What was it like to be there when Nixon was resigning? What about the Apollo 8 mission? During the Revolutionary War? We can't go back and experience these events ourselves, but we can relive them through the eyewitness accounts of others. NARA has compiled an exhibit showing off some of the documents that contain these accounts.
A Footnote blog post reminded me of the NARA document of the day which led me to the Eyewitness Accounts.
NARA Document of the Day
NARA Eyewitness Accounts
Footnote Blog
Thursday, July 19, 2007
Eyewitness Accounts from NARA
Posted by Mike Clement at 9:40 AM 0 comments
Labels: bloggers, footnote blog, NARA
Monday, July 16, 2007
Footnote on Download Squad... people love their UFOs
So the latest press release has continued to generate a lot of interest, at least in more "mainstream" places. Events like the partnership with FamilySearch generated interest among family historians/genealogists but nothing that reached a wide audience.
I mentioned last week that the press release got picked up by Forbes but later on Friday, Download Squad (a well known blog for those of you not familiar) posted about Footnote's release on Project Blue Book.
Footnote's Project Blue Book lets you read government reports, as well as questionnaires filled out by those who say they spotted a UFO. With nearly 130,000 images to wade through, good luck uncovering evidence of a massive government conspiracy in your free time.Footnote publishes government UFO data on DownloadSquad.com
Posted by Mike Clement at 9:55 AM 0 comments
Labels: bloggers, free on footnote, press release, Project Blue Book
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Footnote on Forbes
Well, it's mostly just a reprint of the press release, but getting picked up by Forbes is a big deal :)
Footnote.com Exposes Government UFO Records
Image featured to the right
Posted by Mike Clement at 4:30 PM 0 comments
Labels: News, press release, Project Blue Book
Friday, July 6, 2007
Spotlights - Another New Feature!
Recently a bunch of new features were added to the site, one of which is Spotlights. You can think of a spotlight as a cross between a story page and a comment. Here is one of the spotlights that I created about the Halifax Gazette.
Why would you want to add one yourself?
Well, there is a lot of content buried on the Footnote website that is just waiting to be discovered and shared. Spotlights are your opportunity to shine a light on those tidbits for others to see. Imagine that you are reading through the Halifax Gazette and you see an interesting article. You could send a link to the image to your friends in an email but then you're only sharing it with a few people. You could create a story page. But a story page seems like overkill for a quick comment, right? This is the perfect time for you to create a spotlight. This way instead of just sharing with your email contacts, you can easily share it with all your fellow Footnote members.
Check out what others have spotlighted and shine some light on your favorite Footnote content by creating some Spotlights.
Posted by Mike Clement at 12:25 AM 0 comments
Labels: features
Thursday, July 5, 2007
Footnote is a Four Star Site
Footnote was recently reviewed by About.com's Kimberly Powell.
Here is an excerpt:
Footnote.com has the framework in place to be one of the most flexible and user-friendly sites on the Web for American genealogists. Once they add more records (and there are many in the works), upgrade the search feature, and do some tweaking, it has the potential to be a 5 star site.Footnote.com gets four stars from About.com
Posted by Mike Clement at 10:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: site review
Friday, June 29, 2007
"Official" Launch and Free Documents
Footnote.com announced it's "official" launch yesterday. While the site has been live since January and over 12.5 million images/documents are now available on the site, yesterday was the "hard" launch. (January would have been referred to as the "soft" launch). As far as I understand it, the difference is more a marketing difference than anything else.
So, to me, the most significant part of the release is the following:
As part of the launch, Footnote.com is making a significant portion of their millions of original Revolutionary War documents available for free from today until the end of July [my emphasis]. Included in these records are secret journals, intercepted letters from the British military, and letters written by George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and other founding fathers. Click here (http://www.footnote.com/revolutionary-war.php) to see samples of these Revolutionary War documents.This promotion doesn't include the so-called "big" titles like the Revolutionary War Pensions or War Rolls, but includes:
- Records from the Constitutional Convention of 1787
- Miscellaneous Papers of the Continental Congress
- Papers of the Continental Congress
Full Press Release:
Footnote.com Announces Official Launch of the Company and Reveals First-Hand Accounts of the Birth of America
Posted by Mike Clement at 9:17 AM 2 comments
Labels: Famous Figures, free on footnote, press release, Revolutionary War
Monday, June 25, 2007
US Constitution and Amendments on Footnote.com
Declaration of Independence? Check. Gettysburg Address? Check. Constitution of the United States? Uhhh, no?
Until late last week, the Constitution was not available on Footnote.com in the American Milestones collection. I'm happy to share that the Constitution, the Bill of Rights (previously available) and all the amendments are now available on Footnote. The American Milestones are meant to be a "living" collection of documents, meaning that Footnote will continue to add relevant and important documents. Are there any milestone documents that you feel are missing?
Related Footnote content: Ratified Amendments
Posted by Mike Clement at 11:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: American Milestone Documents
Thursday, June 21, 2007
CRL + Footnote = More Awesome Documents
Footnote announced a partnership with the Center for Research Libraries (CRL) which means more content will be coming to the Footnote site soon. The blurb from the press release says the following about CRL:
Founded in 1949 by 10 major U.S. research universities, CRL is a nonprofit organization that supports advanced research and teaching in the humanities, sciences, and social sciences by ensuring the availability of diverse knowledge resources vital to those activities. In the years since its inception, CRL membership has grown to 233 North American universities, colleges, and independent research libraries. It is based in Chicago and governed by a Board of Directors drawn entirely from the higher education and libraries community.From the press release:
This new partnership will result in the digitization and indexing of historical documents including U.S. ethnic newspapers, military records, and other materials that provide a unique perspective on American history. “This partnership will enable us to provide wider access to rare American materials,” said Bernard Reilly, President of CRL.I think the key phrase in there is "wider access to rare American materials". While wider access to "common" historical documents is fun (for example the American Milestones on Footnote), it is much cooler to enable wider access to those documents that have been sitting in boxes on shelves in warehouses similar to the one at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark. In these rare documents are "real" history, the stuff that fills in the details left missing by Jr. High Social Studies class.
Press Release
Center for Research Libraries (CRL)
Posted by Mike Clement at 11:37 PM 2 comments
Labels: News, partnership
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
City Directories on Footnote
I found this blog post on Creative Gene about City Directories called What's in a City Directory? At Footnote we have several early 20th and late 19th century city directories from the northeastern United States.
So what is in a city directory and why should you look into them? To the left is a thumbnail of one on the Footnote site. I've transcribed some of the gems from this page:
Bridgham Lorenzo, farmer, house near Young's corner
Briggs B. Franklin (E. F. Packard & Co.), Railroad sq., cor. Court, house Academy, opp. High School
Brooks Wallace W., shoemaker, bds. Mrs. R. Brooks', Main
Brown Orrin, card grinder Barker mill, h. 13 Second
So breaking it down we have names, occupations, company names, and addresses, all good stuff. In addition to the specific information about individuals (which is interesting to family historians), it gives a snapshot in location and time, and more importantly does so on an annual basis instead of every 10 years like a census. This is, of course, also valuable to all Family Historians, regardless of whether your ancestor is in the city directory.
On Footnote we don't have that many towns where we have multiple years yet. One example where we do is Bangor, Maine where we have 1871 and 1882. Looking at the first pages of each, we find that Peter Ackerman is still a fresco painter 11 years later but has moved. We see that the Adams Brothers are still running a hat manufacturing business and are still located at 5 Kenduskeag bridge.
What would be really interesting if somebody out there was a descendant of the Adams Brothers and had a photograph of the brothers at their factory or Peter Ackerman and one of his frescos. They could upload that image and build a story page tying their photo to the city directory of Bangor. Building those sorts of connections within original documents is what Footnote is all about. As we like to say at Footnote, there are hundreds, even thousands of stories here to be discovered and told.
Links referenced in this post:
What's in a City Directory? - Creative Gene
City Directories on Footnote.com
City Directories Footnote Catalog Description
Posted by Mike Clement at 6:06 AM 1 comments
Labels: City Directories, features
Monday, June 11, 2007
Footnote Press in The Tampa Tribune
Footnote.com was featured in an article in The Tampa Tribune over the weekend. It's a good overview of the site and includes a personal example of how the site helped the author, Sharon Tate Moody, to find information on her ancestors.
One of the exciting parts of press like this is that even if those that read this article don't subscribe, hopefully many will come to the site, become members and share their own stories, adding to the value for all that visit the site.The files often are the only surviving records of a soldier's birth date. I have already been able to scratch off one of the tasks on my to-do list - something that would have required a trip to a facility that houses National Archives microfilm series M804.
Instead, sitting right here at my computer, I learned that John Blankenship of Virginia "was born in the county of Lunenburg in the state of Virginia I suppose in the year of 1760. I have no record of my age but know that I was about 20 years old when I first entered the service of the United States." Elsewhere in this affidavit, created as part of a pension claim, Blankenship reveals that his father's name also was John Blankenship. After the war, he returned to Lunenburg County, but three or four years later moved to Pittsylvania County, Va.
Growing Web Site Gets Better - And Cheaper
Posted by Mike Clement at 9:06 AM 0 comments
Labels: News
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Image of the Day: June 9th
One of the "core fields' that we try to get with every document or series of documents is a date. As a result most of our documents have a date or date range associated with them. Those that don't have that information when we push to the site can be annotated by you!
Here is the "image of the day" for June 9th...
Project Blue Book - UFO Investigations » 1964 » June » Westfield, Wisconsin
Letters like this are quite common in the Project Blue Book documents. Oft times a person who saw some sort of phenomenon in the sky would write to a news outlet, like the Chicago Tribune in this document, where they would write back and refer them to the Air Force or other government agency.
This is a "free image" so the links above take you directly to the image viewer.
Posted by Mike Clement at 9:17 AM 0 comments
Labels: image of the day, Project Blue Book
Friday, June 8, 2007
Image of the Day: June 8th
One of the "core fields' that we try to get with every document or series of documents is a date. As a result most of our documents have a date or date range associated with them. Those that don't have that information when we push to the site can be annotated by you!
Given that this information on the site, I can pull an image up using today's date, June 8th, to see what happened "today in history".
So, here is the first "image of the day"...
Eisenhower Photos - 1955 - White House Press Conference
This is a "premium image" so if you are not a subscriber, you won't be able to see the image in the viewer, but the link will take you to a page with a thumbnail.
I'm probably not going to be able to do this every day, but thought it would be fun to do it occasionally. Enjoy!
Posted by Mike Clement at 11:39 AM 2 comments
Labels: Famous Figures, image of the day