If
you have any documents, photos, videos that may be of historic
interest, please contact Jim (his email is above)
____________________________________________________
| Photo
Album is now online!
The history photo
album is now online with a few hundred images.
It has open access
for viewing, but to leave comments for any image,
you must register and setup a password. This is done
because the comments are otherwise open to spammers
who will quickly fill the pages with junk!
Registration
Username should be your call sign, if possible. This
makes it easier to check on unwanted users.
To register
Go to album at http://www.larclub.net/gallery/
Click
on 'Register' on the top right of the page.
This will bring up
a form to enter your 'Username' (use call sign, if
possible), your first name, and email address. The
program will send you an email to give you a URL to
go to for entering your password. Once you have done
so, you are now registered (don't forget your
username and password for next time. Just go to 'Log
On' and use these). Your don't have to register
again!
Please add any
comments to any image you can help identify, even if
its only a thought! This will help to eventually
classify each photo later.
If you have any
problems or questions contact: Leo
VE3ATC |
____________________________________________________
LARC HISTORY PROJECT - 75th ANNIVERSARY
by Leo Wehrstedt, VE3ATC
The Lakehead Amateur Radio Club (LARC) was founded in 1934.
From its meager beginnings to present, LARC dedicated amateurs
brought together their interests and knowledge to help each
other advance in their individual and collective interests in
the hobby.
Over the years, since the beginning, records of involvement,
contributions, events, and technical aspects were produced which
track the clubs members from the earliest members to present.
Browsing the records can be entertaining and enlightening as one
sees just how much the club has meant to its members.
HISTORY PROJECT
For years, Jim O'Brien VE3UA has compiled and protected
documents such as what is now HI-Q, letters, meeting minutes,
and whatever else he could save from being forever lost. This
amounted to boxes and boxes of records that he spent countless
hours of time and energy putting into organized lists to be able
to properly index and track the information.
A lot of the early records were hand written and early copies
were less than perfect to read! Jim had started to transfer
these records by hand to computer friendly pages that could be
stored. Again, Jim spent countless hours and days of his time
transcribing hard to read, or questionable dated documents to a
form others could read and follow.
In 2006, I saw the amount of work Jim put into compiling the
historic records and offered to try to advance the transferring
of these documents to formats and indexing that would be readily
accessible to all members and be a permanent history of the
club. Jim had converted a lot of the early documents he worked
on to a .pdf format. We decided that this was the way to go and
should be a standard format for some time that would not change
like WordPerfect or Word that changes from time to time to new
formats.
With Jim's participation, I developed a web access database
program to record each and every document. This was set up so
we could separate the records and individually enter the
necessary information from our home computers. With both us
working from our homes, we could see what each of us entered,
along with the updates as the entries progressed. Along the
way, we ran into several instances where we changed the database
fields to record other fields of information, such as document
condition, type of document, etc to track the piles of records.
With progress, slow at times, we started to see the final
product of our work and could identify duplicate, missing, or
partial records. This would help in seeking missing information
from other club members that had documents that were not in the
reams of paper we had.
As work progressed, we found the amount of documents
overwhelming and knew it would take the two of us months or
years to convert all the outstanding records to .pdf files for
eventual electronic storage on our own.
A call went out to other club members who might be able to help
convert binders of material. We did get the bulk of the
outstanding documents converted. Special thanks to Bill Unger
VE3XT and Robert Mazur VA3ROM who spent hours scanning binders
of written information and converting them to .pdf files.
DOCUMENTS
Final confirmation and recording of documents on hand will have
to be done in the future to ensure we have converted all the
records we have on hand to .pdf format. With the boxes of
documents, again, this will take a lot of time and effort. We
are sure the bulk of it has been taken care of, but with the
amount of pages involved, some more than likely have been
missed.
PHOTOS
The club has photos going back to the date the club was formed.
These will be eventually scanned also, and converted to .jpg
files so they can also be electronically stored.
Dave Kimpton VE3AVS has scanned a lot of these photos to date.
(Thanks Dave!)
The photos will also have to be individually identified as to
the people shown, date taken if possible and location. Again,
this will take some time so will be the second stage of the
History Project.
VIDEO and MEDIA
Several video tapes from the past were in the historic
collection. These were in varying formats and needed to be
converted to a format that could be electronically stored and
available to all members either via the internet or on disc.
Thanks to the efforts of Lindo Scalese VE3NHX these have been
now been converted and are on the list for eventual addition to
the website (as time permits). This will be the third stage of
the History Project.
PRESENTLY
Our original idea was to place all of the .pdf files, photos,
and videos on CD's or DVD's with a nice artistic label. This
can still be done if there is enough interest to make the work
worthwhile. The benefits of having all the records on one disk
would be to be able to search the complete history and view
desired documents a lot faster than over the internet.
I will placing the scanned documents, we have so far, on the
club website http://www.larclub.net for viewing. These are in
.pdf format, and Adobe Reader is required to view them. Watch
the club website for updates.
The documents will be listed by date, and may have some other
information with the listing. Presently I am using a basic
directory , which will be updated in the future to a menu
system - again as time permits- to get us started using the
files.
Help from any interested members would be appreciated. For now,
work is required in the following areas:
- Comparing original documents on hand to those that have been
scanned and processed to ensure we have not missed any. (A
lot of them!)
- Identifying photos- people, dates, places, etc
Thanks to all who have taken the time and effort to contribute
files or copy items that were not previously available to us.
Leo Wehrstedt, VE3ATC
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