You could spend years poking around the National Archives. It's an exciting place to visit on-line--or maybe it's just fun for retired librarians.
Saturday, March 22, 2025
Visiting the National Archives on-line
I stopped at the National Archives site today just because I looked at one of the pdf records from the JFK files. But from there I got lost in all the interesting stuff in the Archives, and stopped to look at the military records, something I'd done about 15 years ago when I was doing genealogy. I'm not going to register (well, I did for just one newsletter) to be a citizen volunteer or get a login so I can answer other's questions, but it was interesting to read through "how can I find out about my uncle's WWII service" or something like that. I clicked on it because I had made similar inquiries years ago. And when someone reported she couldn't get a form to work, some helpful non-employee responded it was probably Trump's Doge program. Yikes, get real. Government forms fail all the time, and even years ago it might take weeks to get a reply--but when you do, those government archivists really know their stuff. Then I looked around at the educational programs for schools. I saw a lot of material on women and minorities just in case some media source has told you falsely that's all been scrubbed. If the writer has insulted or demeaned a group intentionally, I suppose it could have been removed.
You could spend years poking around the National Archives. It's an exciting place to visit on-line--or maybe it's just fun for retired librarians.
You could spend years poking around the National Archives. It's an exciting place to visit on-line--or maybe it's just fun for retired librarians.
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