Friday, September 5, 2014

Volunteers help identify famous First World War officers' records

Volunteers co-operate with identify famous First World War officers' records

22 August 2014

Following three years of operate by volunteers, data from within a little 140,000 surviving paper records of officers who served in the First World War (WO 339), has since been catalogued. Finishing just ahead of the 100th yearly of the start of the Battle of Mons forward 23 August 1914, the records of more of the first officers to observe action in the war's principal major battle are now fully searchable means of name, rank and regiment.

This course includes the file for Lieutenant Maurice Dease, person of the first British officer casualties of the state of opposition and the first posthumous recipient of the Victoria Cross. Also included are records as antidote to famous writers, poets, actors and what may occur hereafter political leaders or their family relations of that kind as Joseph Conrad, Oscar Wilde, Clement Attlee and Tsar Nicholas II.

The records have capacity for correspondence relating to officers' careers including numerous insightful documents revealing promotions, medical relation, pensions and details surrounding their exit. On rare occasions some photographs are included, in the same instance of an x-apprehension and bandage (WO 339/66442).

The 35 volunteers moving with staff at The National Archives regard spent around 6,000 hours painstakingly entering given conditions, checking names, regiments and numbers in opposition to each of the 139,912 documents.

Find to the end more about volunteering at The National Archives.

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