Difference between revisions of "How you can help"

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Don't worry about doing it perfectly, any help is better than none and it's easy to gradually improve wiki pages!
 
Don't worry about doing it perfectly, any help is better than none and it's easy to gradually improve wiki pages!
  
== Recent contributions ==
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== Thanks and recent contributions ==
 
Someone suggested a document via the [https://mia2.typeform.com/to/dkhC4B form]  which was part of correspondence between two men, so their suggested added personal accounts to an Australian and a British battalion with just one link! Thanks to them pages for the [[1/4th Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment, British infantry]] and [[5th Battalion, Australian Imperial Force (AIF)]] now exist and have links to documents created by a soldier in each battalion.
 
Someone suggested a document via the [https://mia2.typeform.com/to/dkhC4B form]  which was part of correspondence between two men, so their suggested added personal accounts to an Australian and a British battalion with just one link! Thanks to them pages for the [[1/4th Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment, British infantry]] and [[5th Battalion, Australian Imperial Force (AIF)]] now exist and have links to documents created by a soldier in each battalion.
  

Revision as of 02:29, 4 December 2014

There are hundreds or thousands of personal accounts of the war online, whether on large sites like Europeana 1914-1918, national libraries and archives, or individual diaries transcribed and posted online through small local projects. The challenge is to link these personal accounts by creating links from the individual who wrote them to their military unit.

In this phase of the project, the aim is find a personal narrative - a diary, letters, memoirs or images - for each military battalion or regiment in the Allied Armies.

Have you got a few free minutes to take on a small research challenge?

Getting started is easy:

  1. Take one of the personal diaries, letters or memoirs listed
  2. Match its author with a regiment or battalion.
  3. Send in the results via this form or edit the wiki directly to add their diary to the relevant battalion or regiment page

Other ways you can help

  • Add other personal or official diaries, memoirs and letters you know about to this site. If you're not used to wikis, use this form to suggest a link.
  • Spread the word! Tell your local history group, museum, library or archive about this project and suggest they add any diaries they know about
  • Add resources for researching World War One records to help others get started
  • Help fill in the battalions for each regiment. Some battalions are already listed in the country pages on the left-hand side but populating the lists is a huge task. Find out more or discuss it on Populating lists of military units.
  • Add detail for battalions through 'infoboxes' that describe how different military units were related to each other (this one is a bit more technical, Find out more or discuss it on Creating structured data about WWI military units
  • Asking questions can also be helpful! You can start a conversation on the Talk page Talk:How you can help.

If you've got a diary you want to add now, search for their regiment or battalion - if the page doesn't already exist you will be prompted to create it. If you're not used to wikis, use this form to suggest a link. You can can also click on any red-linked page name to create that page.

Don't worry about doing it perfectly, any help is better than none and it's easy to gradually improve wiki pages!

Thanks and recent contributions

Someone suggested a document via the form which was part of correspondence between two men, so their suggested added personal accounts to an Australian and a British battalion with just one link! Thanks to them pages for the 1/4th Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment, British infantry and 5th Battalion, Australian Imperial Force (AIF) now exist and have links to documents created by a soldier in each battalion.

Jasonmarkwebber worked on the 3rd Battalion, Grenadier Guards, British infantry page.

B3rn has been doing great work on Australian units, particularly medical units which weren't previously listed.

Finally, GavinRobinson has done brilliant work, not only contributing information about specific battalions but also helping work out the requirements for structured data about battalions, regiments and other military units in the British Army.


You can also view pages recently edited on this wiki.