Video: Ancestry.com Launches World Archives Project to Help Digitally Preserve Millions of Historical Records Worldwide
The #1 Family History Web Site Enables People Everywhere to Be a Part of Preserving History
To view the Multimedia News Release, go to: http://www.prnewswire.com/mnr/ancestry/37608/
The World Archives Project allows individuals to transcribe historical documents at their convenience, from their home computer. Using a free transcription program, contributors select from the many historical record collections that Ancestry.com has digitized — from naturalization records to ship manifests to marriage records, and type in the information from the scanned image. All of the online indexes that are transcribed as part of the World Archives Project are easily searchable and available for free on Ancestry.com.
“Because digitizing historical records and making them available online is both costly and time consuming, many governments and libraries don’t have the budget to do so,” said
Since the project’s beta launch in
“Family history is about sharing,” says
Ancestry.com estimates that it will be able to digitize and index 20 percent more historical content in 2009 to put on its site as a result of the World Archives Project. Many of these transcription projects are small collections that would likely never be digitized were it not through this project and the dedication of these unsung heroes.
There are millions of historical records from around the world that are available to index through the Ancestry.com World Archives Project. Some of the current collections include:
- Naturalization Index Cards – Index cards that can easily lead researchers to the documents created when their ancestors became U.S. citizens.
- Slave Manifests Filed at
New Orleans ,Louisiana , 1807-1860 – These records document the transporting of more than 30,000 slaves to the port ofNew Orleans from other stateside ports as a result of the growing tobacco industry in the southern states. England Newspaper Index Cards – Compiled inEngland between the 1880s to 1965, these index cards contain information on individuals taken from next of kin advertisements, will notices, unclaimed estates and missing persons listings found in several national and overseas newspapers.
For more information about the World Archives Project and how to play an active role in preserving history by becoming a contributor, visit http://www.ancestry.com/worldarchivesproject.
About Ancestry.com and The Generations Network
The Generations Network, Inc., through its flagship Ancestry.com property, is the world’s leading resource for online family history. Ancestry.com has local websites in nine countries and has digitized and put online over 7 billion names and 27,000 historical records collections over the past ten years. Since
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SOURCE Ancestry.com
