UC Merced Library Chosen to Digitize AIDS Historical Archives

Gary Fisher (1961-1994) was a gay African American man who enjoyed writing and drawing and was a dedicated diarist who died of AIDS at the age of 32 in San Francisco. This page, dated February 7, 1991, is from one of his journals and it illustrates the fear, uncertainty and hope that surrounded the use of new medications to treat HIV and AIDS. (Gary Fisher Papers, San Francisco Public Library)
Gary Fisher (1961-1994) was a gay African American man who enjoyed writing and drawing and was a dedicated diarist who died of AIDS at the age of 32 in San Francisco. This page, dated February 7, 1991, is from one of his journals and it illustrates the fear, uncertainty and hope that surrounded the use of new medications to treat HIV and AIDS. (Gary Fisher Papers, San Francisco Public Library)

 

(From UC Merced website, by By Lorena Anderson, University Communications)

“The UC Merced Library Opens a New Window. ’s digital assets team is playing an important role in providing access to a swath of modern history that will contribute to research and society.

The team has been asked to digitize about 127,000 pages from 49 archival collections related to the early days of the AIDS epidemic in the San Francisco Bay Area as part of the AIDS History Project, which is being funded by a two-year, $315,000 Implementation Grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The project is a joint effort of the Archives and Special Collections department of the UCSF Library, the San Francisco Public Library, and the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society.

This is a great opportunity to look deeply into how community groups and the medical community mobilized to help combat the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco,” said Emily Lin, head of the library’s Digital Assets Unit Opens a New Window. . “It will give people a much more detailed look and different levels of understanding about how these people and groups went about solving a problem, including how effective they were at shaping public opinion and affecting change.”

The AIDS epidemic was one of the most significant public health events of the late 20th century and continues now. San Francisco was particularly hard-hit, in part because by the early 1980s, it had become a welcoming place for gay men who moved from throughout the country to experience a flourishing gay community.

Emily Lin, director of digital assets for the UC Merced library.

Emily Lin, director of digital assets for the UC Merced library.

This same diaspora also fueled the development of unique community-based organizations to care for the sick and dying, as well as unprecedented modes of political activism.

Desperate patients hoping for a cure, supported by newly formed community organizations, held protests and sit-ins at medical conferences, shaking up the world of medical research. Art and literature, too, most notably the AIDS Quilt, were created out of the grief and loss caused by the epidemic.

Beginning in the mid-1980s, San Francisco witnessed the development of a highly effective collaborative network of city and state agencies, hospitals, health care providers and community groups that, through a goal of putting patients first, became known as the “San Francisco model” of compassionate AIDS care.

In the late 1980s, UCSF and others initiated the AIDS History Project to help forge relationships between historians and the AIDS community to document and preserve the lessons and experience of the AIDS epidemic. They have selected collections from three archives that will contribute to an understanding of the medical, social and political processes that merged to develop effective means of treating people with AIDS, educate the public about HIV, create social support organizations for people who were often shunned by family, and advocate for a community that was dying at an alarming rate.

The 127,000 pages include handwritten correspondence, personal notebooks, typed reports, agency records, printed magazines, photos, negatives, transparencies and posters. The effort will digitally reunite these collections and make them available publicly and globally.

The UC Merced Library is very pleased to be partnering on this project, which builds upon our longstanding collaboration with the UCSF Library to digitize rare and unique materials in the health sciences,” UC Merced University Librarian Haipeng Li said. “Our students and researchers, especially those involved in UC Merced’s growing public health program, will benefit from wider access to the AIDS History materials, and I am sure the experience and expertise of our staff will enable them to contribute significantly to the success of the project.”

1991 Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Parade in San Francisco. (UCSF Archives and Special Collections)

1991 Lesbian/Gay Freedom Day Parade in San Francisco. (UCSF Archives and Special Collections)

Each of the items in the collections will be carefully examined for privacy concerns, but once they are determined to be ready for release, they will be disseminated broadly through the California Digital Library, with the objects freely accessible to the public through both Calisphere, operated by the University of California, and the Digital Public Library of America. UC Merced will also host an exhibit and public symposium in the second year of the grant, to amplify outreach efforts.

It is important that such collections — documenting a central, if difficult, part of our nation’s history — be exposed to as wide a public as possible,” said Scott H. Podolsky, M.D., professor of global health and social medicine at Harvard University and director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine.

Doing so will enable in-depth study of the ephemera associated with and produced by one of the most profound and impactful social movements for health in recent history,” said UC Merced anthropology and public health Professor Nancy Burke. “Widespread access to these materials by social scientists and public health scholars will likely lead to new understandings of this significant period in our history that may impact future events.”