
In an effort to provide the membership with more
information about the

representatives meet with

to work on a project to put the digitized collection
of IAM publications online for all to research and view. Below is a copied portion of
the original iMAIL from
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
.

Here is the finished product.


IAM History Makes Online Debut
IAM history comes alive with the
online debut of all of the Machinists’ Monthly Journals
from the earliest edition in 1889 all the way through its last year of
publication 1956. The collection, which also includes the Machinist
newspaper published from 1946 to 1994, is a joint project started in
2004 between the
Georgia State University Southern Labor Archives
and the Machinists union.
Representatives from Georgia State and the IAM met at the William W.
Winpisinger Education and Technology Center to demonstrate the new
digital collection. “This has been a tremendous project to capture our
history and make it available to our members, labor scholars and anyone
interested in labor history,” said Winpisinger Center Director Jim
Leslie. Georgia State University in Atlanta, GA has been the official
archive of the Machinists union since 1988 and houses many of the IAM’s
most precious documents. The IAM was founded in Atlanta in May, 1888.
“This project uses the latest technology to take us back to our
earliest days. We want our members to use this site to learn about our
past and our struggles so we can stay strong in the future,” said
Headquarters GVP Bob Thayer who was at the debut.
Thousands of pages of Monthly Journals and Machinists newspapers have
been converted to digital PDF format and are keyword searchable,
including name and topic. The new site is the result of a two-year
effort that involved compiling a complete set of Machinists’ Monthly
Journals and Machinist newspapers, converting thousands of pages of
materials into digital format, cataloguing the collection and making it
available online.
“This is an incredible collection,” said Pamela Hackbart-Dean,
director of the Southern Labor Archives for Georgia State University.
“These publications give not only the IAM’s history but are a source for
scholars, students and IAM members to get labor’s perspective on some of
the greatest events in North American history. The IAM has made a great
contribution to labor history.”
