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Ancestry.com AND FAMILYSEARCH TO MAKE A BILLION GLOBAL RECORDS AVAILABLE ONLINE
Groundbreaking Agreement to Deliver Valuable Historical Content Over the Next Five Years
PROVO, Utah, September 5, 2013 – Ancestry.com and FamilySearch International
(online at FamilySearch.org),
the two largest providers of family history
resources, announced today an agreement that is expected to make
approximately 1 billion global historical records available online and
more easily accessible to the public for the first time. With this
long-term strategic agreement, the two services will
work together with the archive community over the next five years to
digitize, index and publish these records from the FamilySearch vault.
The
access to the global collection of records marks a major investment in
international content as Ancestry.com continues to invest in expanding
family
history interest in its current markets and worldwide. Ancestry.com
expects to invest more than $60 million over the next five years in the
project alongside thousands of hours of volunteer efforts facilitated by
FamilySearch.
“This
agreement sets a path for the future for Ancestry.com and FamilySearch
to increasingly share international sets of records more
collaboratively,”
said Tim Sullivan, CEO of Ancestry.com. “A significant part of our
vision for family history is helping provide a rich, engaging experience
on a global scale. We are excited about the opportunities it will bring
to help benefit the family history community
and look forward to collaborating with FamilySearch to identify other
opportunities to help people discover and share their family history.”
The
organizations will also be looking at other ways to share content
across the two organizations. Both organizations expect to add to the
already digitized records shared across the two websites in addition to
new record projects to be completed over the next five years.
"We are excited to work with Ancestry.com
on
a vision we both share," said Dennis Brimhall, President of
FamilySearch. "Expanding online access to historical records through
this type of collaboration can help millions more people discover and
share
their family's history."
This
marks a groundbreaking agreement between the two services. But the two
organizations aren’t strangers to working with each other; hundreds
of millions of records have already been shared and are available on
Ancestry.com and FamilySearch.org. The companies also announced in early
2013 an additional project where they plan to publish 140 million U.S.
Wills & Probate images and indexes over the
next three years—creating a national database of wills and other
probate documents spanning 1800-1930 online for the very first time.
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