Thing 19: Online Timelines


By Kathryn Otto

 

An online timeline can be useful as a way to highlight your collections based on events you put on the timeline; to help you organize and process a collection; to feature your state’s/university’s/county’s/organization’s  history online where younger audiences will find it and, one can hope, “follow” it; to trace the history of a person or family through time; to use as part of an exhibit; to create a timeline to go with a class syllabus; or to ”collect” new Internet postings as they appear based on search terms you select.

 

Dipity is one example of an online timeline creation tool or generator. It has been around for a (relatively) long time. Many newer ones have come along, building on Dipity’s success.  As with all Web 2.0 tools, you need to keep an eye open for the latest innovations.

 

For this Thing, we are looking at “Minnesota History” on Dipity, an example of both a timeline of the state’s history and a timeline that highlights collections, in this case of the Minnesota Historical Society (MnHS). The most recent events on the timeline are too new to have items in the collections already, so look at some of the older events on the timeline. The “I-35W Bridge Collapses” event (Aug. 1, 2007) includes a podcast video created by the archives staff, as well as links to resources on the bridge and a blog posting on a museum item. Then go back to Jan. 4, 1999, “Ventura Becomes Governor.” This event includes links to the Society’s “Governors of Minnesota” webpage, photographs of Jesse Ventura in the the Society’s Photo and Art Database, and you can even listen to Governor Ventura’s speeches, which are available online. Other entries have links to online catalog records, EAD inventories, and “Minnesota History Topics” for History Day students.

 

In February 2011, MnHS was featuring the timeline on its main homepage in one of the four boxes across the middle, but also as one of the changing items in the “hero.” Now it is back to being just one of the four boxes (lower circled item).  

 

 

Besides having your timeline “in the cloud” on Dipity itself, their timelines can be embedded on your website. The Minnesota History timeline is also located on the Minnesota Historical Society’s website.

 

Some other ways the Minnesota Historical Society has tried using Dipity include:

 

 

Web Search: Minnesota History“  and “Minnesota” were both created by Dipity staff and are examples of how you can “collect” Internet postings on a search term(s) of your choice, in this case “Minnesota.”

 

Other online timeline generators you might want to investigate include:

 

 

Tasks

 

  1. Set up a timeline in Dipity (or another generator if you prefer) and add some events.
  2. Link back to some resources on your own website.

 

Blog Prompts

 

 

Resources