The JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services community is expanding—uniting libraries, archives, and cultural heritage organizations working together to strengthen responsible, mission-aligned digital collections practices. Through AI‑assisted collections processing, integrated digital asset management, long‑term preservation, and sharing their unique materials on JSTOR, Stewardship participants are advancing discovery and broadening access in ways that reflect their values and aspirations.

This month’s Stewardship update features new members of our community, notable collections made available by our participants, and updates from the broader community. If you’re looking to scale your digital collections program—or simply curious to see what peers are doing—we hope these stories provide inspiration.

New to the Stewardship community

We’re excited to welcome new institutions to JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services—each contributing distinctive collections, innovative projects, and unique insights to our growing community. Explore the full participant list.

New to Tier 2

The following institutions will use JSTOR’s integrated, cloud-hosted Stewardship platform for digital asset management, Portico-backed preservation, and discovery—including the ability to share materials on JSTOR.

Siena University – Loudonville, New York

Black-and-white cover of Alumnus, published by Siena College (March 1967), featuring a winter view of a campus building with columns and a central cupola, surrounded by bare trees and snow.
Alumnus, March 1967. Siena University Alumni News, Siena University.

Siena worked with JSTOR’s professional migration team to move collections from CONTENTdm to JSTOR Stewardship, making over 2,600 items openly available via The Siena University Digital Repository on JSTOR, with the goal of expanding access to campus scholarship and archives.

Read the full Siena University announcement 

St. John Fisher University – Rochester, New York

Close-up photograph of archival materials arranged on a table, including aged typed and handwritten documents, a printed bond certificate, and a black and white portrait photograph of two men standing side by side.
Six Nations materials from George P. Decker papers, St. John Fisher University, Lavery Library Archives & Special Collections.

Home to distinctive materials including abolitionist-era newspapers, recordings from the history of radio broadcasting in Rochester, and a growing body of faculty and student scholarship, Fisher aims to improve discoverability and searchability with built-in OCR for newspapers, and automatic transcription for audio materials.

Read the full St. John Fisher announcement

New to Tier 3

These institutions will join our charter program dedicated to advancing responsible, sustainable digital collections stewardship; gain access to JSTOR Seeklight plus the integrated Stewardship platform for digital collections management, preservation, and sharing; and help shape JSTOR Seeklight through working groups, user testing, and cohort discussions.

Wellesley College – Wellesley, Massachusetts

Color illustrated postcard titled “Greetings from Wellesley,” dated Aug. 15, 1904, featuring scenes of Wellesley College: students rowing on Lake Waban, a large red-brick campus building, the campus gates, and a woman in cap and gown.
American Souvenir Co., Greetings from Wellesley Postcard, 1904. Wellesley College Archives Image Gallery, Wellesley College.

Wellesley is the fifth Oberlin Group and second Boston Library Consortium institution to join the charter program. An early adopter of JSTOR’s stewardship programs, the college already shares more than 31,500 items openly on JSTOR

Read the full Wellesley announcement

Drew University – Madison, New Jersey

Close-up of an aged manuscript page written in brown ink, featuring dense, slanted cursive handwriting on yellowed paper. The script appears to be from the 18th or 19th century, with flowing letterforms and closely spaced lines, showing signs of fading and slight ink bleed typical of historical documents.
Freeborn Garrettson, A Journal of the Life of [Freeborn] Garrettson from May 18, 1778 [Book 2], 1778. Freeborn Garrettson Collection, Drew University.

Drew will use JSTOR Seeklight to expand access to traditionally hard-to-process materials. They’ve already used the tool to describe, transcribe, and share a handwritten 122-page journal from 1788, adding to more than 9,000 items across 50 collections already available from Drew on JSTOR

Read the full Drew University announcement 

Collection spotlight

As stewards of unique materials, our participants make a diverse array of collections available on the JSTOR platform, discoverable alongside scholarly materials by researchers on-campus, and worldwide.

Browse thousands of open access collections on JSTOR.

JSTOR Seeklight-generated, human-reviewed description: The University of Alabama in Huntsville’s Space Journal Collection

Cover of Space Journal, dedicated to the astro-sciences (March–May, Winter issue, 50¢). The illustration shows a sleek silver rocket standing upright on landing legs in a prehistoric landscape with palm-like trees and rocky cliffs. Two large, dinosaur-like reptiles with long tails and red markings stand in the foreground, while a flying reptile glides in the background, blending retro-futuristic space exploration imagery with ancient Earth scenery.
Space Journal, Vol. 1, No. 5, March-May 1959. Space Enterprises, Inc., 1959. Space Journal Collection, The University of Alabama in Huntsville.

Explore the full run of the short-lived, Cold War-era Space Journal, published by the Rocket City Astronomical Association and Space Enterprises, Inc. in Huntsville from 1957 to 1959. Gain insight into each issue with AI-assisted, human-reviewed metadata—clearly labeled with transparency notes so readers understand how descriptions were created.

Browse the Space Journal collection on JSTOR

Explore JSTOR Seeklight

Cleveland Public Library: Architecture of Greater Cleveland and Ohio

Watercolor architectural drawing of the Chandler House (1895), a large, light-yellow Victorian residence with steep red gabled roofs, a rounded turret with a conical roof, arched porch openings, and tall chimneys, set on a grassy lawn with trees framing the house.
Arthur Nelson Oviatt. Chandler House. 1895. Architecture of Greater Cleveland and Ohio Collection, Cleveland Public Library.

Trace Cleveland’s Gilded Age grandeur through historic photographs from the Cleveland Public Library. Images of Euclid Avenue’s “Millionaires’ Row,” Schweinfurth-designed mansions, and the Cleveland Arcade reveal how industrial wealth shaped revival-style splendor—and how much has since disappeared.

Explore the Architecture of Greater Cleveland and Ohio on JSTOR 

Read the JSTOR Daily feature: “How America’s Industrial Elite Built Their Own Palaces”

Contributions and conversations

Through presentations, written pieces, conference panels, and more, the Stewardship community is committed to sharing back what they do and learn. Visit our events page to catch up on past recorded events, register for new ones, and find opportunities to meet up at an upcoming conference. 

Preservation first: How The Evergreen State College modernized digital stewardship with JSTOR

The Evergreen State College migrated nearly 4,900 items from a locally maintained Omeka environment into JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services, strengthening long-term preservation through Portico while reducing maintenance burden. With a supported migration completed in weeks, Evergreen shifted focus from system upkeep to sustainable, future-ready stewardship.

Read the case study 

Federal grant will unlock centuries of Long Island history at Hofstra

Hofstra University’s Long Island Studies Institute (LISI) has been awarded a $459,000 federal grant to digitize and expand access to materials documenting Nassau and Suffolk counties. The grant will help support Hofstra’s participation in the JSTOR Stewardship charter program—advancing the adoption of archival technologies and best practices, strengthening long-term preservation, and ensuring digitized materials are preserved and made accessible through a trusted, widely used scholarly platform. Hofstra has already contributed several JSTOR Seeklight-processed collections to JSTOR: Hempstead, New York Photographs and Battle of Long Island

Read the announcement

Want to learn more about becoming a part of JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services? Get in touch with our team!

Written by:

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Alex Houston

Alex Houston is a Senior Marketing Manager at ITHAKA with over 15 years of experience supporting the academic community. With a background in the scholarly publishing ecosystem, graduate coursework in philosophy, and freelance archival experience, she leads communication strategy for initiatives like JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services and is proud to help advance ITHAKA’s mission to expand access to knowledge and education.