The University Library at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has 
announced the institutions recommended for direct funding through the Email 
Archives: Building Capacity and Community (EA:BCC) re-grant program. In its 
first round, the EA:BCC awarded grant funding to five institutions deeply 
involved in innovative email archiving activity: Harvard University; University 
of Albany, SUNY; Council of State Archivists, Inc.; Columbia University; and 
the University of Chicago Library.

Nearly $400,000 was distributed amongst the awardees to illustrate and build 
capacity for a wide range of archival institutions to process, preserve, and 
provide access to email using community-supported tools. In addition, the 
awardees represent the diverse nature of institutions contributing to the 
advancement of current email archiving practices. The combined effort and 
outcomes of these projects will make significant progress in the adoption, 
productivity, and efficacy of email archiving.

The EA:BCC program is a four-year program that will build the capacity for 
archives, libraries, and museums to collect and better preserve email as part 
of the historical record in their research collections. We invite you to learn 
more by visiting our project website at, 
https://emailarchivesgrant.library.illinois.edu/. Included below is a brief 
description of the five institutions’ programs recommended for funding.

Integrating Preservation Functionality into ePADD, Harvard University 
($100,000.00)


Harvard University will integrate long-term email preservation functionality 
into ePADD, an open source email archiving software program which already 
supports archival appraisal, processing, discovery, and delivery. Harvard and 
its project partners, the University of Manchester and Stanford University, 
will enhance ePADD’s functionality to provide a tool that more comprehensively 
and robustly supports the email archiving lifecycle. Supported features of the 
new product, known as ePADD+, will include local customization and 
extensibility to accommodate institutions that require alternative preservation 
packaging. In addition, local deployments at the three partner institutions 
will validate ePADD+’s broad applicability for diverse institutional needs and 
act as exemplars for similar deployment in other programmatic contexts across 
the email archiving community.


Mailbag: A Stable Package for Email with Multiple Masters, University of 
Albany, SUNY ($63,890.00)


The M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections & Archives at the 
University of Albany, SUNY will create Mailbag, a functional specification 
based on the BagIt specification, in addition to, a software tool to create and 
manage Mailbags. One key feature of Mailbag is the ability to preserve multiple 
masters for email archives in a structured and actionable format. This will 
allow archivists to rapidly capture email and fix it in a stable package for 
later processing and access. Additionally, the project team will create a 
Python library and command line utility with a basic Graphic User Interface 
(GUI) for creating and managing Mailbags that will use web archiving technology 
to preserve external context and enable archivists to easily acquire email and 
store it in a stable manner.


CoSA PREPARE: Preparing Archives for Records in Email, Council of State 
Archivists, Inc. ($100,000.00)


CoSA will develop and deliver capacity-building activities for email 
preservation and access to state, territorial, and the District of Columbia 
archives. The program will focus on providing practical solutions for the 
collection, preservation, and accessibility of email generated by government 
officials and key legislators through the following activities: needs 
assessment; development of best practice documents; applications, tools, and 
protocols testing; and technical assistance and mentoring. These outcomes will 
foster ongoing learning, information exchange and collaboration to build the 
capacity for the preservation of governmental records.


Creating Email Archives from PDFs: The Covid-19 Corpus, Columbia University 
($98,630.04)

Columbia University will contribute email archiving solutions on both ends of 
the email stewardship cycle -- acquisition and preservation, on one end, and 
research access, on the other. The focus will be on government responses to the 
Covid-19 pandemic that are being released through FOIA requests made available 
online by journalists. Consequently, researchers are facing a number of 
challenges accessing these records and cannot easily determine the scope of 
arrangement of the collections, or find descriptions of the contents of the 
main components. To combat these challenges Columbia will build an open-source 
tool and associated library that takes email embedded in PDFs as input and 
generates an MBOX file as output, thereby making these records compatible with 
existing email archiving solutions. In addition, the project team will process 
a large corpus of FOIAed records on Covid-19 to enhance its value to 
researchers and to develop it into a new collection as part of the Freedom of 
Information Archive (FOIArchive), an aggregated database of government records.

Attachment Converter: Preserving the Context of Electronic Correspondence, 
University of Chicago Library ($40230.00)

The University of Chicago Library will build the Attachment Converter, software 
that will take command-line conversion tools and use them to batch-convert 
attachments in an email collection into recommended formats for digital 
preservation. The software will efficiently preserve and contextualize email 
attachments, which are often significant documents in a large range of 
proprietary and obsolete formats. This effort will increase the capacity of The 
Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center of the University of 
Chicago Library to collect correspondence in all forms and contribute to its 
mission of documenting University activities and supporting teaching and 
learning on campus.  The project team plans to collaborate with colleagues from 
other institutions to ensure that the Attachment Converter will accommodate a 
broad range of documents and archival workflows. The Attachment Converter will 
be made freely available to the archival community.

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CHRIS PROM

Associate Dean for Digital Strategies

University Library

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

1408 W. Gregory Drive, #246G | M/C 522

Urbana, IL 61820

+1 (217 )244-2052 | [email protected]

www.library.illinois.edu<http://www.library.illinois.edu/>



RUBY LORRAINE MARTINEZ

Email Archives Community Fellow

Office of Digital Strategies

e: [email protected]



[cid:642bb695-ef02-47fd-8363-d32fa5adba38]

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