Machine Generated Data
Tags
Color Analysis
Feature analysis
Amazon
Clarifai

AWS Rekognition
Rug | 74.8% | |
Categories
Imagga
created on 2019-06-05
text visuals | 99.9% | |
Captions
Microsoft
created by unknown on 2019-06-05
a close up of a piece of paper | 81% | |
close up of a piece of paper | 79.4% | |
a piece of paper | 79.3% | |
Clarifai
No captions written
Salesforce
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip on 2025-05-20
a photograph of a lettered to a man who is holding a piece of paper
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip-2 on 2025-07-06
two pages of a letter from a man to his wife
OpenAI GPT
Created by gpt-4o-2024-11-20 on 2025-06-08
This is an archival document related to the Young Women's Union of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The page appears to be mounted on a gray backing material and contains two sections of text — one describing the organization and its purpose, and the other providing statistical information.
Left Section:
The text describes the Young Women's Union, located at 422–428 Bainbridge Street, Philadelphia, and states that it was founded in 1894 by a group of young Jewish women. Its mission is to "educate and aid the Russian poor and to aid the children mentally, spiritually, and bodily." The union was later incorporated in 1896.
The "Character of Work" section highlights the organization’s range of activities:
- Literary, social, athletic, and charitable clubs.
- Classes in arts, music, military drill, and gymnastics for children.
- Services such as sewing, dressmaking, a savings fund, and a library.
- Special facilities for dancing classes, kindergarten, and social initiatives like a career home for working girls.
Right Section:
This section provides statistics on the organization:
- Resident population: Men: 0, Women: 4.
- Number of workers: 74 (excluding residents).
- Enrollment: 2754 in clubs and classes.
- Total outreach: 5855 people, including women and children reached by the union's settlement programs.
- Most participants and beneficiaries are of Jewish nationality.
The top of the page is labeled "Young Women's Union, Philadelphia, Pa." and there is a handwritten number in the upper-right corner ("G. Sc. 41 60757").
Summary:
This document serves as a historical record detailing the activities, mission, and impact of the Young Women's Union, emphasizing its role in aiding the Jewish immigrant population in Philadelphia during the late 19th century.
Created by gpt-4o-2024-08-06 on 2025-06-08
The image is a black and white photograph of a document or page featuring two primary text sections. It is labeled at the top as "Young Women's Union, Philadelphia, Pa."
The left section is titled "YOUNG WOMEN'S UNION" with the address "422-426 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia." It states that the union was founded in 1884 by young Jewish women to educate and aid the Russian poor, focusing on their mental, spiritual, and bodily well-being. It was incorporated in 1896. The "CHARACTER OF WORK" paragraph outlines the various activities and offerings provided by the union, including literary, social, athletic, and charitable clubs, gymnasium classes, art departments with life sections, benefits for members and poor students, various classes for girls, concerts, lectures, classes for mothers, and a working girls' club.
The right section lists "STATISTICS," detailing the number of residents (4 women) and staff, the enrollment figure for clubs and classes (2754), and the number of people reached (5855), noting that nearly all of the community served is Jewish.
The document appears to be an informational flyer or report about the Young Women's Union and its activities at the time.
Anthropic Claude
Created by anthropic.claude-3-haiku-20240307-v1:0 on 2025-06-12
The image shows two sections of text describing the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The left section provides background information on the organization, stating that it was founded in 1906 by a group of young Jewish women. It outlines the organization's activities, including educational, social, and vocational programs for young women and girls. The right section provides statistics related to the organization's work, such as the number of members, the number of children served, and the number of working girls assisted.
Created by us.anthropic.claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022-v2:0 on 2025-06-12
This image shows two historical documents about the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, PA. The documents appear to be administrative records or information sheets. The left document details the organization's founding in 1885 and its character of work, which included various activities like athletics, art classes, and programs for working youth. The right document contains statistics, showing membership numbers and demographics, noting that the majority of constituents were Jewish. The organization was located at 428-430 Bainbridge St. in Philadelphia and was incorporated in 1895. The documents seem to be from the early 1900s based on their appearance and typewritten format. They provide insight into an organization that served the educational, cultural, and social needs of young people in Philadelphia during that era.
Meta Llama
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-11b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-05-28
The image presents a scanned document from the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pa., featuring two typed pages on a beige background.
Page 1:
- Title: "Young Women's Union, Philadelphia, Pa."
- Address: "488-498 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia"
- Founded: "Founded in 1888 by a number of young Jewish Women"
- Mission: "To educate and aid the Russian poor and to aid the children, mentally spiritually, and bodily."
- Incorporated: "Incorporated, 1895."
- Charity Work: "CHARITY OF WORK: Literary, artistic, athletic and charitable (aid) clubs, of boys and girls. Art department. The life question of this department has recently been organized as a club, the funds of which are used as a nick benefit for the members and to aid poor students who desire to go to the Academy of Fine Arts. Military and dreammaking, sewing, cooking clubs, gymnasiun (for school children, working boys and working girls), mother's clubs, dancing classes, juvenile aid work, vocation, library, saving fund, day nursery, doctor, sewer home for working girls."
Page 2:
- Statistics:
- Number of Residents: "Number of residents: 4"
- Number of Workers: "Number of workers, exclusive of the residents, 74"
- Total Amount of Clubs and Classes: "Total amount of clubs and classes, 2784"
- Nationality: "Nationality of this larger community, almost all Jewish."
The document provides an overview of the Young Women's Union's mission, activities, and statistics, highlighting its focus on education, charity work, and community service.
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-05-28
The image is a scanned document from the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The document features two white rectangles with black text on a gray background.
Left Rectangle:
- Young Women's Union
- 422-428 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia
- Founded in 1888 by a number of young Jewish women "to educate and aid the Russian poor and to aid the children, mentally spiritually, and bodily."
- Incorporated, 1896.
- CHARACTER OF WORK
- Literary, social, athletic and charitable (aid) clubs, of boys and girls. Art department. The life question of this department has recently been organized as a club, the funds of which are used as a rich benefit for the members and to aid poor students who desire to go to the Academy of Fine Arts. Military and dramatics, elocution, gymnasium (for school children, working boys and working girls), mother's clubs, dancing classes, juvenile aid work, kindergarten, library, sewing fund, day nursery, shelter, armour home for working girls.
Right Rectangle:
- STATISTICS
- Number of residents: Women, 4
- Number of workers, exclusive of the residents, 74
- Total number of clubs and classes, 2764
- Nationality of people - men, women and children, - including those in the various organizations, reached in any way by the settlement, 3000
- Nationality of this larger constituency, almost all Jewish.
The document provides information about the Young Women's Union, its mission, and its activities, as well as statistics on its membership and reach.
Amazon Nova
Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-05-27
The image is a scanned document with a white background and black text. It appears to be a report or document from the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The document is divided into two sections, with the left section titled "Young Women's Union" and the right section titled "Statistics." The left section provides information about the organization's founding and mission, while the right section provides statistical data about the organization's membership and activities. The text is organized in a structured format, with headings and subheadings, and includes details such as the organization's address, the number of members, and the types of activities they offer. The image appears to be a historical document, possibly from the early 20th century, based on the style of the text and the content of the document.
Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-05-27
The image shows a document that is probably a report about the Young Women's Union, Philadelphia, PA. The document is divided into two parts. The left part of the document contains information about the organization, its history, and its character of work. The right part of the document contains statistics about the organization. The document is written in black font on a white background.
Google Gemini
Created by gemini-2.0-flash on 2025-04-30
Here is a description of the image:
The image shows a faded, off-white document with typed text, likely an official record or report. At the top center, the heading "Young Women's Union, Philadelphia, Pa." is printed. Below this, the document is divided into two sections, each containing a block of text.
On the left, under the heading "Young Women's Union," the text details the organization's address (422-428 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia), founding year (1885), and mission, which includes educating and aiding the Russian poor and children mentally, spiritually, and bodily. It notes the incorporation year as 1896. Further down, under "Character of Work," it lists various activities and services, including literary, social, athletic, and charitable clubs for boys and girls, an art department, a "life section," millinery and dressmaking, sewing classes, a gymnasium, mother's clubs, dancing classes, juvenile aid work, a kindergarten, a library, a saving fund, a day nursery, a shelter, and a summer home for working girls.
On the right side, under the heading "Statistics," the document provides numerical data. It notes 0 men and 4 women as residents, 74 workers exclusive of residents, a total enrollment of 2754 in clubs and classes, and an estimated number of 3855 people (men, women, and children) reached through the settlement's various organizations. It concludes by stating that the nationality of the larger constituency is almost entirely Jewish.
Additional markings appear, including "S U 62" in the lower right corner of the second section, and what looks like a handwritten notation, "G S- 24 45.17.5" in the upper right corner of the page. The paper itself shows signs of age and wear.
Created by gemini-2.0-flash-lite on 2025-04-30
This is a document from the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It provides information about the organization, including its founding in 1888 by Jewish women with the aim of educating and aiding the Russian Jewish community. The document details the "Character of Work" with various clubs and classes offered, such as literary, athletic, art, sewing, and childcare. The "Statistics" section lists the number of residents, workers, total enrollment in clubs and classes, the estimated number of people reached, and the nationality of the constituency. The text is written in a formal, historical style.
Mistral Pixtral
Created by us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0 on 2025-05-29
The image appears to be a historical document related to the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The document provides information about the founding, purpose, and activities of the organization.
Left Section:
- Organization Name: Young Women's Union
- Address: 423-425 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia
- Founding: Founded in 1896 by a member of young Jewish women.
- Purpose: "To unite us all this coming year and to aid the children, mentally, spiritually, and socially."
- Incorporation: Incorporated in 1898.
Organization of Work:
- Clubs: Educational, athletic, and charitable (aid) clubs for boys and girls.
- Library: Maintains a library and reading room.
- Art Department: Conducts art department work.
- Home: The points of work are used as a home.
- Activities: Various activities such as sewing classes, cooking classes, gymnasium (for general children), dramatic club, debating club, mother's club, dancing classes, manual training classes, kindergarten, library, swimming, day nursery, and others.
Right Section:
- Distribution:
- Number of residential rooms: 4
- Number of workers, exclusive of the residents: 24
- Total enrollment of clubs and classes: 2764
- Estimated number of people (men, women, and children) including those in the various organizations, reached in any way by the settlement: 5055
- Nationality of the larger constituency: About all Jewish.
Date: The document is dated December 2, 1910.
This document provides a snapshot of the activities and impact of the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia at the beginning of the 20th century, highlighting its focus on education, recreation, and community support for Jewish youth and families.
Qwen
Created by Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-7B-Instruct on 2025-07-28
The image appears to be a scanned page from a document related to the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The page is divided into two sections.
The left section contains a formal description of the organization. It states that the Young Women's Union was founded in 1896 by a group of young Jewish women with the aims of educating and aiding the Russian poor, and aiding children both mentally and spiritually. It mentions the incorporation of the organization in 1896 and lists the characteristics of its work, which include literary, social, athletic, and charitable clubs for boys and girls. It also notes the presence of an art department and a life insurance section that benefits members and aids students who want to attend the Academy of Fine Arts. Further, it lists activities such as gymnastics, sleep, cooking classes, and more.
The right section of the page provides statistics about the organization. It lists the number of residents (150 men, 4 women) and workers (74 workers in total). It also mentions the total enrollment of clubs and classes, which is 2764. It further provides an estimated number of people reached by the settlement, which is 3,555. Lastly, it notes that the nationality of the larger constituency is almost all Jewish.
Created by Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-72B-Instruct on 2025-07-28
This image shows a historical document related to the Young Women's Union in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The document appears to be divided into two sections, each typed on separate pieces of paper and pasted onto a larger sheet.
The left section provides information about the organization:
- It is located at 423-426 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia.
- It was founded in 1886 by young Jewish women to educate and aid Russian Jews and their children.
- It was incorporated in 1896.
- It describes the character of the work done by the organization, which includes literary, social, athletic, and charitable clubs for boys and girls, an art department, military and gymnastics for school children, working boys and girls' circles, mothers' clubs, dancing classes, juvenile aid work, kindergarten, library, sewing fund, day nursery, shelter, and a summer home for working girls.
The right section provides statistical information:
- It mentions the number of residents (men, women, and children) and the number of workers.
- It states the total enrollment of clubs and classes.
- It provides an estimate of the number of people reached by the organization, including men, women, and children.
- It notes the nationality of the constituency served, which is almost entirely Jewish.
The document is labeled at the top with "Young Women's Union, Philadelphia, Pa." and has a handwritten note in the upper right corner.