Your Name: 

Helen Hofton 

Community Group Name 

Pirton Local History Group 

Focus of Community Group 

Researching and preserving the history of Pirton village through various media, including books, photographs, audio, and digital archives. 

Type of Records held 

Historical records, photographs, audio tapes, videos, and digital files. 

Size of collections in GB 

 

How did you get involved with your community group? 

The research group started in the 1980s as a Wea local history class in our Hertfordshire village. About 6 of us decided to write a book on the history of the village. By the 1990s we had collected a lot of data, and we wanted this to be available to people across the world. So, we used the money raised by the book to fund an open access website. The composition of the group has changed over the years and I, as chairman began to ask people with different skills to come on board for different projects. When we were doing a project recording timber framed houses, a surveyor and an architect from the village joined me.  

How do you collect material for your collections? 

Initially we collected material from the county record office, I photographed records of people such as land tax, quarter sessions, overseer’s accounts, rates etc and we input this information into an excel spreadsheet. These files are available on the website. We also collected old photographs which were scanned by the local museum. They kept the negatives, and we had a print copy. Audio tapes and later videos using an iPad, were made of elderly residents. 

What processes are in place to manage and process your collections? 

Archive records such as census, probate, lay subsidy, saved as excel files were then input into a relational access database of people. About 28 thousand records and each had an individual identifier, but because of non-standardised spelling, searching by name was difficult. To make the record database more searchable, we created a bank of all the names by removing the vowels, so Lake became LK—-. Recently another spreadsheet of house records, i.e. manor court rolls, land sales has been created and this links to the people database. 

The audio tapes were digitized by the British Library as part of the Unlocking Our Sound Heritage project. The old photos are scanned and saved as TIFF s for publication or JPEGs for the website. We have our own YouTube channel for our historical videos. 

How do you preserve your collections? 

Most of our collections are on the website. The website is a free resource bank for articles, essays and further research on the history of the village. The website hosting is currently funded by sales of our book but in the future, I would like it to be funded by the Parish Council. The site has been deposited on the UK WebArchive but this is not searchable. In the short term all files are backed up daily on my NAS. The Hertfordshire Archives (HALS) has only just started digital collecting and preservation although there are over 25 excellent local history websites with digital records in the county. We have approached TNA about preservation of these websites, but it seems that amateurs, without standardisation, are ahead of archivists by nearly 20 years. 


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