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Can you read cursive? The National Archives wants your help
Fox 5 ^ | 1/14/25

Posted on 01/14/2025 2:52:10 AM PST by EBH

If you have expertise in reading cursive, then there’s an opportunity that might peak your interest.

The National Archives is looking for someone who can transcribe (or classify) more than 200 years’ worth of U.S. documents.

Which historical documents must be transcribed? A team within the federal agency is looking for volunteers to read and transcribe records from Revolutionary War pension records that include applications and other records related to claims for pensions and bounty land warrants. Other historical materials include immigration documents from the 1890s and Japanese evacuation records.

What they're saying: Suzanne Isaacs, a community manager with the National Archives Catalog in Washington, D.C., tells USA Today in an interview that volunteers will help the agency transcribe or tag records in their catalog. They can simply pick a record that hasn’t been worked on, and it only requires a half hour a day or week to do it.

The National Archives is collaborating with the National Parks Service ahead of the nation's 250th birthday for a project, and they are reaching out to volunteers for assistance transcribing these documents.

How can I apply? What you can do: People interested in participating can sign up online at the National Archives website. There is no application to fill out, and all you have to do is register for a free user account in order to contribute to the National Archives Catalog, by clicking on the Log in / Sign Up button.

(Excerpt) Read more at fox5dc.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: 250thbirthday; archives; commoncore; cursive; cursivefoiledagain; epigraphyandlanguage; godsgravesglyphs; history
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To: EBH

At the very least, the ‘volunteers’ should be offered some kind of compensation.


101 posted on 01/14/2025 11:06:15 AM PST by Tired of Taxes
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To: mad_as_he$$

Quite correct.


102 posted on 01/14/2025 11:19:48 AM PST by sauropod ("You didn't take a country. You only won a football game!" - Dan Dakich Ne supra crepidam)
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To: newfreep

Photo....

I refuse to do cursive. My papa said if I went around doing it I wouldn’t be able to sit down for a long time.

The Linguistic Society of America said “Rachel Jeantel is multilingual and a native speaker of Haitian Creole, Spanish, and African American English”.


103 posted on 01/14/2025 12:09:52 PM PST by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: Red Badger

So that’s how that stuff gets posted around here... ;^)


104 posted on 01/14/2025 12:51:54 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: AnAmericanMother

He actually wasn’t very old at that point. He had joined the 2nd Cavalry and had had his horse roll over on him. As a lawyer, he just transferred to the Judge Advocate Corp and took the place of one who’d been arrested for keyhole peeping on girls. He was chosen for the investigation because he’d just gotten the death penalty for the Southern Conspirators in the Indianapolis trial about the Chicago prison camp breakout plans.

Handwriting differs so greatly even among written pieces by the same author. 5th great grandfather wrote in unintelligible squiggles on the back of envelopes but, even at 78 years of age, his handwriting was exquisite when writing in his daughter’s manuscript book. Know the feeling.

So those were Civil War letters you were reading. What sort of stories were they telling? Home dreaming, I imagine. Very exciting that you have those.


105 posted on 01/14/2025 12:53:17 PM PST by mairdie
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To: dagunk

😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣..................


106 posted on 01/14/2025 1:01:49 PM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: EBH

Great! It will be my big chance to rewrite that Declaration of something or other and tell you what TommyJeff really meant. The part about transgender rights, for example...


107 posted on 01/14/2025 1:10:06 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: mairdie

Had two g-g grandfathers in the CSA - both wrote letters home, very chatty about the war and the actions they were involved in. But talking about home as well. “You know how I didn’t used to like greens . . . I sure could relish a mess of them now!”


108 posted on 01/14/2025 3:50:34 PM PST by AnAmericanMother (Ecce Crucem Domini, fugite partes adversae. Vicit Leo de Tribu Iuda, Radix David, Alleluia!)
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To: EBH

Sounds like fun.


109 posted on 01/14/2025 4:33:59 PM PST by madison10
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To: AnAmericanMother

I had two CSA great grandfathers - one was a captain in the 22nd Texas Cavalry. The other was also in the cavalry and fought against his father and brothers, who were on the other side. His youngest child was named Lee, after his general. Had horses shot out from under him but got thru the war, only to die in 1865, as did his wife. His children were raised by his wife’s brothers.

On the other side, had a great grandfather, Burnett, and a g2 grandfather, Burnett’s father-in-law, in the Union army, and the same on another branch.

That’s why I get so upset every time they try to rename a Southern fort or take down a military statue.


110 posted on 01/14/2025 4:38:53 PM PST by mairdie
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To: newfreep
"Rachel Jeantel will not interview for a cursive writing job..."

Not yet!


111 posted on 01/15/2025 2:22:39 AM PST by clearcarbon (Fraudulent elections have consequences.)
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To: LukeL

I’m guessing the difficult part is not that it all is in cursive writing per se but in the choices of words and phrasings and sentence structures.


112 posted on 01/15/2025 2:27:48 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: AnAmericanMother; mairdie; SunkenCiv

Yes the two documents in comment #57 are “rather archaic for 1865” especially as the first was written in 1773 and the second in 1775, That “medial s” (my Chromebook just “corrected” the word “medial” to “medical” and I had to go back and correct the “correction”) which is much like the modern “s” script was in fact written by a young man to his fiance in 1773. That love letter apparently uses an abbreviation for 1773, and actually reads “30th/73-———” (unless it was 20th?). The second document clearly states “1775”.

I sure hope anyone trying to type translations of these old documents does NOT have a “self correcting machine”, or if they do they very carefully proofread what they have translated for modern “corrections.” They wouldn’t even have to be radical leftists trying to twist history, merely sloppy proofreaders with self correcting print functions.


113 posted on 01/15/2025 5:21:12 AM PST by gleeaikin (in Question authority as you provide links )
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To: gleeaikin

Just my confusion - two different sets of letters, one linked and not shown - which I conflated.


114 posted on 01/15/2025 7:18:34 AM PST by AnAmericanMother (Ecce Crucem Domini, fugite partes adversae. Vicit Leo de Tribu Iuda, Radix David, Alleluia!)
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To: Preachin'

My wife’s mother used to write her kid’s Christmas list in shorthand and place them on the refrigerator.


I do the same thing with my wife’s Christmas list, except I write in Russian cursive. (The only real benefit I got from college Russian classes).


115 posted on 01/15/2025 8:49:13 AM PST by hanamizu ( )
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