Click on the broken link graphic and fill in the form
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'Genealogists for Families' project
Genealogists worldwide, plus family and friends, are working as a team to help families and small businesses in low income areas. Our motto is, 'We care about families (past, present and future).'
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A volunteer project to extract data from digital images and make them available through FamilySearch.
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Projects being administered by participating genealogical and historical societies.
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Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild
Volunteers have transcribed more than 5,000 passenger lists since 1998.
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Free, user-contribed data from several states.
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National Archives Transcription Pilot Project
A pilot project for volunteers to transcribe historical documents digitized from the U.S. National Archives collections.
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Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness Wiki
This wiki is an effort to reconstruct and revive the Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness site that was created by Bridgett Schneider and which became dormant with her death in the fall of 2011. Hopefully, the previous volunteers will find the site and supply contact information so that the wiki volunteer pages can be as robust as they once were.
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Saving Ours is a grass root group dedicated to preserving our past by ensuring our records are digitized and made free to the general public. Our current focus is preserving our small town archived newspapers.
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The 1940 United States Census Indexing Project
FREE
Upon its release, the 1940 U.S. Census Community Project, a joint initiative between Archives.com, FamilySearch, findmypast.com, and other leading genealogy organizations, will coordinate efforts to provide quick access to these digital images and immediately start indexing these records to make them searchable online with free and open access.
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U.S. National Archives and Records Administration - Citizen Archivist Dashboard
Transcribe historical documents, contribute articles, upload your own images.
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The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has gathered millions of historical documents containing details about survivors and victims of the Holocaust and Nazi persecution during World War II. In partnership with Ancestry.com the two organizations have created the World Memory Project to allow the public to help make the records from the Museum searchable by name online for free. Getting started is as simple as downloading a free software program and then typing details from a record image into a database that will then become searchable online.











