Cranbrook, Way Back

When we consider historical records, even digital ones, our thoughts do not usually extend to websites. Yet, just like student newsletters or exhibition catalogs, Cranbrook’s website is a compendium of institutional information regarding the people, places, and things that make it unique.  As we ourselves shift evermore towards online existences, one focus of the Archives has been on how to ensure Cranbrook’s virtual legacy.

I’m sure everyone is familiar with the expression, “What goes on the internet, stays on the internet,” or some variation thereof. Cranbrook is no exception. Fortunately, there is the Internet Archive. A non-profit American digital library, it has been saving public websites since 1996. And, courtesy of its web archives, the Wayback Machine, Cranbrook’s evolving web presence has been captured over time from its beginnings in the mid to late 1990s to today. [Interesting aside: through the Internet Archives backup protocol, Cranbrook is a part of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, the current incarnation of the famed ancient Library of Alexandria!]

Screen Shot 2020-05-21 at 3.15.30 PM

Cranbrook home page as it looked in 1997. Courtesy of the Internet Archive.

One of the quickest ways to get a snapshot of what was going on at Cranbrook in the last twenty-three years is through its website.  Get lost in Cranbrook 1997 by clicking on the above homepage image and navigating through the still active links.

How about exploring Cranbrook 2007?

Screen Shot 2020-05-21 at 2.35.49 PM

Cranbrook home page as it looked in 2007. Courtesy of the Internet Archive.

There are only 1,450 more site captures to delve into, if you’ve got the time! While the interactive websites of Cranbrook’s past can be accessed in this way, it is important to note that the information and files used in their creation form part of the over two million items at the Archives. For example, the main homepage image from the 1997 website, the Woodward Entrance Feature, can be found in the Archives’ Architecture Slide Collection.

S.22.268

View of the entrance feature from Woodward Avenue at sunset, 1996. Dan Hoffman, designer. Balthazar Korab, photographer. Copyright Balthazar Korab/Cranbrook Archives.

As increasingly digital files become the only documentation of Cranbrook activities or events, its websites are more integral to understanding the context of these records. The Archives continues to expand its digital capabilities to keep pace. In the near future, we hope to provide our own copies of Cranbrook’s various websites (with keyword search capability), side by side with the digital records from which they were created.

CCCR logo_horiz_color_no text_transparent background-1

Deborah Rice, Head Archivist, Cranbrook Archives Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research

2 thoughts on “Cranbrook, Way Back

  1. DEBORAH,

    VERY INTERESTING AND INFORMATIVE ARTICLE, SHOWING THE IMPORTANCE OF KEEPING FACTUAL RECORDS OF THE PAST. FUTURE GENERATIONS WILL ENJOY LEARNING ALL ABOUT THE CREATION AND IMPORTANCE OF THE CRANBROOK EDUCATIONAL COMMUNITY.

    LOIS HARSH

    Like

  2. My husband and I have been part of the Cranbrook community for 50 years and lived on the grounds for 39. We definitely remember Cranbrook “ Way Back”. We walked the new entrance as it was being built from our home on Faculty Way. Saw many, many changes during our those years we lived there. Husband, Russ Conner is just completing his 50th year of teaching in the upper school science department and is going for one more.

    Kathryn Conner

    Liked by 2 people

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

%d bloggers like this: