Digital Collections

Digital Collections is the central repository for digitized and born-digital assets from the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library.  With a focus on supporting research and public engagement, this platform encourages users to virtually experience, explore, and access digitized materials that reflect the diversity of the library’s wide range of historical and cultural resources.

Searching the Virginia Gazette in Digital Collections :  Over 2,000 issues of the Virginia Gazette dating from 1736 to 1780 are available on the Digital Collections platform. While keyword searching of the newspapers is not yet fully available, we hope that the following search tips will help you locate issues relevant to your research interests. 

        Identifying issues with relevant content :  Use online indexes to identify content by names, places, and main topics: 

                Virginia Gazette Index, 1736-1780, by Lester J. Cappon and Stella F. Duff. Williamsburg, Va.: Institute of Early American History and Culture, 1950.  
                Please note that the Cappon index does not include issues which came to light after these volumes were published.  

                    Volume I: <a href="https://archive.org/details/virginiagazettei01capp/mode/2up" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/virginiagazettei01capp/mode/2up</a>  

                    Volume II: <a href="https://archive.org/details/virginiagazettei02capp/mode/2up" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/virginiagazettei02capp/mode/2up</a>  

                    Virginia Gazette Index of Topics (<a href="https://research.colonialwilliamsburg.org/DigitalLibrary/va-gazettes/VGPPIndex.cfm" target="_blank">https://research.colonialwilliamsburg.org/DigitalLibrary/va-gazettes/VGPPIndex.cfm</a>)  

        Locating specific issues within Digital Collections : Once you find newspaper issues of interest, take note of their publication dates so that you can find the corresponding issues in Digital Collections. 
        Cappon issue references include an abbreviation of the printer name, followed by an abbreviated date, and an indication of location within the issue: 
 
                              PD15Oc72:23 = Purdie & Dixon’s VA Gazette, Oct. 15, 1772, page 2, column 3 

                              A guide to abbreviations used in Cappon may be found here : <a href="https://archive.org/details/virginiagazettei01capp/page/n9/mode/2up" target="_blank">https://archive.org/details/virginiagazettei01capp/page/n9/mode/2up</a> 

        All issues of the Virginia Gazette automatically load on the home page. To isolate issues by year of publication or printer, use the Standard Filters panel on the left side of the screen.  
        You may also use the search box (under “Can’t find what you’re looking for?”) to search for issues by date. To do this, enter the date within quotation marks as follows: 

                                 “October 15, 1772”    Be sure to spell out the full month, insert a comma between the day and year, and nest the date within quotation marks. 

        Viewing and downloading issues : To view an issue of the newspaper in full screen, click on the image preview to open the record, then select the Open Document link on the top right. It will open on a new browser tab. 
        Issues may be downloaded for personal use. To download an issue of the newspaper, click on the image preview to open the record, then select the Download link. All issues will download as PDFs.  

        Saving and Sharing :  Registered users may save digital assets by using the Add to Collection link at the top right of the screen. Saved assets will remain in your saved items folder indefinitely. 
        To create a shareable link to an asset, click on Share at the top right of the screen. Please note that using a link copied from an asset’s address bar will not direct you back to the same page upon future uses.

To learn more about The Virginia Gazette please see: <a href="https://www.colonialwilliamsburg.org/discover/sources/the-virginia-gazettes/" target="_blank">https://www.colonialwilliamsburg.org/discover/sources/the-virginia-gazettes/</a>

The Rockefeller Library has partnered with Swem Library at William & Mary and the Library of Virginia to provide access here to the issues of The Virginia Gazette from each institution’s holdings. Together with microfilm issues, researchers can access one of the most complete runs of the newspaper online.  Support for making The Virginia Gazette available on the Digital Collections platform is provided by the Bloomberg Philanthropies Digital Accelerator Program.  This program supports leadership development and technological infrastructure investment that builds audiences, increases fundraising, drives revenue, delivers dynamic programming, and helps develop best practices to share across a network of non-profit cultural organizations.

Please contact the Rockefeller Library with any questions about Virginia Gazettes: <a href="mailto:rocklibrary@cwf.org" target="_blank">rocklibrary@cwf.org</a>

Virginia Gazettes

The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation began its work to restore and interpret 18th-century Williamsburg in 1926. Since then, its historians, archaeologists, and curators have conducted extensive research to ensure that work is as historically accurate as possible. They have examined its existing structures, excavated sites, analyzed paint samples, collected artifacts, searched land records, and consulted 18th-century books, manuscripts, engravings, and maps, documenting their efforts along the way.
 
The Research Reports gathered here have been contributed by various CWF departments to the Rockefeller Library for the purpose of sharing this work with the public. Most of the reports relate directly to buildings in Colonial Williamsburg’s Historic Area; each generally has an archaeological, an architectural, and an historical report associated with it. But researchers will also find topical reports on areas of interest to 18th-century studies, as well as a few interpretive reports that outline the way in which buildings have been presented to visitors.
 
It's important to note that while reports are still being added as new research is completed, the majority date to the period of the initial Restoration: over 60% were written before 1959. Thus, while they present the most complete understanding available at the time of their composition, they may now be out of date due to the discovery of new evidence and advances in technology. Researchers may also encounter outmoded or disrespectful terminology or evidence of discriminatory views in these reports. Colonial Williamsburg continues to make this material available for research as part of our commitment to understanding our own history.
 
Support for making Colonial Williamsburg Research Reports available on the Digital Collections platform is provided by the Bloomberg Philanthropies Digital Accelerator Program.  This program supports leadership development and technological infrastructure investment that builds audiences, increases fundraising, drives revenue, delivers dynamic programming, and helps develop best practices to share across a network of non-profit cultural organizations.
 
Please contact the Rockefeller Library with any questions about Colonial Williamsburg Research Reports: <a href="mailto:rocklibrary@cwf.org" target="_blank">rocklibrary@cwf.org</a>

Colonial Williamsburg Research Reports

The John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library presents a selection of Colonial Williamsburg publications available as pdf downloads for scholarly use.  Each folder, or collection, shown below is a different topical publication.  Use the search bar shown below to search across all titles or within a particular periodical.  Several of the collections are titles which are still being produced.  Folders are updated as new issues become available.

Search tips: 

- Type key words or phrases in the  box below to search across all publications. 

- Use the filters side panel at left to help refine your search by collection, contributor, or timeline

Colonial Williamsburg Publications

The Williamsburg Bray School is the oldest extant building dedicated to the education of Black children in the United States, located in Williamsburg, Virginia.  The assets shown here represent highlights from the thousands of images, videos, and primary sources about the restoration of the Bray School.

Williamsburg Bray School

Teacher Resources