Historical Researcher

Historical Researcher Bring your passion for history into a role where research shapes meaningful work every day. As a Historical Researcher, you’ll dig into the past, uncover forgotten stories, and connect the dots that inspire people right now. Some days it’s old documents. Other times, it’s family roots or cultural shifts. Whatever the project, your work matters. Here’s how it might fit into your career path. Why This Role Matters History isn’t just a pile of dates. It’s memory, identity, and connection. In this role, you’ll keep those threads alive through archival research, genealogical studies, and primary source analysis. Some projects shape museum exhibits. Others give families the piece of their story they’ve been missing. And sometimes? Your work makes someone pause and think, “So that’s where I come from.” It feels great knowing your research helps future generations find their place. What You’ll Be Doing Day to Day Typical day? There isn’t one. But here’s the flavor: • One day, you might be elbow-deep in historical archives, pulling out letters no one’s touched in decades. • Another time, you’re preserving fragile manuscripts so they survive another hundred years. • Some projects involve providing museum collections with a context that helps visitors feel connected. • You might sit with people, recording stories for oral history projects. • And yes, plenty of time goes into academic research methods and primary source research to make sure details are bulletproof. Some days? You’ll lose track of time in the archives, chasing details no one else bothered with. That’s usually when the fundamental discoveries happen. Skills That Make a Historical Researcher Successful Forget checklists. It’s more about how you think: • Curiosity. Ever gone down a rabbit hole to answer one question? That’s gold here. • Patience. Trails go cold. You’ll keep going until something cracks. • Storytelling. Dates and names are fine, but people remember the story. That’s how historical documentation sticks. • Balance. One day, it’s handwritten notes. The next day, it’s digital history tools or library and information science databases. • Details. One wrong date? The whole story changes. How You’ll Work With the Team Remote doesn’t mean solo. Yes, you’ll work independently—but you’ll never be isolated. • Weekly calls where we share wins, struggles, and sometimes just random finds. • Online tools that keep our research methodology clear and straightforward. • Peer reviews to catch what one person might miss. • Senior researchers who love pointing you toward sources you didn’t even know existed. We’re scattered across locations, but we’ve got each other’s backs. Types of Projects You Might Tackle No two projects look the same. Some examples: • Helping families trace their roots with heritage research. • Adding depth and accuracy to exhibits focused on cultural history. • Partnering with academics on work that leans into historical analysis and historical data interpretation. • Creating resources for schools and media that make history engaging. • Highlighting everyday lives through social history studies—stories usually left out of the record. A Peek Into Real-Life Wins Ever wonder who wrote that forgotten letter in a box? One of our team members did—and found it wasn’t a letter at all, but a journal. Inside: a firsthand account of how a town survived a 19th-century flood. That discovery reshaped a whole documentary and gave locals a new sense of pride. Another project? A genealogical study revealed a client’s surprising link to a well-known figure. It wasn’t about bragging rights. It was about identity. Discoveries like that remind us why the work matters. Salary and Perks You’ll earn an annual salary of $88,000, plus perks built around balance and growth: • Work where you want, when you do your best thinking. • Join virtual hangouts to make remote work feel less lonely. • Get training in areas like document preservation and advanced research methodology. • Take time off—you’ll need the reset. Challenges We’ll Face Together Let’s be real: history isn’t neat. Archives are incomplete. Sources contradict. Dead ends happen. And yeah, remote life can get quiet. Here’s how we handle it: • Celebrate small wins. They add up. • Switch gears—oral history projects often fill gaps when paper trails end. • Keep conversations open. Nobody’s left stuck on their own. The Impact of Historical Research on Communities Your insights? They might help a family finally trace their roots. Or guide a museum to tell a story people actually trust. They might give schools fresh material to spark curiosity. Sometimes they add clarity to debates with solid academic research methods. Other times, it’s thoughtful historical interpretation that changes how a community sees itself. And every so often, someone looks at your work and says, “I never knew that about us.” That’s the real impact. Career Growth Path as a Historical Researcher Your first year might look something like this: • Month 1–2: Getting the hang of our systems, shadowing research. • Months 3–6: Leading smaller historical documentation projects with backup when you need it. • Month 7–12: Running complex assignments solo, maybe even mentoring others. By then, you’ll have sharpened your historical data interpretation skills and built a portfolio of work that speaks for itself. Your Next Steps If this role sparks your curiosity, that’s probably a sign you’d enjoy the work. Picture yourself in historical archives, chasing mysteries, pulling threads others overlooked. History isn’t just about the past—it’s how we make sense of today. As a Historical Researcher, you’ll keep history alive and relevant. If this sounds like the kind of work you’d enjoy, let’s have a conversation. Global Applicants Welcome: Candidates from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, European Union, Australia, India and other eligible regions worldwide are encouraged to apply. See our Global Hiring Locations for details. Apply tot his job

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