OCR stands for Optical Character Recognition. OCR is a software tool that can extract print text from some documents.
When will OCR work well?
OCR does not work on handwriting. It only works for printed or typed text, meaning text created by a typewriter, printing press, or other mechanical means. OCR will do best on consistent and clear images of modern typefaces.
Do I still need to review pages started with OCR?
Yes! OCR is imperfect. It may not work well for some or all parts of a typed page, but it can be a great starting point. If you start a page with OCR, you should read the text closely before submitting. If you are reviewing a OCR-ed page, you also still need to review.
We always want to use volunteer time effectively. When the Library of Congress digitizes a large group of printed pages, it will usually OCR them. The materials in By the People campaigns are not good candidates for applying OCR at scale, either because they are handwritten, a mixed collection of handwritten and print materials, or printed on paper or in a typeface that does not produce accurate OCR results. However, OCR can still be a useful starting point for some typed pages. Use it if it if you like it or skip it if you don’t!
You can help by transcribing a new page, adding tags to this page, or coming back later to review this page's transcription.
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Clicking "Transcribe with OCR" will remove all existing transcription text and replace it with automatically generated text. We recommend saving existing text in a separate document if you may want to revisit it.
Campaign Tips
Transcribing Frederick Douglass
Discover the life of Frederick Douglass in his letters.
The campaign is primarily letters written by others to Douglass that document the personal and public. Some drafts and retained copies of outgoing correspondence are also included, as well as letters of his second wife Helen Pitts Douglass.
These pages come from the General Correspondence series of the Frederick Douglass Papers, as well as the Addition I and Miscellany series.
Douglass Day
This campaign launched in celebration of Douglass Day 2024!
Our collaborators at the Center for Black Digital Research at Penn State have revived Douglass Day as a day of service to Black digital history. Learn more at douglassday.org.
Image filters can help!
This campaign contains some difficult-to-read pages. Our viewer filters may help you read light, dark, or blurry pages by allowing you to adjust the brightness and contrast.
Access the filters by clicking on the icon at the top of the image viewer (located between "flip horizontally" and "toggle full page").
The filters build upon each other, so you can apply more than one at a time.
Historical handwriting
Many documents in this campaignuse Spencerian script, a handwriting used from about 1850 to 1925. It was standard in the U.S. prior to widespread adoption of typewriters.