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Transcribing Walt Whitman
Walt Whitman is best known as a path-breaking poet and author of Leaves of Grass.
He worked as a school teacher, printer, newspaper editor, journalist, and carpenter, before becoming a civil servant and volunteer visitor in Washington D.C. Union hospitals during the Civil War. Whitman penned a variety of poetry and prose, including essays, articles, reviews, fiction and nonfiction for the periodical press, speeches, and autobiographical works.
Whitman at the Library of Congress
The Library of Congress holds the largest number of Walt Whitman materials in the world.
The drafts, notes, fragments, letters, poetry, and prose in this campaign come from three different collections held by the Library's Manuscript Division:
Is it in the Whitman Archive?
Transcriptions in the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Walt Whitman Archive website may be a helpful resource for volunteers working on the correspondence in this campaign.
The Whitman Archive does not cover the entirety of the Library's collections but does contain transcriptions for many of the Whitman letters held by the Library.
Search keywords from a document to try to locate it in the Whitman Archive database.
Transcription basics
Transcribe what you see! Preserve original spelling, punctuation, word order, and page numbers or catalog marks.
Preserve line breaks except when a word breaks over a line or page. Then transcribe it on the line or page where it starts.
Use brackets [ ] around deleted, illegible or partially legible text. Transcribe any words or letters you can't identify as [?].
Access all instructions at any time by clicking the How To tab on the right of this page.
Historical handwriting
Many documents in this campaign use Spencerian script, a handwriting used from about 1850 to 1925. It was standard in the U.S. prior to widespread adoption of typewriters.
These resources can help with you deciphering:
- Handwriting in the Civil War, Sullivan Press
- How to decipher unfamiliar handwriting, Natural History Museum Archives (UK)
- Palaeography: reading old handwriting, 1500 - 1800, A practical online tutorial, UK National Archives
Need more help? Check out the How-To Guide
You can access full instructions at any time while transcribing or reviewing. Just click the blue How-To Guide button above the transcription box.
The guide also includes campaign descriptions and other helpful context under "About This Campaign".
View or print instructions in a separate webpage by visiting How-To at the top of your screen on any page.