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Friday, May 15
 

8:30am EDT

S202: Say My Name: Identifying the African Americans Enslaved at White Hall
Friday May 15, 2026 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
This project started with a basic idea - identify, recognize and honor the names and lives of the African American individuals and families whose work contributed to the growth and maintenance of White Hall and Madison County, Kentucky. Owned by Green Clay, the largest slaveholder in the state during his lifetime, and later by his son Cassius, known as the state’s greatest champion of emancipation, White Hall is a historic site today owned and operated by Eastern Kentucky University (EKU). By engaging students, faculty and staff from departments across EKU and partnering with the local African American community, hundreds of relevant Clay family documents were transcribed, edited and analyzed to identify enslaved individuals. The role of the archives in this project was to instruct and guide over 300 students in transcribing historical documents and to create the online database. In addition to instruction and outreach, presenters will discuss how digital tools and platforms can be used to build accessible public history resources. This work exhibits how archives can serve as a hub connecting academic programs with public history, community engagement, and digital scholarship. These partnerships expanded the archives’ reach and established it as a space for co-creation, preservation, and dialogue, rather than just for information access.

Speakers
Debbie Whalen, Eastern Kentucky University (Session Chair)
Jackie Couture, Eastern Kentucky University
Friday May 15, 2026 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
Great Hall 1-2, 1st Floor Ohio Union

10:00am EDT

S302: Focusing In on Image Backlogs: Processing Photograph Collections with Efficiency and Care
Friday May 15, 2026 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Based on their forthcoming book chapter in Navigating Archival Backlogs: Strategies for Success, Philanthropic Studies Archivist Molly LaPorte and Digital Preservation and Digital Collections Archivist Evan Miller will expand on their work from a processing case-study at Indiana University Indianapolis’s Ruth Lilly Special Collections & Archives. The Junior Achievement (JA) Records contains approximately 38 cubic feet of unprocessed photographs, and the presenters aimed to develop an efficient processing workflow while respecting depicted individuals. The JA collection is partially processed but highly used, necessitating intervention for the backlog of accruals to expand access.

Striving to balance the minimum processing and preservation concepts of MPLP alongside the careful attention and empathetic touch of a feminist ethics of care, this session will explore both their successes and failures and provide a practical system other archivists and practitioners can use in their own institutions. From preliminary prep work and documentation gathering to digitization selection and reconciliation with born-digital assets, the presenters hope to share their thoughts along with a streamlined workflow for efficiently reviewing stagnant backlogs while keeping people front of mind.

Speakers
Molly LaPorte, Indiana University Indianapolis
Evan N. Miller, Indiana University Indianapolis
Friday May 15, 2026 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Great Hall 1-2, 1st Floor Ohio Union

11:30am EDT

S402: Big, Born-Digital Challenges: Practical Workflows for Impractically Large Collections
Friday May 15, 2026 11:30am - 12:30pm EDT
This session will present practical workflows for processing and preserving new, born-digital collections of challenging proportions from ever-evolving sources to make them meaningfully accessible.

Last year, the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center received the offer of a donation of 4,500+ videos. They arrived in the form of the university’s primary institutional YouTube Channel. In addition to addressing a number of appraisal questions, the process of accessioning the video collection gave insights into challenges surrounding cloud migrations of this scale, Google Takeout metadata, and file format remediation.

At the University of Minnesota Libraries Archives and Special Collections, recent challenges included collections with a thousand or more optical disks and accessions of files created and stored in Google Drive. While the former was a familiar media format, the number of disks involved made previous workflows unfeasible. In the case of cloud storage, new complications arose based on file size and the number of creators or file owners involved. Both cases required new approaches and new procedures just to ingest.

Presenters will share their solutions and their problem-solving processes. Although both examples are from large academic institutions, they will present lower-cost tools, free tools, professional collaborations, and the methods and advocacy that allowed this work to be completed affordably in-house without the expense of outsourcing the work to external vendors.

Speakers
Andrew McDonnell, University of Kentucky (Session Chair)
Lara Friedman-Shedlov, University of Minnesota
Friday May 15, 2026 11:30am - 12:30pm EDT
Great Hall 1-2, 1st Floor Ohio Union

1:00pm EDT

Friday Forum - Networking for Digital Archivists
Friday May 15, 2026 1:00pm - 1:45pm EDT
Do you have digital records in your collections? Are you hoping to start a digital preservation program? Are you looking for some practical advice on how to handle your digital records? Do you have a lot of questions and don’t know where to begin? Come to this forum to join others in a networking session. This will be a casual gathering where you can share challenges and successes, exchange tips and procedures, ask questions, and generate inspiration to take back to your shop.

Facilitators:
  • Larissa Krayer, Digital Archivist, University of Nebraska Medical Center
  • Brandon Pieczko, Digital and Special Collections Librarian, Indiana University School of Medicine

Friday May 15, 2026 1:00pm - 1:45pm EDT
Great Hall 1-2, 1st Floor Ohio Union

2:00pm EDT

S502: Lightning Tour: Archival Projects Across Ohio
Friday May 15, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
This series of lightning talks highlights a selection of projects in archives around Ohio. In "Telling Akron's Black History: A Classroom Approach to Archiving," CJ Jacobs from the University of Akron will present on how students worked with archival materials from Akron’s Black community to understand the lived experiences of marginalized voices in their city. In "17 TB of Photos?! : Getting Started Processing the Digital Photography of Dan Dry," Laura Smith and Aurora Charlow from Ohio University will talk about their approach to processing a challenging digital collection, which involved making decisions to surmount issues of scope, original order, and copyright. In "Resounding Histories: Podcasting for Archival Outreach," Nick Pavlik from Bowling Green State University will present on the potential for narrative podcasting in archival outreach, reflecting on his experience producing the “Archival Encounters” podcast at Bowling Green State University that highlighted how archivists and subject experts can leverage their potential as storytellers to increase archival engagement.

Speakers
Aurora Charlow, Ohio University (Session Chair)
CJ Jacobs, University of Akron
Nick Pavlik, Bowling Green State University
Laura Smith, Ohio University
Friday May 15, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Great Hall 1-2, 1st Floor Ohio Union
 
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