Digital Humanities Projects

Throughout my time as a Digital History Fellow and a Graduate Research Assistant at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media I worked on four different projects.

Between 2021 and 2023 I acted as the Project Manager for the American Religious Ecologies project, I led a team of undergraduae and graduate students in the efforts to photograph, digitiz, and transcribe over 232,000 congregational schedules currently held at the National Archives and Records Administration. Beyond project management, I was also at the front of the blogging efforts and created a data visualization entitled “Male and Female Pastors in the National Spiritual Alliance.”

In the summer of 2023 I worked as a graduate research assistant for World History Commons, an Open Educational Resource (OER) project funded by the NEH that provides quality, peer-reviewed resources for teaching and research in world and global history. I researched, wrote annotations, and added primary resources and website reviews that covered subjects that are often omitted or covered briefly in history classrooms. These subjects include resources about Oceania, Ancient North America, Ancient South America, and archaeological and art history finds.