
Spines of Kipling scrapbooks, some dating to the nineteenth century. These scrapbooks are the focus of the Digital Kipling Project.
by Roger Gillis, Digital Humanities Librarian; Diana Doublet, Digitization Assistant; and Jessica Ruzek (digital exhibit assistant)
This post is the first in a series that will highlight the Dal Libraries’ Digital Kipling project. The project involves digitizing and contextualizing the Rudyard Kipling Scrapbooks — part of the internationally renowned Kipling Collection held in the Dalhousie Libraries’ Special Collections.
The Dalhousie Libraries’ Kipling Collection has an international reputation as the most comprehensive collection of Rudyard Kipling’s publications in the world. Containing an exhaustive selection of Kipling’s literary and journalistic works, the Kipling Collection holds important research ephemera and support material by and about Kipling, including manuscripts, letters, pamphlets, original illustrations from Kipling’s works, autographs, sketches, and sheet music for poems set to music. Kipling was one of the most popular authors in the UK in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and is the author of The Jungle Book.
The Kipling Collection also contains the Kipling Collection scrapbooks: 11 scrapbooks created by notable nineteenth and twentieth century Kipling enthusiasts from England and the United States. There are seven collectors behind the 11 scrapbooks: Sir William Garth, Ellis Ames Ballard, G. D. Wells, James Todman Goodwin and three unidentified collectors. (The collectors of these scrapbooks will be explored in a future post as part of this series.) These scrapbooks are informal compilations, which preserve Kipling’s early journalistic works, as well various versions and editions of poems, short stories, and serials, many of which no longer survive in their original form.

The Digital Kipling Project team of Diana, Roger, and Jessica gingerly explore one of the scrapbooks, brittle with age.
This summer, the Dalhousie Libraries’ Digital Kipling Project team will be digitizing the scrapbooks and creating a digital humanities exhibit via the Libraries’ new digital exhibit space using Omeka, an open source web-publishing platform. The project team consists of Roger Gillis (project manager/digital humanities librarian), Diana Doublet (digitization assistant), and Jessica Ruzek (digital exhibit assistant). The team is working with digital archivist Creighton Barrett and special collections librarian Karen Smith to bring this project to fruition.
By digitizing the scrapbooks, this project will enhance the accessibility of the Kipling Collection, provide contextual and background information crucial to the scrapbooks, and will further support research surrounding Kipling. The Digital Kipling online exhibit will launch in the fall of 2017. Updates and information on the site can be found here: http://kipling.library.dal.ca
This is just amazing. I can’t believe that in almost 20 years at Dal, first as a student (in British history, no less) and then as a staff member, that this is the first time I am hearing about this collection!
Really looking forward to your updates. Thanks for shining a light on this remarkable resource!
Thanks very much!
Fascinating ! Did you know that the University of Cape Town in South Africa also has a collection of Scrapbooks,mostly compiled by one John Scott Macgregor, in its Kipling Collection ? Dominic Davies wrote about these in the March 2014 Kipling Journal , (available online via the Reader’s Guide on the Kipling Society website, if you;re interested.)
Thanks for bringing this to our attention! We will pass this along to those working on the project.
I’d like to find out more? I’d care to find out more details.
More information can be found here: http://kipling.library.dal.ca
And a new blog post is just about to be published.