Reading cursive is a superpower,” said Suzanne Isaacs, a community manager with the National Archives Catalog in Washington, ...
Anyone with an internet connection can volunteer to transcribe historical documents and help make the archives' digital catalog more accessible ...
A lot of old records at the National Archives are written in longhand, but fewer people can read cursive. The institution is ...
Reading cursive is a superpower,” Suzanne Isaacs, a community manager with the National Archives Catalog in Washington, DC, ...
To date, more than 4,000 Revolutionary War Pension Project volunteers have typed up the content of over 80,000 pages of ...
If you can read cursive, the National Archives would like a word. Or a few million. More than 200 years worth of U.S. documents need transcribing (or at least classifying) and the vast majority ...
If you’re one of the dwindling number who can decipher this type of writing, the National Archives is hoping you have some ...
The National Archives needs help from people with a special set of skills–reading cursive. The archival bureau is seeking volunteer citizen archivists to help them classify and/or transcribe ...
If you are talented at reading cursive handwriting, the National Archives could really use your help with transcribing and ...
Get a read on this. The National Archives is seeking volunteers who can read cursive to help transcribe more than 300 million digitized objects in its catalog, saying the skill is a “superpower.” ...