"Wait a minute, you still use microfilm? Aren't all newspapers digitized these days?"
This is a statement we hear pretty regularly at the Western History and Genealogy Department, and it's one that we completely understand. After all, in the age of the Internet, almost anything you've ever read is available in just a few keystrokes. Right?
Not necessarily.
Thanks to the high cost of digitization and the labor associated with indexing and scanning newspapers, most historic newspapers and documents are still available in just one format: microfilm.
Microfilm, as it turns out, is an incredibly robust format for viewing the written word that, in all likelihood, will be with us for many years to come.
So what exactly makes microfilm so special?
Efficiency and Affordability
For starters, microfilm is a very efficient means for institutions like Denver Public Library to bring large print collections to their customers. In a building like the Central Library, where storage space is at a premium, microfilm allows us to store a huge number of newspapers in a very small space.
How small a space? We currently house a complete run of the Rocky Mountain News (1859-2009) and the Denver Post (1894-present) in a series of file cabinets that are just 4 ft 6 inches tall and 12.5 feet long. (And that includes six empty drawers for growth!)
Of course these aren't the only microfilms that are housed at DPL. In the Western History Department you'll find a wide range of historic Colorado newspaper like Cervi's Journal as well as more modern newspapers like Colorado Gambler.
Microfilm also allows DPL customers to access large book collections such as Western Americana Frontier History of the Trans-Mississippi West, as well as doctoral dissertations and masters theses from history students in Colorado and across the world.
On our genealogy side, we house hundreds of historic documents such as New Mexico church records, ship passenger lists, and naturalization records on microfilm. These documents are available to any DPL customer and are an incredible resource for genealogists.
Preservation
If you've ever run across an old newspaper, you know that newsprint isn't exactly a stable format. Modern newsprint is made from wood pulp and becomes extremely fragile over time. This makes handling historic newspapers (on a regular basis anyway) a near impossibility. Microfilm, however, allows library customers to access the oldest newspapers we've got, anytime they want. (The originals are housed in our storage areas and are only accessible if the microfilm copies are for some reason not legible.)
Even better, if a water pipe were to break over our microfilm storage cases, the microfilm would be just fine. That's a big deal when you consider how much damage a small amount of water could do a historic newspaper collection.
The Modern Microfilm Reader
Today's microfilm readers are designed to work with the formats modern researchers are used to and include a scanning function for making digital copies. DPL customers who want electronic copies of historic newspapers and documents can simply transfer their scans to a USB drive, put them in a cloud storage service like Dropbox, or e-mail them.
For those customers who prefer hard copies, printed copies are available for 10¢ a page. (And, yes, we do take credit and debit cards.)
If you don't know how to to use a microfilm reader, the WHG staff is more than happy to walk you through the basics. It's much easier than you might think!
Microfilm's Future
While the march of digitization is certain to continue forward in the years to come, it's also safe to say that microfilm will be with us for some time. Even if we, and every other institution, started massive digitization projects today, there is so much material that's been microfilmed that it would be decades before it all made it online. Until that day comes, we'll still be using microfilm and it will still be as useful as it is today.
Comments
Hi Lori, Thanks for your
Hi Lori, Thanks for your question. We have a great Building History section where you can research your Denver home. To see what types of information we have, please check out our Building History Tutorial. Then, come see us and we'll help you navigate through the materials!
How do you store your boxes
How do you store your boxes of microfilm?
Hi Susan - Thanks for your
Hi Susan - Thanks for your question. We store the microfilm in acid free cardboard boxes. Because it's such a durable format, it requires almost nothing in the way of maintenance!
It's too bad DP is one of the
It's too bad DP is one of the huge gaps that never got digitalize. Newsbank did it but for some reason they don't have a public version of it only for universities. The Bush era was amazing for our technological push. It felt like a modern 80s. Since then companies have gone to foreign investments and that is why we are in the bind we are today.
Since then we have gone more and more backwards to dumb and stupid level.
Trump has nothing to do with it. In fact foreign investors have a lot to do as the Trump Tariffs are aimed at them so until we unbind ourselves we will for the lack of a better word slam a hammer at ourselves yet our generation wonders why we keep getting hit.
We are hitting ourselves dummies by going with these bozos. Trump is hoping we will be smart enough to make things ourselves here. We don't have to be in this digital/political bind.
Hi Kyle - It's my
Hi Kyle - It's my understanding that there has never been a full digitization of the Denver Post. The Newsbank database that DPL, and many other libraries, use starts around 1989 and only includes articles that were produced in-house. My guess is that it was a whole lot easier, and cheaper, for the database companies to post up the digital files that were provided by the newspaper (including their metadata) than undergoing the very labor intensive process of indexing 120 odd years of newspapers.
To the best of my knowledge, domestic politics of any kind has not played a role in the use of microfilm reader in the United States.
Thanks for your comments!
Under the threat of Obama
Under the threat of Obama many companies including IBM went back to electric/manual typewriters. I wonder where they get the ribbon for it all.
I don't think Mr Trump
I don't think Mr Trump realizes how far gone we are in that regards. In the 90s all the machines went to China. Bolts and all. In the 2000s our US Military Defense outsourced to China so everything from guns to casings to boots are all made overseas.
The tools to make the machines are no longer here either. The people who did know how to do things were old back then and have either retired or died off naturally unless there were some hidden smart people we don't know about were home schooled and taught skills to make things without relying on China or foreign investing. China owns the world's gold next to the Middle East which is the 2nd largest ownership.
They used to do annual inspections and reports of Fort Knox till the 90s then they stopped reporting. The week before 9/11 hundreds of millions of US dollars worth of gold mysteriously 'vanished' from the Pentagon and the people killed were the ones investigating it. Geez I wonder why...................
As a result you won't believe
As a result you won't believe the weird/amazing architecture over there. It makes the USA feel like a 3rd world nation.
Would like to have a list of
Would like to have a list of the Newspapers on microfilm at the Central DPL . . .
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