The official blog of footnote

Upcoming 2007 Footnote Member Meetings

June 29th, 2007 | Written by Elizabeth

The following is a list of upcoming Footnote Member Meetings we will be holding the remainder of 2007.

    Footnote members who live in these areas or who will be attending any of these conferences, are welcome to attend. We will discuss future plans, solicit member opinions and give out door prizes. Anyone who is interested may attend. Seating will be limited. If interested please contact Elizabeth.

Let’s talk about Footnote

June 14th, 2007 | Written by Blake Scarbrough

Brad Baldwin of Rocky Mountain Voices sat down with our CEO, Russ Wilding, to talk about Footnote.

 

This second video is an interview by Dick Eastman, EOGN, with Beau Sharbrough, our Senior Director of Content Aquisition, about content on Footnote at the.

 

Footnote.com Members Meeting at the 2007 ALA Annual Conference

June 12th, 2007 | Written by Elizabeth

We will be holding a meeting of Footnote.com members at the 2007 ALA Annual Conference in Washington D.C. on Saturday, June 23, 2007 at 2pm. The meeting will be held at The National Archives building in downtown Washington D.C. Footnote members who live in the Washington D.C. area or who will be attending the 2007 ALA Annual Conference, are welcome to attend. We will discuss future plans, solicit member opinions and give out door prizes. Anyone who is interested may attend. Seating will be limited. If interested please contact Elizabeth.

Footnote gets some ink

June 11th, 2007 | Written by Chris Willis

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Sharron Tate Moody, a reporter and former self-professed skeptic of Footnote.com, took another look at the site this weekend and talks about it in her Tampa Tribune column:

At that time (February 2007), users could subscribe to the site for $9.99 a month or $99 a year. Still skeptical, I wasn’t willing to pay for a year.

I was wrong.

Not only is Footnote.com surviving, it’s thriving. And when was the last time something got better - and cheaper - at the same time? The number of records online has grown consistently and the annual fee is down to $59. Those who paid $99 have received extensions.

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Also, Utah-based connect magazine has a short piece in their June issue, which is not yet online:

Footnote.com is a history buff’s dream. The site has text-based search options and built-in social functionality allowing users to share comments and tag any document with notes.

Also check out their connectcast to listen into their discussion about Footnote.

View original Lincoln document discovered at the National Archives

June 8th, 2007 | Written by Chris Willis

The National Archives unveiled a handwritten note by Abraham Lincoln written on 7 July 1863 telling his generals to bring about “the litteral(sic) or substantial destruction of (Robert E.) Lee’s army” after the battle of Gettysburg. A week after Lincoln’s note, the Confederate army slipped across the Potomac River into Virginia, and the war continued for two more years. This document underscores one of the great missed opportunities for an early end to the Civil War.

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10 million original documents and growing daily

June 7th, 2007 | Written by Blake Scarbrough

There was a time not long ago when researching a Revolutionary War soldier or battle meant spending lots of money and time sifting through dusty archives in hopes that your document could be found.

Today, we’re happy to announce that we’re much closer to making such an experience a thing of the, uh, past.

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When Footnote launched the site had nearly 200,000 images from the American Revolution. A respectable collection but with room to grow.

Five months later we have millions of original War documents from muster rolls, officer pay, supply records, service records, pensions and Continental Congress Papers - more are being added daily.

For us, it would have been easier and cheaper to have just created simple indexes to these images. But it wouldn’t have been fun.

Being able to examine an original document first-hand can be a powerful experience. Click on a document and a richer story soon unfolds before you. Each document, with its unique handwriting, marginalia and weathered creases, tells more than the words say.

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On Footnote, each document can also show you other interested Members or be attached to Story Pages.

We believe that being able to access the actual image is important not only for serious researchers but also for those whose interest in history is just awakening.

But making it easy to search and view any of these 10 million images on Footnote takes some effort.

To start, the documents need to be findable. Using our Annotation tool found in the Viewer, we and our Members have added 3.5 million annotations. Each annotation identifies that person, place, date or transcribed text down to the pixel and makes hard to decipher handwriting a breeze to read.

The Annotation tool also lets anyone identify anything of interest in images that they upload to Footnote. Each annotation then becomes findable within seconds.

As of today, storing just these images requires more 5.4 terabytes of hard drive space - an amount equal to about what two public libraries might hold. But unlike a library, the vast majority of documents on Footnote are not available online anywhere else.

At Footnote we make the image the center of the history experience because this is where it all started. This is the evidence, the story. This where your research can begin, end or take you places you never expected.

Here are few unexpected stories that we have come across:

With our unique partnership with the National Archives you can expect to see many as 2 million new historical document added each month.

But those documents will never be able to tell the complete story. There are millions of other stories and missing pieces sitting in attics, photo albums and old shoe boxes across the country.

If you have a story to share, we encourage you to start a Free Story page.

Together we can discover a more complete history.