Collection Summary

The GBH Archives special collection includes programing and ancillary materials preserved by GBH Archives, public media’s oldest professional archive. The collection includes television episodes, raw interviews, radio broadcasts, news reports, and curated clips, many of which are featured in the thirty special collections and seventeen scholar exhibits found on the GBH Archives website Open Vault.

Included in the collection are GBH news and public affairs series, such as The Press and the People (1958–1959), exploring press coverage of key events of the 1950s; Say Brother (1968–1997), GBH’s longest-running Black public affairs program, subsequently renamed Basic Black (1998–2024) and reimagined in 2025 as GBH News Rooted; the landmark debate series The Advocates (1969–1974; 1978-1979; 1984); and the documentary series FRONTLINE (1983–present). The collection also includes groundbreaking arts and cultural programming, such as New Television Workshop (1974–1993), which supported the creation and broadcast of contemporary dance, performance, and video art. Alistair Cooke’s introductory and closing remarks for episodes filmed during his tenure as host of Masterpiece Theatre are also showcased in the collection.

The GBH Archives special collection features full interviews from documentaries, such as The Murder of Emmett Till (2003), Stonewall Uprising (2010), and 1964 (2014), all of which aired on the GBH documentary series American Experience (1988–present). Also included are interviews and footage from multi-part documentary series, such as Vietnam: A Television History (1983), War and Peace in the Nuclear Age (1989), and Africans in America (1998). The To the Moon Interviews collection comprises interviews conducted for the two-hour NOVA (1974–present) documentary To the Moon (1999) about NASA’s Apollo space program.

The collection brings together GBH radio programs, audio recordings, and materials used in the production of GBH radio series and podcasts. Open Vault’s March on Washington collection includes fifteen hours of uninterrupted radio coverage of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Select episodes of the radio series Folk Heritage (1978–2003) showcasing folk music and bluegrass are available in the Folk Heritage with Dick Pleasants collection. And the exhibit Eric Jackson’s Radio Legacy highlights Jackson’s interviews with some of the most celebrated jazz musicians of our time. Additionally, the Scratch & Win and The Big Dig collections feature programming used in two GBH podcasts, The Big Dig: A Study in American Infrastructure (2023), about the notorious Boston highway project, and Scratch & Win (2025), about the changing politics of gambling in Massachusetts in the 1970s and ‘80s.

The GBH Archives special collection also features programming and materials from curated collections on specific topics, such as cooking and animal conservation. The From the Vault collection highlights an eclectic mix of episodes from classic GBH series, such as Invitation to Art (1958–?) and Dancing Disco (1978–1979), as well as clips from some of GBH’s most historic broadcasts. These include the Boston Symphony Orchestra announcement of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and the James Brown concert that aired following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

The following is a list of Open Vault and AAPB special collections featuring GBH programming:

Open Vault Special Collections

  1. 1964 Interviews
  2. The Abolitionists Interviews
  3. The Advocates
  4. Africans in America Interviews
  5. The AIDS Quarterly/The Health Quarterly
  6. Alistair Cooke Masterpiece Theatre Collection
  7. The Big Dig
  8. Boston TV News Digital Library
  9. Evolution of Jazz
  10. Folk Heritage with Dick Pleasants
  11. Freedom Riders Interviews
  12. From the Vault
  13. FRONTLINE: The First 15 Years
  14. The GBH Animals Collection
  15. The GBH Cooking Collection
  16. John Brown’s Holy War Interviews
  17. Jubilee Singers Interviews
  18. March on Washington
  19. The Murder of Emmett Till Interviews
  20. New Television Workshop
  21. The Press and the People
  22. Prospects of Mankind with Eleanor Roosevelt
  23. Reconstruction Interviews
  24. Rock and Roll
  25. Say Brother
  26. Scratch & Win
  27. Stonewall Uprising Interviews
  28. Stories of East and Southeast Asia
  29. To the Moon Interviews
  30. Victory Garden
  31. The Vietnam Collection
  32. War and Peace in the Nuclear Age
  33. Zoom

Collection Background

Since 1979, GBH Archives has preserved, cataloged, and provided access to materials produced by GBH for radio, television, home video, and digital platforms. The archive currently preserves nearly one million audio, video, film, and digital assets dating back to 1947.

Created in 2005, the GBH Archives website Open Vault provides online access to unique and historically important content produced by GBH. The initial creation of Open Vault was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and the prototype website was funded in part by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Additional support was provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. In 2018, the National Endowment for the Humanities issued a challenge grant to GBH Archives to support the preservation and digitization of 83,000 of the most at-risk items in GBH’s archival collection. Open Vault was redesigned in 2024, and in 2025, the AAPB’s GBH Archives special collection was created, bringing together all digitized, GBH-produced programming in the AAPB.