HT City

Capital’s history will be on the internet as Delhi Archives plans to go online soon

- Ruchika Garg ruchika.garg@hindustant­imes.com

Delhi has been built, destroyed and rebuilt several times in the course of its history. Naturally, it has a rich and very interestin­g past, too. Many pages of its history are in the custodians­hip of the Delhi Archives department, Delhi Government, which is taking them online in phases.

Sanjay Garg, head, Delhi Archives, says, “We have more than 10 crore pages of records and will upload the pictures (scans) on the web in the coming months. We are working on 4 crore pages in the initial phase. Anyone can access them once the site becomes functional.”

However, downloadin­g the scans might come for a minimal price. “Anyone can visit the page and look at the pictures (scanned pages), but if anyone would want to download the images, they have to pay for it,” adds Garg.

Delhiites are super-excited about it. “I am a student of history in Delhi University and I am sure I will end up buying most of the pictures, especially from the British era. I just hope that the price is affordable,” says Harshita Singhal, a second-year graduation student.

“I am a sucker for history. I have my own library. I am now going to download all these pages and get them bound and add these to my collection,” says Vaibhav, an IT engineer.

“My friends and I plan to download some pictures of the monuments from the archives, visit the monuments and get clicked there. Wouldn’t it be awesome!” says Sahil Dhillon, who’s in the third year of graduation.

The department has pictures from the British era, the underconst­ruction Civil Lines and Lutyens zone and many more. Talking about how they got the pictures, Garg says, “Some pictures are given by the government, some by eminent personalit­ies from the Capital and some we receive from family members of known people. We caption them if all details are available and keep them in both scanned format and hard copy.”

We have more than 10 crore pages of records and will upload them on the web. Anyone can access them once the site is functional

SANJAY GARG HEAD, DELHI ARCHIVES

However, he adds that maintainin­g a hard copy is very difficult. “Since the pages are very old so they have to be handled carefully. Also, we have to maintain a certain temperatur­e to preserve them,” adds Garg.

 ?? PHOTO: DELHI ARCHIVES ?? A picture of the Publicatio­n House from the archives and (right) Sanjay Garg
PHOTO: DELHI ARCHIVES A picture of the Publicatio­n House from the archives and (right) Sanjay Garg
 ?? PHOTO: SHIVAM SAXENA/HT ??
PHOTO: SHIVAM SAXENA/HT

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