"The Digital Harrisburg Project: Placing the Population of a Progressiv" by David Pettegrew and Albert Sarvis
 

The Digital Harrisburg Project: Placing the Population of a Progressive Era City

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

Winter 2020

Abstract

Our article describes the work of the Digital Harrisburg Project in placing the population of Pennsylvania's capital city on geocoded historical maps in 1900-1930. We argue that geocoded census data-population tied to precise locations in a GIS-marks a game-changer for creating fine-grained historical pictures of human mobility and changing urban diversity. Because historical federal census tables recorded information about race, immigration, occupation, property value, and home address, the historian has the power to study patterns of residence that relate to complex forces such as regional and global immigration, economic change, and urban reform. Census records and historical maps are hardly unproblematic, however, and require care in analysis and interpretation. The article highlights the digital project and data, the challenges of digitizing demographic records and geocoding urban space, and potential applications for rethinking historical problems such as City Beautiful.

Comments

This edited collection was developed and published in tandem with the IIPT-Commonwealth Monument Project (2018-2020), with support and funding from Messiah University's Center for Public Humanities and the Council of Independent College's Humanities Research for the Public Good Grant Program.

Originally published as:
Pettegrew, David, and Albert Sarvis (2020). The Digital Harrisburg Project: Placing the Population of a Progressive Era City, Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies 87(1), 22-44. https://doi.org/10.5325/pennhistory.87.1.0022.

“Used with permission from Penn State University Press.”

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