By Susan Haigh, The Associated Press

A detailed account of African-American life in the Northeast during World War II, carefully preserved in the basement of the Connecticut State Library, has been uploaded for a new, modern readership.

Hunched over a lighted magnifying machine, Christine Gauvreau spent months scrolling through reels of microfilm of Black-owned and operated Connecticut newspapers, preparing them to be digitized. Theyโ€™re some of the latest entrants in the Chronicling America project, a partnership between the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress to create a national digital database of historically significant U.S. newspapers published between 1690 and 1963.

This Nov. 29, 2018 photo shows an original April 23, 1949 copy of the New England Bulletin, Black-owned and operated weekly newspaper in Hartford, Conn. Old microfilm of this and other incarnations of the newspaper are being digitized so they can be available online as part of the United States Newspaper Program. (AP Photo/Susan Haigh)

โ€œItโ€™s really a document from the very early civil rights movement in Hartford,โ€ said Gauvreau, who recently finished archiving old issues of the now-defunct Connecticut Chronicle, Hartford Chronicle, Hartford-Springfield Chronicle and New England Bulletin, a family of Black-owned and operated newspapers that began in 1940 and operated consecutively for about a decade.

Connecticutโ€™s latest additions to Chronicling America mark the first African-American newspapers added to the project from a Northeast state.

The four Connecticut-based weekly newspapers upheld a โ€œcrusade traditionโ€ of journalism, Gauvreau said. They pushed for the hiring of Hartfordโ€™s first Black firefighters and Black bus drivers; advocated for a law barring racial bias in the National Guard; and exposed substandard housing, inferior quality goods and high prices in Harfordโ€™s North End neighborhood. In an April 23, 1949 article, the New England Bulletin criticized the โ€œvacillating standโ€ taken by Connecticutโ€™s State Board of Education, which agreed to allow public high school field trips to โ€œjimcroโ€ Washington D.C. โ€œeven though Negro students are segregatedโ€ at certain hotels.

In a front page editorial published in May 14, 1949, readers were urged to write to the State Board of Education ask members to โ€œSTOP PASSING THE BUCKโ€ and prove โ€œbeyond a shadow of a doubt that the board is very much against segregation.โ€ The editorial said the New England Bulletin was taking a stand and criticizing the board for allowing the trips because the decision was โ€œcontradictory to the forward-looking policies of the state with regard to any kind of racial injustice.โ€

An Oct. 5, 1946 column by James E. Shankel, editor of the Hartford Chronicle at the time, wrote about โ€œbare-faced racial discriminationโ€ in Connecticut. He noted a member of a New Haven church had come across a letter from an East Haddam developer advertising lakefront lots for sale and how โ€œthis summer colony is restricted to the Caucasian race.โ€

โ€œObviously, this advertising letter form was never intended to fall into the hands of prospective Negro buyers,โ€ Shankel wrote.

Other pages of the newspapers provide a window into the culture of the time. Articles cover everything from an Easter sermon at Mount Calvary Baptist Church to performances by musical greats. One advertisement announces a scheduled performance by iconic jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald at the State Theater in Hartford. Written by correspondents stationed throughout the state and region, many articles chronicle the accomplishments of Black residents. One headline announces โ€œCityโ€™s Only Army Nurse Returns,โ€ a reference to a Black nurse from Hartford who was honorably discharged from the Army Nursing Corps.

โ€œThey wanted to tell the story about what was happening in Black Hartford. They also wanted to highlight issues of discrimination. They wanted to celebrate Black achievement at the same time,โ€ said historian and Professor Stacey K. Close, the associate provost and vice president of equity and diversity at Eastern Connecticut State University. โ€œDuring World War II, there was a push to improve the employment of African-Americans in terms of the city and the state. And this newspaper took up the challenge.โ€

There was also an effort by the newspapers to make the readers aware of what was happening elsewhere, especially in the southern states where many still had family members.

โ€œThey also made sure that young people knew what was going on in the rest of the country,โ€ Close said.

He added โ€œthere was an urgencyโ€ to what the newspapers were doing.

โ€œThey were trying to push the city to do better than they had done in the past,โ€ he said. โ€œThey were an organization and a paper pushing for social, economic and political change.โ€