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News from the Archives!

We are pleased to announce that the Wellcome Trust have awarded a second grant to Northumberland Archives to continue the amazing work they have done through the Stannington Sanatorium Project.

The ‘Stannington: From Sanatorium to General Hospital: Opening Up Three Decades of Paediatric Care’ Project has been awarded £49,100. This money will allow us to digitise the main series of case files from the Stannington Sanatorium collection covering the period 1944-1966. These files comprise 100 linear feet of records – that’s a whopping 122,000 pieces of paper to be digitised! We will redact the key documents in each file – the patient progress notes, x-ray card and discharge sheet and append the redacted copies to the catalogue entry. The files span the life of Stannington from it being a tuberculosis sanatorium funded by the Poor Children’s Holiday Association (now Children Northeast), including the introduction of the National Health Service, (1947) to its final conversion to a general children’s hospital (1953), which it remained until its closure in 1984, opening up three decades of paediatric care.

The Stannington Sanatorium Project ran from August 2014-July 2015 and allowed the full cataloguing and part-digitisation of the records from Stannington Sanatorium. However, the digitisation element of the project was primarily focussed upon the original and microfiche radiographs that made up a sizeable portion of the collection and only the early case files up to 1943 were digitised at this stage. This grant will fund the digitisation of the remainder of the individual patient files included in the Stannington Collection and will fund full re-packaging of the original files in conservation grade materials.

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Through this project we will utilise digitisation as a preservation tool thereby minimising further handling and potential damage to patient files through the creation of a digital surrogate which can be viewed electronically. In turn the project will increase accessibility to the collection via the redaction and web-mounting of the files. It will benefit members of the academic community who have shown a vast interest in the previous project and wish to access the files as a teaching resource or for their own research. This new digital content will be added to Northumberland Archives electronic catalogue where the c.20,000 images created in the first project can now be viewed.

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The project will commence in November 2015 and will run for 12 months. Two new members of staff will be employed, one full time the other part time, to undertake this arduous task and they will endeavour to blog about their progress from November onwards so make sure you keep a look out for new postings!

End of the Stannington Sanatorium Project

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The Stannington Project has been running for the past year but will be coming to an end this week.  Over the course of the year we have catalogued all the patient files and the associated administrative files from the sanatorium.  We now know that there are 5041 individual patient files and 14,671 corresponding radiographic images.  Now that they have all been fully catalogued it is very easy for us to locate files and match them up to their associated radiographs, this is particularly important when dealing with requests from former patients who want to see their own files.  The level of detail included in the listing of patient files makes it a useful resource for academic research and allows for the easy selection of relevant cases. Another major part of the project has been the digitisation of all the radiographs and early case files, which is now complete, and discussed in more detail in our previous blog post.  The full catalogue and the attached images can all be viewed through the Archive’s online catalogue.

Working through the records over the past year we’ve learnt a lot about how TB affected children in the mid-20th century and some of the individual stories have been fascinating.  We hope everyone’s enjoyed reading our blog posts as much as we’ve enjoyed writing them, and keep a look-out for future updates on Stannington and more posts from the WWI Project.

Thank you for reading!

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Digitisation of Stannington

A major part of the Stannington Sanatorium Project has been to digitise the radiographs held within the collection, along with early case files and the significant amount of photographic material. The digitisation has taken many months, transferring 14,663 microfiche x-ray copies and original x-rays and 949 patient case files into a digital format using a digital SLR camera. These images have subsequently been redacted, removing any identifying information and thus creating completely anonymised digital images.

Digitising radiogrphs from microfiche

Archival digitisation is utilised as a means of protecting original records and preventing further deterioration. Through the creation of a digital surrogate original documents need not be produced as frequently, therefore prevent the risk of further damage to originals caused by regular handling. It also aids in the making of the records more widely accessible. By creating a digital image it is possible to utilise a number of internet resources, including social media, as a means of reaching beyond those who can physically visit the archive. Throughout the Stannington Sanatorium Project we have used a range of social media sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, as well as making use of widely accessed sites like Flickr to disseminate information covered by the collection.

The Stannington Collection, a collection pertaining to a children’s tuberculosis hospital encompassing both clinical and non-clinical records, is very specific in its own nature. As a result it has generated much interest from many fields of the academic community. Through the production of anonymised digital copies, academics can access records which, without redaction, would otherwise be unavailable under data protection law. This allows the records to be more widely disseminated as a teaching tool; a means for continuing research into tuberculosis and a way of understanding our not so distance past.

With the final stages of the digitisation process nearing completion, we have succeeded in our aims to open up this fascinating collection to those in the local area and beyond, and as a resource for future research. Copies of the images can now be viewed and purchased (if required) from Northumberland Archives electronic catalogue.

To view our Flickr stream follow this link: https://www.flickr.com/photos/99322319@N07/albums