NEWS Mar 21, 2011

75 years of the Auckland Star to be available online

Sue Sutherland and Allison DobbieActing National Librarian Sue Sutherland (left) and Manager of Libraries and Information for Auckland Council Allison Dobbie, signing the collaborative partnership agreement at the LIANZA conference in Dunedin.

The Auckland Star, formerly known as the Evening Star, was published daily from 1870 to 1991. The Evening Star was first launched in March 1870 and re-launched as the Auckland Evening Star approximately 9 years later. In 1887 it was renamed the Auckland Star.

Auckland Libraries holds bound volumes of the original newspapers. These were microfilmed in the 1960s to improve ongoing access and to aid preservation but heavy use means both the original papers and microfilms are fragile and deteriorating.

The project will take several years to complete with the first papers available later this year. Digitised copies of the Auckland Star will be accessible through the National Library’s Papers Past website, which holds close to two million pages of digitised historic New Zealand papers.

View digitised newspapers on Papers Past

The Auckland Star items will provide researchers with easy access to information of regional and national significance and covering significant events such as women's suffrage, the great depression and both world wars.

"This heralds a partnership between Auckland Libraries and the National Library of New Zealand to digitise the papers from 1870 to 1945 inclusive," says Allison Dobbie, Manager of Libraries and Information for Auckland Council.

"This includes newspapers still in copyright, which Fairfax have generously allowed us to reproduce. We’re also exploring other collaborative projects with the National Library."

Acting National Librarian, Sue Sutherland, says: "The National Library of New Zealand is thrilled to be collaborating with Auckland Libraries to digitise its collections of the Auckland Star and broaden the newspaper's reach to all New Zealanders."

Ms Sutherland says the partnership signals the National Library's ongoing commitment to working with the New Zealand library sector so that more of the nation's documentary heritage is digitally preserved and accessible to future generations.

For more information contact Sam Minchin, Digital Services Co-ordinator at Auckland Council, or Allen Walley, Senior Communications Advisor at the National Library.