When transcribing letters for Library of Congress, should I try to retain the spacing used by the writer/typist?
When transcribing letters for Library of Congress, should I try to retain the spacing used by the writer/typist?
I'm sure the librarians will respond but in essence it is as follows: Line breaks, yes retain fo ease of reading. Word breaks at end of line, retain the word in whole without a break. Other spacing, no.
So - if it looks like this:
January 8, 1 9 0 5
White Hou-
se
DC.
You would transcribe as:
January 8, 1905
White House
DC.
Thanks. And no indentations at the beginning of a paragraph?
Correct! No need to retain (or add new) paragraph indentations.
Thank you!
Good to know, but I would have thought retaining the indentations of paragraphs would ease the reading and understanding of the letter .
That is a good point!
The issue on our end comes up when we pull the transcriptions together into a single spreadsheet to move them to loc.gov. The indentations can screw up the formatting at that step and then they can display oddly back on the main website.
And plus: we'd much rather have folks focus time/energy capturing the text, rather than formatting
Thanks, Carlyn, that makes sense..