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Access to Parking Lot 3 (P3), which is directly behind the Staten Island Museum, may be limited or off line from April 8 – May 2, 2024 due to ongoing work.  The Museum will be open to the public for regularly scheduled hours and school group visits.  We recommend parking in lots P4 (near the pond) or P1 (near the Children’s Museum). Click here for location and directions.

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Family History

Black and white photo of three people sitting at a table in front of computers

Transcribe with the Staten Island Museum

This online volunteer program invites community members to copy the text of historical documents into a more readable and searchable format. The program will begin with records digitized under the Access, Collaboration, and Equity in Genealogy Initiative (ACEGen). The Staten Island Museum needs your help to make collections about local history more accessible to the public.

In February 2022, the Museum launched its first crowdsourced transcription project: Black History Month Transcribe-a-thon.

ACEGen is a partnership among the Richard B. Dickenson Chapter of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (SIAAHGS) and Frederick Douglass Memorial Park to digitize burial records dating back to the cemetery’s founding in the 1930s. ACEGen will also make city directories from the museum’s collection directly accessible to the public online and pilot digitizing key collections of records from communities that have been under-represented in the public record.

Records digitized by ACEGen are currently available on Internet Archive. However, newly digitized handwritten records will need transcription to become more easily readable, searchable, and accessible. We are looking for volunteers to help with this important work.

The initiative is supported with generous funding from New York Community Trust.

New York Community Trust Logo

 

How to join the project

To become a volunteer transcriber:

Further Reading:

Visit Staten Island Museum’s page on Internet Archive.
Visit Frederick Douglass Memorial Park’s Page on Internet Archive.