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The AFRO-American Newspapers Partners With Google on Digitizing Archive
(TriceEdneyWire.com) The AFRO-American Newspapers, one of the
nation's oldest news organizations dedicated to covering the African
American community, has created a comprehensive collection of over a
million articles that captures the African American experience in
business, civil rights, education, health, law, and sports beginning in
the late 19th century. Google partnered with the AFRO and helped to
digitize the newspaper's historic archives and make them searchable
on-line and available to anyone, anywhere in the world.
"It took
us over 10 years to develop and fine tune the concept to make the
AFRO's Archive site a reality and Google played a key role," said
publisher Jake Oliver. "The site includes original page views of
complete editions of the newspaper dating back to the early 1900s and
in-depth coverage of important stories such as the events of the arrests
and national spectacle surrounding Scottsboro Boys trials, the
entertainment coverage of Black movies stars such as Dorothy Dandridge,
the Army's use of the Tuskegee Airmen (Fighting 99th) in World War II,
coverage of the Little Rock 9 Integration in 1954 and many other events
that helped to shape the black community."
Researchers,
students, historians, teachers, and other groups can use the Archives to
trace family roots, develop talking points, craft speeches and gather
information on a myriad of topics that affected African Americans. To
access the AFRO-American Newspaper Archives on-line, a person should go
to http://www.afro.com/afroblackhistoryarchives.
"The AFRO has
one of the most comprehensive collections of African American history in
the world," said Oliver, the great grandson of the newspaper's founder
John H. Murphy, Sr. "The AFRO is an American institution and has a huge
repository of information that can be used while blogging, or when
someone is on Facebook to post quotes and with Twitter. Now, with our
new mobile iPhone application, the AFRO's Archives can be accessed
instantly by students at school, researchers and anyone who has a thirst
to learn and understand."
The AFRO-American Newspaper,
headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland, is the oldest African American
family-owned newspaper in the nation. Founded in 1892 by John H. Murphy,
Sr. "the AFRO" has grown to become the leading news provider for
African Americans in Baltimore and the greater metropolitan Washington,
D.C. area. The AFRO publishes three editions-Baltimore, Washington, DC,
and Prince George's County Maryland. In addition, it publishes the
online Afro.com and supports several community outreach programs
including Mrs. Santa, Clean Green Block and Character Education. With
on-line, national and local news, the AFRO has more than 500,000
readers.
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