In 1999,
American Quarterly collaborated with the American Studies Crossroads Project and the center to organize an experiment in hypertext publishing. Four essays, covering such diverse topics as photos, as legal evidence, the
Spanish–American War in film, early comic strips, and
Arnold Schwarzenegger, offer contrasting approaches to using digital media for scholarly presentations. Other early experiments in digital publishing include
Imaging the French Revolution, a series of essays analyzing images of crowds in the French Revolution and
Interpreting the Declaration of Independence by Translation, a roundtable of historians brought together to discuss the translation and reception of the Declaration of Independence in Japan, Mexico, Russia, China, Poland, Italy, Germany, Spain, and Israel. In 2009, the center began to focus more on
scholarly communication and community-building projects. Particularly notable projects from this era of the center included the NEH-funded One Week One Tool Summer Institutes; NEH-funded Doing Digital History workshops for mid-career American historians; the Mellon-funded THATCamp
unconferences; and the Sloan-funded PressForward, a
WordPress plugin for online scholarly communication. and
Digital Humanities Now, which ran from 2009 to 2021. In 2017, the center held a Mellon-funded workshop to explore the role of argument in
digital history scholarship. It subsequently published a whitepaper, "Argument and Digital History" and ran a panel on it at the
American Historical Association Annual Meeting. == Public history ==