non-members FREE

Most archival material relating to 19th century poverty and welfare was written either by the elites, who legislated on the matter, or the administrators, who managed poverty at a local level. In this talk Dr Paul Carter, Principal Records Specialist for Modern Domestic Records at The National Archives, will focus on the records created by the poor themselves and will introduce letters written by paupers complaining or asking for information about their rights to relief. These records a part of a large collection of 19th century pauper letters contained in record series MH 12 which is cared for by the National Archives there.

After the talk there will be an opportunity for a tour of the public areas of The National Archives, including the Document Reading Room and the Library.

The Local Studies Group South AGM will also take place during the afternoon. If you would like to attend the AGM only, please e-mail: tony.pilmer@aerosociety.com.

To book, visit:

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/victorian-poor-in-their-own-words-talk-library-tour-lsg-south-agm-tickets-19134600104

 

The Preservation Game – using volunteers to help preserve a historic collection

One of the National Aerospace Library’s goldmines is our pamphlet collection. It contains marketing and technical material from around the world. Much of the material was issued by the great names in aircraft manufacturing such as Junkers, Handley Page, Hawker Siddeley and De Havilland. We also have reports from the Air Ministry, Ministry of Munitions and Ministry of Aircraft Production, early airline timetables, aeronautical research papers and much, much more. As with all of us, as they have got older, they have acquired some aches and pains – a snagged cover here, a rusty staple there, etc. So late last year we started a project to help stabilise our delicate material so it would be around for future generations of researchers.

In the depths of December, a group of intrepid volunteers from the RAeS Farnborough Branch turned up for a day’s training course at the National Aerospace Library. Thanks to some help from the RAeS Foundation we had all the equipment that the group required and the National Trust’s Adviser on Libraries Conservation, Caroline Bendix, as our trainer, to give us all the key skills we needed. What became apparent was that this was not an ordinary assignment for Caroline. Normally faced with the cream of National Trust volunteers, she was not used to a group of retired aeronautical engineers, model makers and aero enthusiasts asking questions relating to feathering techniques and the strengths of differing materials – these were not the typical questions raised at Blickling Hall or Cragside!

Volunteer training  Volunteer training

Despite this our volunteers’ skills and experiences have really enhanced the project whether by using magnets to identify stainless steel staples that will not rust and do not need replacing or using a drill to make cleaner, smaller and more accurate holes in paper that a needle could ever do. As Caroline said, drills are not normal conservation equipment but they have worked really well for us!

Aerial Derby before preservation

So what is our band of volunteers doing? A typical donation to the NAL was a 1913 Aerial Derby programme. Packed with photographs, maps and biographical snapshots of competitors and manufactures, it paints an amazing picture of the intrepid days of early aviation. However, rusting staples had started to eat away at the paper and the covers had become torn and scuffed.

So our volunteers removed the rusty staples, cleaned the pages, repaired the tears and holes and then re-sewed the pamphlet. Once placed in an acid-buffered envelope and a box, it should be available for researchers and enthusiasts for many decades to come.

Aerial Derby after preservation   

However, some of the material we have found is beyond our volunteers’ training. We have found a large number of books that require professional work and so we have put many of these items into our Adopt a Book appeal. The RAeS Foundation grant also enabled us to buy some box board and inert polyester which allows our librarians to make boxes and covers to help protect some of our other delicate material.

As well as a steady supply of coffee, our volunteers have enjoyed working with a steady stream of amazing and sometimes weird material. A technical report that described experiments using circular runways caused a lot of discussion and so did experiments showing that supersonic aircraft did not seriously harm the built environment. Recently we discovered a plan of a D shaped aeroplane which someone pointed out would have saved Armstrong-Whitworth a large amount of money when they were sued by an American company after the Second World War for “copying” their D shaped aircraft designs – our plan dates from 1932. We’ve also enjoyed repairing some beautifully designed marketing material from Rolls-Royce, though the US Government Printing Office’s use of large industrial staples has not won many friends in the Farnborough area. However, the big danger is getting too caught reading some of the amazing material rather than repairing it. Perhaps the toughest assignment was attending our Volunteer Garden Party. It was a tough job celebrating our work whilst job sitting in the sunshine, drinking tea, eating home-made cake and watching the aircraft taking off and landing at Farnbrough Tag Airport – but somebody had to do it.

Volunteer Garden Party  

After seven months the project is going very well. We have filled over 100 pamphlet boxes and reviewed around 30% of our reserve collection, this means that we should be ready to move onto other parts of the collection in around two years. Until they read this our volunteers haven’t known that we have a separate pamphlet collection to investigate and around 40,000 technical reports still to do!

E-local history publication of the year award – nominations open

Have you been part of a group that has produced an electronic local studies project? Was it funded by local government or the national lottery?

If the answer is yes, nominate your project for the electronic category of the Alan Ball Awards.

Projects could include websites, apps, video, animation and some aspects of social media, such as blogs. We are interested in both the quality and usefulness of the content, and also how it engages the reader or user, especially new users.

Winners will be given a certificate and accorded the title of Alan Ball Award winner, which can be used on promotional material. Sadly, there is no trophy or cash prize, but as previous award winners will confirm, it is a prestigious award that is very meaningful within Local History community.

To nominate your web-based project, please complete the form below:

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Any questions? Please contact Terry Bracher via terry.bracher@wiltshire.gov.uk.

Visit to the Surrey History Centre, Woking – Wednesday 30th September 2015

On Wednesday 30th September CILIP Surrey will be visiting to the Surrey History Centre at Woking from 2.00 p.m. – 4.00 p.m. Join them for a very full tour behind the scenes, exploring the local studies library, archive rescue, cleaning and sorting areas, the conservation laboratory, packaging room, strong room and Surrey County Archaelogical Unit. There will also be a selection of rare and interesting books and maps on display. The visit is free, but open to CILIP members only because of limited numbers. Book early through Eventbrite on:https://membersonlysurreyhistorycentretour.eventbrite.co.uk

Disaster Response and Salvage Training course, last few places available

Those wonderful people from the APML have organised a bargain price half-day training session with Harwell’s at the beautiful Royal Astronomical Society in central London….

Disaster response and salvage training course

Monday 24th August 2015, at Royal Astronomical Society, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London W1J 0BQ

Choice of morning session (10am-1pm) or afternoon session (1.30-4.30).

Fee: £40 per person (including VAT)

Trainer: Emma Dadson, Harwell Document Recovery Services

Outline: This course will provide training on disaster planning, and will give hands-on practice in salvage tactics.

Please can you contact Sian Prosser (sp@ras.org.uk) to book a place, indicating whether you would prefer to attend in the morning or afternoon.

Local History Online: Digital content and social media for local history – free course, booking open now

Monday 12th October 2015
9.30am – 4pm
Lancashire Archives
Bow Lane
Preston

Join LSG NW for this FREE wide ranging event. The day will examine the possibilities of using Wikipedia and hear about the first hand experiences of an HLF project, a local historical society and a national heritage organisation working in this field.

Speakers: Doug Taylor – Wikimedia Foundation volunteer; Jacqueline Arundel and Richard Marshall – the Tagging the Treasures HLF project; Paul Weatherall – Manx National Heritage; Paul Swarbrick – Preston Historical Society.

Tea, coffee etc provided but lunch isn’t. You will be able to eat your own packed lunch/takeaway or visit a local cafe.

LSG NW AGM will take place during the lunch break.

To reserve your place, please contact Jane Parr on 0161 234 1934 or email j.parr@manchester.gov.uk.

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