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University of Minnesota

Kathryn A. Martin Library

Northeastern Minnesota COVID-19 Community Archive Project

Online Collection

Many of the items that have been contributed to the Northeastern Minnesota COVID-19 Community Archive Project are now available online through UMedia. We will continue to add items to this digital collection. 

A COVID-19 Community Archive

Drawing of a school bus, with the bus driver wearing a face mask and distributing a bag of food to a child through the back doors of the bus. A woman holding a smaller child is standing nearby.Imagine that 100 years from now you are researching the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic in Northeastern Minnesota. It’s easy to find dry statistics and numbers, but you want more. What were people thinking and feeling during this time? What informational materials and public art did they create? How were they helping each other? What did the day-to-day experience of this time look like in Duluth? 

What if there were an archive of those experiences for you to explore?

Welcome to the Northeastern Minnesota COVID-19 Community Archives Project, organized by the University of Minnesota Duluth Archives & Special Collections. The goal of this project is to create a community archive that will preserve the story of this unprecedented time in our community. To do this, we need your help. We are continuing to collect materials from community members that document the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Duluth and surrounding communities. To contribute to the collection, contact us at libarchives@d.umn.edu.

Image: "School" by Krista Sue-Lo Twu

What Types of Materials Can I Contribute?

wearing face masks. Two of the masks are home-made with Native American print fabric. One mask is an N95 mask, the other is a disposable medical mask. The older child has her hand in the photo, and is wearing a purple latex glove.Some examples of items that could be included in the archive are: A sign, social media post, or video created for your business directing customers to practice social distancing, or explaining your altered business model; a recording of a musical or spoken word event shared online during this time; photographs of scenes from around your community, such as empty shelves in the grocery store, or people in your neighborhood talking to each other while standing six feet apart; materials from your place of worship explaining the move to online services; photographs of public art, such as chalk art on sidewalks, or paper hearts posted in windows; homeschool schedules or other daily routines; your own journal entries (written, audio, or video) documenting your pandemic experience. 

These are only a few examples. We welcome documentation that represents individual experiences, and also documentation that represents your community's experience. This includes but is not limited to how businesses, government agencies, schools, colleges/universities, health care agencies and religious, social, political and other organizations are affected by the pandemic as well as documentation of individuals' feelings and reactions to the pandemic, routines for school children at home, examples of mutual aid, day-to-day quarantine routines, and life for essential service workers. We are collecting materials that document all experiences and viewpoints -- we want your voice in the archive! Submissions may be in the form of digital photographs, text files, PDFs, spreadsheets, presentations, audio files, or video files.

Image: Jeremy Davis and family, 2020

How Do I Contribute Materials to the Archive?

Please submit materials by contacting us at libarchives@d.umn.edu. We have compiled some frequently asked questions here. For other questions, please contact us at libarchives@d.umn.edu or (218) 726-8526.

The majority of items that have been collected so far are available online:  

Thank you for helping us with this important project. Your contributions are a crucial part of telling the story of the COVID-19 pandemic in our community.

Contact Us:

Email: libarchives@d.umn.edu

Phone: (218) 726-8526

Location: Kathryn A. Martin Library
Library Annex 202 (see map)