Create historical photo mashups with HistoryPin
September 9, 2010
HistoryPin combines maps, images, and historical inquiry to explain the changes in neighborhoods through stories and archival images. While still in beta, the site (which is a partnership between Google and an organization called We Are What We Do) has interesting potential for research in the classroom and could be used as a model for a community-action project for students.
HistoryPin invites users to upload images from the modern day in conjunction with images of the same places from yesteryear, allowing the viewer to see the changes of a locale located on an interactive map. Along with the images, users are encouraged to write a “story” behind the picture. The site touts the idea of allowing a viewer to “compare how the world looks today with how it used to look.” What makes the site even more interesting is that you can search the map by location (just enter the name of a city, or some coordinates) as well as by time period. The map goes back as far as 1840 and runs right up to the present day.
In the Classroom
Many classrooms do local history projects that involve the research of a community and the changes that have occurred over time. HistoryPin might eventually provide not only images and information related to those assignments (many of the “pins” so far are from the larger cities) but also might be a place where student projects get published in a very authentic way. If that possibility seems a bit too big to take on, a teacher could certainly use Google Maps or another mapping platform to create their own, smaller version of HistoryPin, using the site as a model.
A Video overview of HistoryPin
Related stuff
Are projects like the American Civil War Augmented Reality Project the future of education?
Take a look at the past with historical maps on Google Maps and Google Earth



