National Archives and Footnote.com Announce New Digital Holocaust
Collection
Collection Includes Holocaust-Related Photos and Records Available
Online for First Time
WASHINGTON & LINDON, Utah--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and Footnote.com
(www.footnote.com)
today announced the release of the internet's largest Interactive
Holocaust Collection. For the first time ever, over one million
Holocaust-related records - including millions of names and 26,000
photos from the National Archives - will be available online. The
collection can be viewed at: http://www.footnote.com/holocaust.
"We cannot afford to forget this period in our history," said Dr.
Michael Kurtz, Assistant Archivist of the United States and author of America
and the Return of Nazi Contraband: The Recovery of Europe's Cultural
Treasures. "Working with Footnote, these records will become more
widely accessible, and will help people now and in the future learn more
about the events and impact of the Holocaust."
Included among the National Archives records available online at
Footnote.com are:
-
Concentration camp registers and documents from Dachau, Mauthausen,
Auschwitz, and Flossenburg.
-
The "Ardelia Hall Collection" of records relating to the Nazi looting
of Jewish possessions, including looted art.
-
Captured German records including deportation and death lists from
concentration camps.
-
Nuremberg War Crimes Trial proceedings.
Access to the collection will be available for free on Footnote.com
through the month of October.
The collection also includes nearly 600 interactive personal accounts of
those who survived or perished in the Holocaust provided by the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum. The project incorporates social networking
tools that enable visitors to search for names and add photos, comments
and stories, share their insights, and create pages to highlight their
discoveries. There will be no charge to access and contribute to these
personal pages.
"These pages tell a personal story that is not included in the history
textbooks," said Russ Wilding, CEO of Footnote.com. "They give visitors
a first-hand glimpse into the tragic events of the Holocaust and allow
users to engage with content such as maps, photos, timelines and
personal accounts of victims and survivors through over 1 million
documents."
So that visitors may more easily access and engage the content,
Footnote.com has created a special Holocaust site featuring:
-
Stories of Holocaust victims and survivors.
-
Place where visitors can create their own pages to memorialize their
Holocaust ancestors.
-
Pages on the concentration camps - includes descriptions, photos,
maps, timelines and accounts from those who survived the camps.
-
Descriptions and samples of the original records from the National
Archives.
The Holocaust collection is the latest in a continuing partnership
between Footnote.com and the National Archives to scan, digitize, and
make historical records available online. The goal is to give more
people access to these and other historical records that have previously
only been available through the research room of the National Archives.
This partnership brings these priceless resources to an even greater
number of people and enables the National Archives to provide
ever-greater access to these critical holdings.
About Footnote.com
Footnote.com is a subscription website that features searchable original
documents, providing users with an unaltered view of the events, places
and people that shaped the American nation and the world. At
Footnote.com, all are invited to come share, discuss, and collaborate on
their discoveries with friends, family, and colleagues. For more
information, visit www.footnote.com.
About the U.S. National Archives
The National Archives alone is the archives of the Government of the
United States, responsible for safeguarding records of all three
branches of the Federal Government. The records held by the National
Archives belong to the public - and it is the mission of the National
Archives to ensure the public can discover, use, and learn from the
records of their government.