Funding
History of funding sources for the project
1998-2000
- Kenneth & Evelyn Lipper Foundation ($100,000)
- Support for Nuremberg Trials Project pilot project: initial design and implementation of document metadata schema and data-entry tool; creation of document metadata for Trials 1, 2 and 4; digitization of prototype set of Trial 1 documents; machine-readable text extraction for Trial 1 transcript (keyboarding)
2004-2005
- Harvard’s Library Digital Initiative ($74,861)
- http://hul.harvard.edu/ois//ldi/resources/Nuremberg_LDI_grant_final_report-PublicVer.pdf
- Support for Nuremberg Trials Project one-year position responsible for editing Trial 1 transcript and various tasks connected with completion of digitization of Trial 1 documents
2010-2011
- Harvard Law Library internal funding ($15,695)
- Support for Nuremberg Trials Project one-year effort to digitize Trial 2 and Trial 4 documents (18,587 pages)
2014-2015
- Harvard’s Open Your Hidden Collections Project ($140,000)
- http://library.harvard.edu/06112015-1629/nineteen-open-your-hidden-collections-proposals-funded
- Support for Nuremberg Trials Project one-year effort to create content for posting Trial 3 online as part of its website offerings; support to finish digitization of all typescript and some photostat document pages in scope for the project (646,413 pages)
2015-2016
- Harvard’s Open Your Hidden Collections Project ($86,220)
- http://library.harvard.edu/open-collections-review
- Support for Nuremberg Trials Project one-year effort to create content for posting Trial 7 online as part of its website offerings; support to digitize transcripts for all 13 trials
2016
- Harvard Law Library internal funding ($98,829)
- Support for digitizing oversize and remaining photostat evidence documents (64,034 pages), and for machine- readable text extraction (raw OCR, OCR correction and keyboarding) for transcripts of Trials 1-4 and 7