US National Archives

Life and death at sea and in the Arctic
Post Reply
User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

US National Archives

Post by Randi »

User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

Re: US National Archives

Post by Randi »

User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

Re: US National Archives

Post by Randi »

User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

Re: US National Archives

Post by Randi »


More than 500 logbooks of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey Ships (USC & GSS) are now available to view and download in the National Archives Catalog. The logbooks are found within the series Ships’ Records, 1846 – 1963, part of Record Group 23: Records of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1806 – 1981.

Information contained within these logbooks may be of interest to genealogists and historians, and should also serve as a rich source of historical weather data for climate scientists. A typical logbook contains daily entries of the ship’s position, the ship’s movements, weather conditions, and descriptions of the day’s surveying activities.



This logbook page shows hourly weather data recorded by USC&GSS Endeavor on June 12-13, 1888, at Hampton Roads, Virginia.
Image 32 from Log of USC&GSS Endeavor: 03/18/1888-10/27/1888. National Archives Identifier 247017740
User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

Re: US National Archives

Post by Randi »

National Archives Catalog — Wrapping up 2022


U.S. Coast Guard. Alaska Patrol - Bering Sea Expedition
1948, Coast Guard Cutter Northwind. 

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/205573798
User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

Re: US National Archives

Post by Randi »

2024

Happy Birthday Ellis Island!

Bending Toward Justice: Civil Rights in the Federal Courts

Celebrating Feats of Engineering

Celebrating Amazing American Women

75 Years of Alliance

Earth Day, 2024

Citizen Archivist “Outside the Box”

Mining the Catalog - Exploring records from the Exhibit Power & Light

Play Ball! America’s Pastime in the National Archives

Honoring the Military

Revolutionary War Pensions at One Year
Any of our volunteers will tell you that reading these original documents is challenging at times, even for people used to reading cursive. Handwriting was different in the early 19th century compared to what many of us learned in school. The “long s” is perhaps the most common letter that trips people up. The image below shows the word “Congress” with a long s followed by a more familiar short s.


Play Ball! America’s Pastime in the National Archives

Summer Vacation!

Keys to the Past - Typewriters in the Records of the Federal Government
In the federal government, the introduction of typewritten documents varies widely by agency and even by office, location, resources, and individual circumstances. By the late 1800s, following the introduction of commercially available typewriters, federal agencies began producing type written records.

Remembering the March on Washington

Going for the Gold
User avatar
Randi
Posts: 6942
Joined: Sat Mar 14, 2020 6:53 pm
Location: Pennsylvania

Re: US National Archives

Post by Randi »

Celebrating Constitution Day
Twenty years ago, Congress passed a law recognizing September 17 as Constitution Day. On that date in 1787, the delegates at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia put their signatures on the Constitution of the United States. Local celebrations of Constitution Day started over 100 years ago, but it didn’t become federal law until 2004.
Post Reply

Return to “The voyages, the work, the people, the places”