ibiblio and our director, Paul Jones, have gotten a lot of media attention for our digital preservation efforts (sometimes wrongly called hoarding). Seems we have the World’s oldest World Wide Web page, a version that Tim Berners-Lee used for his demonstration at Hypertext 91 in San Antonio, TX.
We’ve included links to many versions of the story below. Jones’ own version is on his Real Paul Jones blog.
But the most amusing recognition has come from the University of North Carolina entry at the Forbes America’s Top Colleges site. There in the Profile section, we read:
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is home to one of the oldest preserved websites, stored on an antique computer maintained by Professor Paul Jones, gifted to him by one of the original Swedish architects of the World Wide Web. Established in 1789, UNC Chapel Hill is one of the three oldest universities in the country, the second largest university in the state, and one of the original eight Public Ivy schools. UNC Chapel Hill students, alumni and athletic teams are known collectively as the Tar Heels, and have garnered more than 40 NCAA championship titles in six different sports (women’s lacrosse won this year). The school mascot is the Ram.
While we know that Tim Berners-Lee is British and was working in Switzerland at CERN with no particular Swedish connection and we know that “gifted” should not be a verb and we know that the page has been online continuously since 1993 (at least), we’re delighted to be seen as having something that UNC and Forbes can be proud of.
Enjoy the articles and the World’s oldest World Wide Web page.
- The First Web Page, Amazingly, is Lost (NPR Science May 22, 2013)
- 1991 Web Page found, Password lost (first-website.web.cern.ch May 23, 2013
- Search is on for lost first draft of original web page (C-net May 23, 2013)
- Web Page Demonstrated at Hypertext 91 Surfaces (First Website Blog. My 23, 2013) [image of my tweet to CERN]
- BBC Tech News (May 24, 2013) Online appeal unearths historic web page
- News & Observer (May 24, 2013) “Hunt for world’s oldest WWW page leads to UNC Chapel Hill” [Linked content no longer available]
- VERY EARLY WEB PAGE UNEARTHED AFTER CERN’S PLEA FOR ONLINE RELICS (Fast Company. May 24, 2013) [appropriately in all caps]
- Online appeal helps recover historic webpage (Times of India, May 25,2013) [note link to my sports career] [Linked content no longer availabe]
- Historic web page recovered by online appeal (Zee News India. May 25, 2013)
- The search for the first web page (Rappler – Manilla, Philippines. May 27, 2013)
- Historic web page recovered through online plea (ZeeNews – India. May 28, 2013)
- UNC Professor hold a piece of Internet History (The Daily Tar Heel. May 30, 2013)
- World: We Have Lost the First Webpage. Professor: Oh, I Have a Copy of It Right Here. (Atlantic Tech. May 30, 2013)
- The first Web page is lost – a copy is found on Paul Jones’ NeXT Cube – available on the Web all along (UNC School of Information & Library Science. June 3, 2013)
- Search For 1st Web Page Takes Detour Into NC (Associated Press. June 11, 2013. republished worldwide) [Linked content no longer available]
- Hunt For The First Web Page Leads To UNC-Chapel Hill (WUNC. June 12, 2013)
- Meet the Internet pioneer who lays claim to the world’s first webpage (Upstart. June 13, 2013)
Sources: