The EServer was founded in 1990, when a group of graduate students set up their office computer in "Trailer H" on the
Carnegie Mellon University campus network to permit them to collaborate with one another. In 1991, with the addition of more disk space, it became an Internet network server designed to provide public access (via
FTP,
telnet and
Gopher to literary research, criticism, novels, and writings from various humanities disciplines. The site, originally called the English Server, was dedicated to publishing works in the arts and humanities free of charge to Internet readers. It was developed to assist leisure reading in particular, following a study by Geoffrey Sauer (the site's director) into the rapid and significant increase of books in the United States post-1979 and a consequent decrease in leisure readings among young Americans. By 1992 it was an extremely popular
Gopher and
FTP site, and by 1993 had a significant
World Wide Web presence. Its original Internet domain name was "english-server.hss.cmu.edu", which later became "english-www.hss.cmu.edu", then "english.hss.cmu.edu", then "eng.hss.cmu.edu". In the years since, the name was shortened to "eserver.org", and it was usually referred to as "EServer." The site is no longer published and available. ==Ideals==