01
Apr
08

A network site launched by the National Archives and footnote.com now makes it easier to access records of those whose names appear on the wall. Vietnam.

The Vietnam War Memorial in Washington DC has gone virtual. A entanglement install launched by the National Archives and footnote.com now makes it easier to access records of those whose names appear on the wall. More than 58,000 U.S. troops out of the window their lives in the Vietnam War.

Their names are etched in granite stone at the famed Vietnam Memorial. And now, an interactive trap placement launched by the National Archives and footnote.com will yield greater access than ever before to information about the people behind the names. Allen Weinstein of the National Archives says “this website will also lend a hand us remember the crucial facts about the nature of this and other wars.

” It’s a cobweb re-creation of the Vietnam Memorial, and finding someone on the wall is as simple as typing a name, walkabout date, or home town into a search box on the website. It then zooms into the room of the wall where the individual name can be viewed and provides information ranging from photos to casualty reports. Russell Wilding, the CEO of footnote.com says “we await that this interactive wall will become a means for healing and paying exaltation to those who sacrificed and given to our country.

It’s a link to the service records of those who’ve given their lives and the stories of their heyday at war. Visitors to the web site can also post comments and view the comments of others. Hundreds of veterans befall the central research room each year to examine documents and the plat will mean they no longer will have to travel to the archives locations to gain access to the records.

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