The National Archives is brimming with historical documents written in cursive, including some that date back more than 200 ...
Get a read on this. The National Archives is seeking volunteers who can read cursive to help transcribe more than 300 million ...
The National Archives is looking for volunteers to transcribe more than 200 years worth of documents. You can help, even if you can't read cursive.
If you can read cursive, the National Archives would like a word. Or a few million. More than 200 years worth of U.S.
I think it’s because signatures are supposed to be in cursive ... a way of writing that was more like us — a blur of activity, everything connected, an oddly-modular alphabet that was supposed ...
With the ability to read and write cursive becoming more rare, the National Archives is looking for some important volunteers.
Seeing my father’s handwriting puts me in contact with the man he was at each stage of his life.” – John Carter Cash By the ...
But is there a benefit to hours spent painstakingly copying the joined alphabet? Teaching children ... of classroom time spent on traditional cursive writing, the benefits, some argue, may not ...
The National Archives uses Citizen Archivists who volunteer to help transcribe such materials. The ability to read cursive handwriting is helpful but not essential. “We create missions where we ask ...