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MARTIN'S HISTORY OF FRANCE THE DECLINE OF THE FRENCH MONARCHY. BY HENRI MARTIN. TRANSLATED FROM THE FOURTH PARIS EDITION. BY MARY L. BOOTH VOL. I. BOSTON: WALKER, FULLER, AND COMPANY. proprietors 1866. Nov. 28. 1865. Vol. 40. P. 965
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THE DECLINE OF THE FRENCH MONARCHY. BY HENRI MARTIN. TRANSLATED FROM THE FOURTH PARIS EDITION, BY MARY L. BOOTH. VOL. I. BOSTON: WALKER, FULLER, AND COMPANY. 1866. Nov. 28, 1865. Vol. 2. 40. P. 945.
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ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY: OR, YEAR-BOOK OF FACTS IN SCIENCE AND ART FOR 1855. EXHIBITING THE MOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES AND IMPROVEMENTS IN MECHANICS, USEFUL ARTS, NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, CHEMISTRY, ASTRONOMY, METEOROLOGY, ZOOLOGY, BOTANY, MINERALOGY, GEOLOGY, GEOGRAPHY, ANTIQUITIES, &c. TOGETHER WITH A LIST OF RECENT SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS ; A CLASSIFIED LIST OF PATENTS ; OBITUARIES OF EMINENT SCIENTIFIC MEN ; NOTES ON THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE DURING THE YEAR 1854, ETC. EDITED BY DAVID A. WELL, A. M. BOSTON : GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 WASHINGTON STREET. LONDON: TRÜBNER AND COMPANY, 12 PATERNOSTER ROW, 1855. [*Depos'. Feb. 28, 1855 See Vol. 30. Page 103 Gould & Lincoln, Propr.*]
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1 ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY: OR, YEAR-BOOK OF FACTS IN SCIENCE AND ART FOR 1855. EXHIBITING THE MOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES AND IMPROVEMENTS IN MECHANICS, USEFUL ARTS, NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, CHEMISTRY, ASTRONOMY, METEOROLOGY, ZOOLOGY, BOTANY, MINER- ALOGY, GEOLOGY, GEOGRAPHY, ANTIQUITIES, &c. TOGETHER WITH A LIST OF RECENT SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS; A CLASSIFIED LIST OF PATENTS; OBITUARIES OF EMINENT SCIENTIFIC MEN; NOTES ON THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE DURING THE YEAR 1854, ETC. EDITED BY DAVID A. WELLS, A. M. BOSTON: GOULD AND LINCOLN, 59 WASHINGTON STREET. LONDON: TRÜBNER AND COMPANY, 12 PATERNOSTER ROW, 1855. Depos'. Feb. 28, 1855. See Vol. 30. Page 103 James Lincoln, Publisher.
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7 of his Country." But, after my advent here, I came to know that the day had even additional importance, because it was the natal day also of one who may, in a way, very properly be called the father of this large company of neighbors and friends gathered here to mark his eightieth anniversary. As Washington is the Father of his Country because of pre-eminent services rendered, so may Mr. Carter, for the time at least, be regarded as a father to us, because of kindly service rendered by him and received by us all how often! We are not here, therefore, simply to celebrate the eightieth birthday of a neighbor,--rather, it seems, to take advantage of the occasion to show Mr. Carter our appreciation of his generous and cheerful life among us. What one of us has not received from or through him some friendly token, some feast of
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7 of his Country." But, after my advent here, I came to know that the day had even additional importance, because it was the natal day also of one who may, in a way, very properly be called the father of this large company of neighbors and friends gathered here to mark his eightieth anniversary. As Washington is the Father of his Country because of pre-eminent services rendered, so may Mr. Carter, for the time at least, be regarded as a father to us, because of kindly service rendered by him and received by us all how often! We are not here, therefore, simply to celebrate the eightieth birthday of a neighbor,—rather, it seems, to take advantage of the occasion to show Mr. Carter our appreciation of his generous and cheerful life among us. What one of us has not received from or through him some friendly token, some feast of
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506. Elements Vertical Oblique Horizontal 5 1 4 3 2 1 2 3 4 5 90° 50° 35° 0° Principles of Small Letters. 5 1 5 5 4 3 1 3 4 4 1 3 4 1 4 3 1 3 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 Scale of Lengths. Spaces 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 • This mark denotes equal spaces. Principles of the Capitals. Ovals 7 Prin. 8 Prin. 8p. 8p. 8p. 9 prin Spaces 1 2 3 4 1/8 4/5 1/2 1/2 1/3 2/3 1/2 9p. Give Special Heed to these Directions. This No. is the sequel to No. 1, the preparation for No. 3. The directions here given take for granted that those on the cover of No. 1 have been studied and followed. In this No. the letters formed from the first four principles are reviewed, and the stem-letters, t, d, p, q, are introduced. The Contractions used are as follows:—m.l., Main Line; c.l., Connecting LIne; m.s., Main Line Slope; c.s., Connecting Line Slope; m. Modified; pl., Parallel; P., Principle; E., Element. The Diagram on the cover shows the Elements, Principles, and Scale of Lengths. The Diagram above the copy, the part made at each Count, the Principles, and the way the copy is to be placed in the lines. SUGGESTIONS. 1. The only possible way of teaching Penmanship successfully in a school, is to have all the scholars of the class write the same line in the same book at the same time. 2. The order of instruction is KNOWLEDGE, EXECUTION, CRITICISM. First, KNOWLEDGE. Explain the copy carefully, and have it analyzed into its Principles and then into its Elements. Teach the nature, peculiarity, slope, beginning and ending of each element; notice the connections between the principles, and the combining lines between the letters; call attention to similitude and parallelism of parts and lines. Second, EXECUTION. Let them first trace the copy with dry pens. Then have one line in the column written, directing the pupils to be very careful as to position, penholding, rests, and movements, which are explained in the Manual and on cover of No. 1. Do not allow the pen to be raised from the paper until the line is written except in p. Be sure the wrist does not touch; it should be high enough from the desk to allow a holder to be passed under its right side. Third, CRITICISM. Criticize the line written, by asking questions on each particular given as knowledge, which the class answer by raising their hands. The errors lie, of course, on each side of the truth. Thus, if the line is a curve, it may be curved the wrong way, or too much or too little; if sloped, then too much or too little; the turn will be correct, or too broad, or too narrow. Select one or two of the most prevalent faults, discovered by the answers and by your own observation, for correction, direct especial attention to them, and have one more line written that may be corrected. Then criticize these same points, see how many have succeeded in correcting them, and write one more line. Thus, criticize the execution of each line, and direct attention to the correction of fault after fault until the whole is perfected. GENERAL RULES. 1. Begin and end in the corners. 2. Every principle touches both the head and base lines. 3. The Main Lines are straight lines and the sides of the oval written downwards; the ovals, the second upstroke of b and v, and the second and fourth of w. See Manual, Chap. III. The Connecting Lines are the rest of the curves written upwards. The Turns unite main to connecting lines. Sometimes the main and connecting lines unite in a point: this is termed a Connection. The line formed between two letters by their connecting lines running into one another at the middle of the space is termed a Connecting Line. 4. The odd numbers are used for the upstrokes; the even, for the down. 5. There are five Elements, numbered in the order in which they occur in the principles. There are six Principles in the small letters; from these, with the addition of a few exceptional parts, all the small letters are made. 6. The red lines mark the columns, each of which is divided into three oblongs or boxes. Write down the columns always. 7. The m.s. is 50° from base-line. N.B. Teachers will find our Manual of Penmanship a complete compendium of the art of teaching writing. The Blackboard Tablets are invaluable for presenting the Elements, Principles, and Capitals, of large size and perfect form. The Oblique Lines are a great help to the scholars in acquiring correct slope. SPECIAL DIRECTIONS FOR THE COPIES. COPY 1. KNOWLEDGE. The 1's and 2's are pl. respectively. The top of 1 is a little more than half across the box. Mind the slope of 2's, and the distance between them. Observe Rules 1, 2, 3, 7. Analyze P.1 from Diag. on cover. P.1 has been fully explained in No. 1, which see. Its analysis is P.1=3/4 E.1 + 1/4 E.2 + 3/4 E.3. Notice that the second 2 is perfectly straight through 3/4 of its height and pl. to the first 2, with which compare it. Call attention to the bend which forms the left side of the turn, and to the way in which the right side slants up directly the turn has touched the base line. Caution against making a broad turn by turning too soon on the left, or sagging down on the right side. EXECUTION. First, trace the copy a few times by count, giving special attention to Position, Penholding, Rests, and Movements. Next, have one column-line written by count. Thus, "Ready," (which means place the pen over, but not on the spot they are to start from,) "1, 2," "ready" or "up," "2, 1." CRITICISM. Ask questions on all the particulars known. Thus, "How many began in the corner?" How many did not?" "How many made the top of 1 far enough across?" "How many not?" "1 is the right curve of the oval—How many made this curve?" "How many the left curve?" (Show on the board what you mean.) How many made first 2 straight? Second 2 straight through 3/4? Turn too broad? Too narrow? &c., &c., &c.
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5 Elements. 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Filed Oct. 22. 1858. Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1858, BY ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.
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BOOK_PAGE
early-copyright_2025-06-02
2.1/55. Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1858, By ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.
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NO. VI VOL. XXI. THE [checkmark] MONTHLY LAW REPORTER. EDITED BY JOHN LOWELL AND SAMUEL M. QUINCY. OCTOBER, 1858. ------------ "REPORT ME AND MY CAUSE ARIGHT." See Vol 33 Page 585 Dep Oct. 1858 BOSTON: CROSBY, NICHOLS, AND COMPANY. propr NEW YORK: JOHN S. VOORHIES. --------- BOSTON: PRINTED BY GEO. C. RAND & AVERY.
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BOOK_PAGE
early-copyright_2025-06-02
VOL. XXII. THE MONTHLY LAW REPORTER. EDITED BY JOHN LOWELL AND SAMUEL M. QUINCY. OCTOBER, 1858. "REPORT ME AND MY CAUSE ARIGHT." BOSTON: CROSBY, NICHOLS, AND COMPANY, NEW YORK: JOHN S. VOORHIES. BOSTON: PRINTED BY GEO. C. RAND & AVERY.
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2 Orleans Volunteers, did absent himself from his company, without permission from proper authority, on or about the 14th day of July, 1865, and remained absent until the 28th day of July, 1865. This at Camp Distribution, New Orleans, La. PLEA -—To the first charge - Not Guilty. To the first specification — Not Guilty; but guilty of absence without leave for ten days, from military authority. To the second charge -—Guilty To the Specification, second charge — Guilty. FINDING-—Of the specification, first charge —Guilty of so much only as sustains the charge of absence without leave. Of the first charge — Not Guilty; but guilty of absence without leave. Of the specification, second charge —Guilty. Of the second charge -—Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be confined at hard labor, at such place as the Commanding General may designate, for the period of three months." 3. Corporal JOHN KAPPEL, Company H, 1st United States Infantry. CHARGE 1st. "Disobedience of Orders." SPECIFICATION —In this: That Corporal John Kappel, of Company H, 1st United States Infantry, whilst on the corner of Canal and Carondelet streets, being ordered by the officer of the patrol, 1st Lieutenant John H. Purcell, 1st Infantry, to halt, did refuse to obey said order. This at New Orleans, La., on or about the 28th day of July, 1865. CHARGE 2d. "Absence without Leave." SPECIFICATION — In this: that Corporal John Kappel, of Company H, 1st United States Infantry, did absent himself from his company quarters, without proper authority, at or about 8 1/2 o'clock, P.M. and did remain absent therefrom until arrested by the patrol of the 1st United States Infantry, at or about 10 o'clock, P.M., on the 28th of July, 1865. This at New Orleans, La. PLEA -—To the specification, first charge — Not Guilty. To the first charge -—Not Guilty. To the specification second charge — Not Guilty. To the second charge -—Not Guilty. FINDING - Of the specification, first charge — Not Guilty. Of the first charge — Not Guilty. Of the specification, second charge — Guilty. Of the second charge — Guilty. SENTENCE. "To be reduced to the ranks, and forfeit to the United States ten dollars per month of his monthly pay for and during the period of two months."
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BOOK_PAGE
downloads_gladstone
2 Orleans Volunteers, did absent himself from his company, without permission from proper authority, on or about the 14th day of July, 1865, and remained absent until the 28th day of July, 1865. This at Camp Distribution, New Orleans, La. **Plea**—To the first charge—*Not Guilty*. To the first specification—*Not Guilty*; but guilty of absence without leave for ten days, from military authority. To the second charge—*Guilty*. To the specification, second charge—*Guilty*. **Finding**—Of the specification, first charge—*Guilty* of so much only as sustains the charge of absence without leave. Of the first charge—*Not Guilty*; but guilty of absence without leave. Of the specification, second charge—*Guilty*. Of the second charge—*Guilty*. **Sentence.** “To be confined at hard labor, at such place as the Commanding General may designate, for the period of three months.” 3. **Corporal John Kappel, Company H, 1st United States Infantry.** **Charge 1st.** “*Disobedience of Orders.*” **Specification**—In this: that Corporal John Kappel, of Company H, 1st United States Infantry, whilst on the corner of Canal and Carondelet streets, being ordered by the officer of the patrol, 1st Lieutenant John H. Purcell, 1st Infantry, to halt, did refuse to obey said order. This at New Orleans, La., on or about the 28th day of July, 1865. **Charge 2d.** “*Absence without Leave.*” **Specification**—In this: that Corporal John Kappel, of Company H, 1st United States Infantry, did absent himself from his company quarters, without proper authority, at or about 8\(\frac{1}{2}\) o'clock, P. M., and did remain absent therefrom until arrested by the patrol of the 1st United States Infantry, at or about 10 o'clock, P. M., on the 28th of July, 1865. This at New Orleans, La. **Plea**—To the specification, first charge—*Not Guilty*. To the first charge—*Not Guilty*. To the specification second charge—*Not Guilty*. To the second charge—*Not Guilty*. **Finding**—Of the specification, first charge—*Not Guilty*. Of the first charge—*Not Guilty*. Of the specification, second charge—*Guilty*. Of the second charge—*Guilty*. **Sentence.** “To be reduced to the ranks, and forfeit to the United States ten dollars per month of his monthly pay for and during the period of two months.”
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-9- the motives which to-day appear to control Legislatures and politicians, it would be this: "We admit the justice of the enfranchisement of women, but we don't want women in politics. That has been our sphere and we want to keep it to ourselves. There are not honors and plums enough to go around now; we don't want to have to divide them with women. Women, too, have a spying fashion of finding things out which we don't care for them to know. They might not approve of us, if they knew us better. Our machines are in good running order now. We know just how to conduct an election; we don't want the cogs stopped by a new class of unknown voters. We have ambitions which we can carry out if things are as they are, but if women came in Heaven only knows what might become of us. While we are in, women must stay out; when we get out, other men can enfranchise women if they want to." I think no one who has labored to secure justice from a Legislature to-day will deny that this is the correct description of the attitude of the modern politician. It isn't a new attitude. Men talked the same way before they admitted the right of woman's claim to the ballot.
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BOOK_PAGE
downloads_carrie-chapman-catt
9- the motives which to-day appear to control Legislatures and politicians, it would be this: "We admit the justice of the enfranchisement of women, but we don't want women in politics. That has been our sphere and we want to keep it to ourselves. There are not honors and plums enough to go around now; we don't want to have to divide them with women. Women, too, have a spying fashion of finding things out which we don't care for them to know. They might not approve of us, if they knew us better. Our machines are in good running order now. We know just how to conduct an election; we don't want the cogs stopped by a new class of unknown voters. We have ambitions which we can carry out if things are as they are, but if women came in Heaven only knows what might become of us. While we are in, women must stay out; when we get out, other men can enfranchise women if they want to." I think no one who has labored to secure justice from a Legislature to-day will deny that this is the correct description of the attitude of the modern politician. It isn't a new attitude. Men talked the same way before they admitted the right of women's claim to the ballot.
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THE HEART AND HOME SONGSTER; CONTAINING A Choice Collection of Songs of the Affections, and embracing all the most Popular and Fashionable Comic, Convivial, Moral, Sentimental and Patriotic Songs. NEW YORK: DICK AND FITZGERALD, PUBLISHERS, 18 ANN STREET.
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BOOK_PAGE
early-copyright_2025-06-02
THE HEART AND HOME SONGSTER; CONTAINING A Choice Collection of Songs of the Affections, and embracing all the most Popular and Fashionable Comic, Convivial, Moral, Sentimental and Patriotic Songs. NEW YORK: DICK AND FITZGERALD, PUBLISHERS, 18 ANN STREET.
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31 Fort Bridger, by Special Order, No. 90, (Department of Utah,) of September 22, 1858, for the trial of privates Brevet Major R. C. G----, Captain 7th Infantry, president. 4. Requisitions for ordnance and ordnance stores, &c., not being entered in the book of "Letters Received," the memorandum preceding the endorsement will give the name of the officer making the requisition, the name of the company or post for which the stores are required, and the date of receipt of such requisition. Where the endorsement on the requisition is a simple reference or a mere approval, it is not necessary to record it in full in this book; a memorandum showing the action taken being all that is required. Fig. 1 shows the mode of noting requisitions and subsequent action thereon. 5. Endorsements on letters, reports, &c., merely referring or forwarding such communications, need not be recorded in this book; a note (in red ink) in the book of "Letters Received," showing the disposition made of such communications, being all that is necessary. On recording a subsequent endorsement, however, (should any be made,) reference must be made to the first one, although not recorded.-- See Fig. 2. In all other cases the endorsement will be recorded in full. It sometimes happens that the endorsement made on a communication, at department or general headquarters, simply approves of the views contained in the endorsements of the post or regimental commander, &c., without stating what those views are; in which case, both endorsements must be recorded in the book, in order to give a perfect understanding of the import of the last endorsement.--See Fig. 3. 6. Endorsements on certificates of disability simply ordering the discharge of enlisted men, will not be recorded in this book. The fact of the discharge being ordered will be noted in the "Book of Discharges," which will be noticed presently. In all other cases the endorsement must be copied; the memorandum preceding the endorsement giving the name of the soldier concerned, the date and place from which such certificates were sent, and a brief description of the cause or causes for discharge. A note (in red ink) will also be made referring to the entry made in the "Discharge Book."--See Fig. 4.
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31 Fort Bridger, by Special Order, No. 90, (Department of Utah,) of September 22, 1858, for the trial of privates Brevet Major R. C. G——, Captain 7th Infantry, president. 4. Requisitions for ordnance and ordnance stores, &c., not being entered in the book of "Letters Received," the memorandum preceding the endorsement will give the name of the officer making the requisition, the name of the company or post for which the stores are required, and the date of receipt of such requisition. Where the endorsement on the requisition is a simple reference or a mere approval, it is not necessary to record it in full in this book; a memorandum showing the action taken being all that is required. Fig. 1 shows the mode of noting requisitions and subsequent action thereon. 5. Endorsements on letters, reports, &c., merely referring or forwarding such communications, need not be recorded in this book; a note (in red ink) in the book of "Letters Received," showing the disposition made of such communications, being all that is necessary. On recording a subsequent endorsement, however, (should any be made,) reference must be made to the first one, although not recorded.—See Fig. 2. In all other cases the endorsement will be recorded in full. It sometimes happens that the endorsement made on a communication, at department or general headquarters, simply approves of the views contained in the endorsement of the post or regimental commander, &c., without stating what those views are; in which case, both endorsements must be recorded in the book, in order to give a perfect understanding of the import of the last endorsement.—See Fig. 3. 6. Endorsements on certificates of disability simply ordering the discharge of enlisted men, will not be recorded in this book. The fact of the discharge being ordered will be noted in the "Book of Discharges," which will be noticed presently. In all other cases the endorsement must be copied; the memorandum preceding the endorsement giving the name of the soldier concerned, the date and place from which such certificates were sent, and a brief description of the cause or causes for discharge. A note (in red ink) will also be made referring to the entry made in the "Discharge Book."—See Fig. 4.
[{"column_name": "markdown", "model_id": "deepseek-ai/DeepSeek-OCR", "processing_date": "2025-10-22T21:01:52.619908", "resolution_mode": "base", "base_size": 1024, "image_size": 1024, "crop_mode": false, "prompt": "<image>\nFree OCR.", "prompt_mode": "free", "batch_size": 1, "max_tokens": 8192, "gpu_memory_utilization": 0.8, "max_model_len": 8192, "script": "deepseek-ocr-vllm.py", "script_version": "1.0.0", "script_url": "https://huggingface.co/datasets/uv-scripts/ocr/raw/main/deepseek-ocr-vllm.py", "implementation": "vllm (batch processing)"}]

Document OCR using DeepSeek-OCR

This dataset contains markdown-formatted OCR results from images in NealCaren/InkBench using DeepSeek-OCR.

Processing Details

Configuration

  • Image Column: image
  • Output Column: markdown
  • Dataset Split: train
  • Batch Size: 1
  • Resolution Mode: base
  • Base Size: 1024
  • Image Size: 1024
  • Crop Mode: False
  • Max Model Length: 8,192 tokens
  • Max Output Tokens: 8,192
  • GPU Memory Utilization: 80.0%

Model Information

DeepSeek-OCR is a state-of-the-art document OCR model that excels at:

  • 📐 LaTeX equations - Mathematical formulas preserved in LaTeX format
  • 📊 Tables - Extracted and formatted as HTML/markdown
  • 📝 Document structure - Headers, lists, and formatting maintained
  • 🖼️ Image grounding - Spatial layout and bounding box information
  • 🔍 Complex layouts - Multi-column and hierarchical structures
  • 🌍 Multilingual - Supports multiple languages

Resolution Modes

  • Tiny (512×512): Fast processing, 64 vision tokens
  • Small (640×640): Balanced speed/quality, 100 vision tokens
  • Base (1024×1024): High quality, 256 vision tokens
  • Large (1280×1280): Maximum quality, 400 vision tokens
  • Gundam (dynamic): Adaptive multi-tile processing for large documents

Dataset Structure

The dataset contains all original columns plus:

  • markdown: The extracted text in markdown format with preserved structure
  • inference_info: JSON list tracking all OCR models applied to this dataset

Usage

from datasets import load_dataset
import json

# Load the dataset
dataset = load_dataset("{{output_dataset_id}}", split="train")

# Access the markdown text
for example in dataset:
    print(example["markdown"])
    break

# View all OCR models applied to this dataset
inference_info = json.loads(dataset[0]["inference_info"])
for info in inference_info:
    print(f"Column: {{info['column_name']}} - Model: {{info['model_id']}}")

Reproduction

This dataset was generated using the uv-scripts/ocr DeepSeek OCR vLLM script:

uv run https://huggingface.co/datasets/uv-scripts/ocr/raw/main/deepseek-ocr-vllm.py \\
    NealCaren/InkBench \\
    <output-dataset> \\
    --resolution-mode base \\
    --image-column image

Performance

  • Processing Speed: ~0.1 images/second
  • Processing Method: Batch processing with vLLM (2-3x speedup over sequential)

Generated with 🤖 UV Scripts

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