Session proposal: Development of a WWII diary project using a database such as KORA

The Naval War College is in process of digitizing the 4,000+ page Command Summary of Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, also known as the “Nimitz Gray Book.” This is one of the most important primary sources for World War II in the Pacific.

This is our first major digital initiative at the Naval War College. I hope to brainstorm with participants on how best to optimize scholarly use of these documents and perhaps allow us to work toward a more expansive portal that includes other war diaries, deck logs, dispatches, memoranda, etc. from this era. The Nimitz Command Summary has potential to serve as a “hub” document for such a portal, which would facilitate the type of cross-searching, analysis, and referencing that is presently so tedious for researchers using these sources in dispersed archives or online sites. We would also like to facilitate downloading/reuse by researchers for their own encoding or analysis projects. Beyond that, I’d like to gather any other creative ideas for timelining, visualizations, student engagement, etc. We will be incorporating this project into a World War II elective this fall.

I recently saw several databases created with KORA, including the Quilt Index, and felt something like Kora might meet our needs with minimal staffing/technology infrastructure requirements. But we are open to all ideas!

Categories: Session Proposals |

About Susan Cornacchia

I was involved with NITLE-sponsored TEI initiatives while working at Wheaton College (MA) some years ago, and I continue to follow developments in this area. I appreciate the enormous potential for enhancing intellectual access and engagement with primary sources through TEI and other encoding projects and crowdsourcing initiatives. I would characterize our first major "digital history" undertaking at the Naval War College -- the Nimitz Gray Book -- as a "dream project" that should be shared, vetted, and brainstormed with others who are excited about bringing history to light.