Sunday, April 19, 2026

How to Turn Your Old Home Videos Into a Family Archive That Lasts Forever

 Somewhere in your house or your parents house there is probably a box of old tapes.


VHS. Betamax. 8mm film. Hi8. MiniDV. Camcorder tapes from the 1980s and 1990s and early 2000s when home video recording became affordable and families documented everything.


Birthdays. Holidays. First steps. School plays. Ordinary Saturdays. The kind of footage that feels mundane when you record it and becomes irreplaceable twenty years later.


Those tapes are dying.


The Problem With Old Tape Formats


Magnetic tape degrades over time. The magnetic particles that hold the video signal gradually separate from the tape backing. The image and sound quality deteriorates. Eventually the tape becomes unplayable.


Most consumer videotape from the 1970s through the 1990s has an estimated useful life of 15 to 30 years under normal storage conditions. Many of those tapes are already at or past that limit. Every year that passes without digitizing them makes the footage on them harder or impossible to recover.


The playback equipment is also disappearing. VHS players are no longer manufactured. Stores that repair them are increasingly rare. Finding a working VCR in good condition is already becoming difficult. Within another decade it may be nearly impossible.


This is not a distant problem. This is happening right now. The window to rescue what is on those tapes is closing.


What You Can Do


You have several options depending on your budget and how much of the work you want to do yourself.


The easiest option is to use a digitization service. Companies like Legacybox, ScanMyPhotos, and iMemories will accept your old tapes by mail and return digital files. These services typically cost between $10 and $30 per tape. You box up the tapes, send them in, and get back digital files you can store on a hard drive or in the cloud. If you have a lot of tapes this adds up but it requires no technical skill and no equipment.


If you want to do it yourself and you have access to the right playback equipment you can connect an old VCR or camcorder to a computer using a video capture device, an inexpensive piece of hardware that costs between $10 and $60, and record the output as a digital file. The quality depends on the condition of the tape and the playback equipment.


For 8mm film rather than tape, which many families have from the 1950s through the 1970s, professional digitization is usually the better choice. Film requires different equipment and the results from DIY attempts are often poor.


Where to Store What You Digitize


Once you have digital files treat them the way you would treat any important digital content.


Save copies in multiple places. Your computer and at least one external hard drive. A cloud backup service. Send copies to family members who can store them independently.


For permanent archiving upload copies to the Internet Archive at archive.org. Video uploads are accepted and preserved indefinitely for free. Your family's home videos will be accessible to your descendants a hundred years from now.


Label everything before you upload. The year, the occasion, the names of the people in the video. A video file called home_video_1994_robert_jr_first_birthday.mp4 will be found and understood by future generations. A file called tape003.avi will not.


Why This Matters


Home video is something that no previous generation in history had access to. Your great-grandparents left photographs if you were lucky. Your grandparents left photographs and maybe some 8mm film. You have the ability to leave moving pictures with sound that show exactly what your life looked like.


That is an extraordinary gift to give to future generations. But only if the tapes survive long enough to be digitized.


Start with the oldest tapes first. The ones from the 1980s are more at risk than the ones from 2005. Prioritize the tapes that show people who are no longer living. A video of a grandmother who passed away ten years ago is not replaceable by anything. Rescue that one first.


The box of tapes in the closet is waiting. The footage on those tapes is already decades old. Do not let it become any older before you act.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Nellie Bly Faked Her Way Into an Asylum and Exposed Horrors That Shocked the Nation

 In 1887 a 23 year old journalist named Elizabeth Cochran walked into a New York boarding house, convinced the other residents that she was acting strangely, and got herself committed to the Women's Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell's Island in New York City.


She was not insane. She was a reporter working for Joseph Pulitzer's New York World. Her editor had given her a straightforward assignment. Get inside the asylum and report what you find.


What she found changed American mental health policy.


What She Did to Get In


Nellie Bly, the pen name she wrote under, spent days practicing a blank stare and erratic behavior in her mirror before presenting herself at the boarding house. She convinced the other residents and the doctor who examined her that she was genuinely disturbed. She was taken to court, examined by a judge, and committed.


Multiple doctors examined her before she was admitted to Blackwell's Island. None of them identified her as sane. The ease with which she moved through the system and ended up institutionalized against her will told its own story about how little it actually took to be locked away in 1887.


What She Found Inside


The conditions at Blackwell's Island were brutal. Patients were given rotten food, cold baths administered as punishment, and physical abuse from attendants. Women who entered the institution not mentally ill were driven toward genuine breakdown by the conditions they were subjected to.


Bly interviewed other patients and found women who had been committed for being too spirited, for speaking a foreign language, or simply for being poor and inconvenient to someone with the ability to have them removed.


She spent ten days inside before her editor arranged her release. She then wrote a series of articles for the World that were collected into a book called Ten Days in a Mad-House.


The public reaction was immediate and significant. A grand jury investigation was launched. The Department of Public Charities and Corrections increased its budget for the care of the insane by over a million dollars. Conditions at Blackwell's Island and other similar institutions were reviewed and reformed.


Nellie Bly's reporting did not fix the entire American mental health system. Problems persisted for decades. But her willingness to put herself inside the story and report what she experienced firsthand produced results that no amount of outside criticism had achieved.


She was 23 years old.


She went on to circle the globe in 72 days, beating the record set by the fictional Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne's novel. She spent her career doing things women were told they could not do and reporting stories people in power preferred to keep quiet.


Her name belongs in the history of American journalism much more prominently than it currently occupies.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

George Washington's Dentures Were Made From Enslaved People's Teeth and History Sanitized That

 The story of George Washington's wooden teeth is one of the most enduring myths in American history.


It is not true. Washington's dentures were not made of wood.


The truth is more complicated and considerably more disturbing.


Washington's dentures were made from a combination of materials including ivory from hippopotamus and elephant tusks, human teeth from other sources, and springs and wire hardware. He suffered from severe dental problems his entire adult life and by the time he became president he had only one natural tooth remaining.


Where Some of Those Human Teeth Came From


Records from Mount Vernon, Washington's plantation, document payments made for teeth. Historians have examined these records carefully.


Among those payments are entries that correspond to teeth purchased from enslaved people at Mount Vernon. The enslaved people living on the plantation had their teeth extracted and those teeth were incorporated into Washington's dentures.


This practice was not unique to Washington. The buying and selling of teeth from poor and enslaved people for wealthy clients who needed dental work was documented across Europe and America in the 18th century. Dentists referred to these as live teeth to distinguish them from teeth taken from corpses and they were considered of higher quality for denture making.


For the people whose teeth were taken the experience was painful and permanent. They lost teeth that could not be replaced. Whether those who were enslaved had any meaningful ability to refuse is a question the historical record does not fully answer but the power dynamic of slavery makes the answer fairly clear.


Why the Wooden Teeth Story Persists


The wooden teeth myth is more comfortable than the truth. It turns a medical reality of 18th century dentistry into a quirky and harmless anecdote about a founding father.


The actual story connects one of America's most celebrated historical figures directly to one of the most brutal realities of the world he lived in. It is harder to tell. It is harder to fit into the version of founding era history that most Americans prefer.


But the historical record is what it is. The records exist. The payments are documented. Historians have studied them and written about them.


Washington was a complex figure who held views about slavery that shifted across his lifetime and who freed the enslaved people he personally owned in his will. None of that erases the reality of what it meant to live as an enslaved person at Mount Vernon.


Getting the history right means telling the full story, not just the comfortable parts.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.