Albuquerque Journal

NHCC receives $500,000 to help digitize archive

Award will also help develop social studies bilingual curriculum

- BY ADRIAN GOMEZ JOURNAL ARTS EDITOR

Digital is the way of the future.

The National Hispanic Cultural Center’s History and Literary Arts program was awarded $500,000 through a national program.

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., secured the funding to help build a digital archive designed to help generation­s of New Mexicans better connect with their heritage.

According to the NHCC, the award will be used to digitize the 65-cubic-feet and 56-linearfeet of photograph, object, recording and document archives in the NHCC’s History and Literary Arts program, which will then be uploaded to the NHCC website. The archives document the history of the Barelas neighborho­od in Albuquerqu­e, the history of New Mexico as a Spanish colony, and the families who played a vital role in the developmen­t of present-day Albuquerqu­e.

“The National Hispanic Cultural Center’s archive doesn’t just preserve documents, it affirms and honors the lives and stories of Hispanic communitie­s across New Mexico and our nation,” Heinrich said in a statement. “I’m proud to have secured $500,000 to now digitize this archive, so that our children can be inspired from wherever they live to follow in the footsteps of people like Mari-Luci Jaramillo, the first Hispanic woman to become a U.S. Ambassador. Hispanic history is American history, and I will continue working to make it accessible to all.”

The NHCC website has inventorie­s of 10 archival collection­s available as PDF downloads and five preliminar­y genealogic­al resource links. The digitizati­on program, known as the New Mexico Genealogy Archiving Project, will make these vast genealogic­al archives more accessible and interconne­cted than ever, allowing people all over the state, nation, and world to learn about their heritage in ways that would not otherwise be possible.

“New Mexico is blessed with a long, multicultu­ral history that includes many families who have deep roots in the community, and I believe one of the NHCC’s most important roles is acting as a steward of that history,” said Noël Bella Merriam, NHCC artistic director and co-interim executive director. “This award not only preserves these priceless documents for future generation­s, but also allows more people than ever to access these records and learn about their family histories. This is a transforma­tive opportunit­y, and we’re grateful to Senator Heinrich’s office for making it a reality.”

Merriam said the award will also help the center to develop K-12 social studies bilingual curriculum for New Mexico educators to use in their classrooms that will bring history to life across the state.

It will also allow the NHCC to design user-friendly and interactiv­e videos, develop engaging online learning activities for families, and establish state-of-the-art online resources for the archival and genealogic­al records of the NHCC.

The project will be implemente­d in phases.

 ?? COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER ?? The library on the National Hispanic Cultural Center’s 20-acre campus received a grant to build a digital archive.
COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER The library on the National Hispanic Cultural Center’s 20-acre campus received a grant to build a digital archive.

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