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| Courtesy http://diloreto.com/areyou/postcards/cards.html |
Today's Sorting Saturday
post is about organizing your family papers. It's a big topic, so I'll post on
this for the next few Saturdays.
Librarians catalog, but
archivists arrange and describe. Archivists nearly always work with original
records, not photocopies or printouts. When they arrange and describe
collections, they work from the general to the specific, working toward
collections of paper or photos at a folder level.
It's common to get bogged
down and obsess about individual pieces of paper at the start, but it's more
helpful to think about your family collection as a whole. So for today let's
start by thinking about the kinds of records you might find in your family's
papers.
1. Personal Papers,
including:
Artwork
and drawings
Audio
or written anecdotes and reminiscences
Birth
announcements
Diaries
and journals
Ephemera, such as bookmarks, invitations, tickets
Family
and personal correspondence
Fraternal associations
Funeral
cards
Memoirs
Migration records
Motion
pictures
Newspaper clippings
Postcards
Photo
albums
Photographs
Political affiliations
Student
work
Report
cards and diplomas
Scrapbooks
Slides
Travel
accounts
Vital
records
Wills,
trusts and probate records
2. Professional or
Business Records, including:
Banking
and financial paperwork
Bills
of sale
Correspondence
Honors
and awards
Ledgers
Legal
records
Marketing records
Notebooks
Payroll
records
Photographs
Political affiliations
Professional organizations
Research files
Résumés
and vitas
Teaching notes
Volunteer and charitable records
3. Family records,
including:
Bibles
or other religious items
Ephemera
Family
photographs
Family
reunion records
Group
correspondence (“round robin” letters)
Do you have other items in
your family papers that you have questions about? Feel free to ask in the
comments section. And tune in next Saturday for some tips about arrangement and
storage of your family's original records.
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I spent the last two days sorting in the "Archival Closet". I'm looking forward to your posts and what I will be able to learn from a REAL archivist. I'll be writing about my experience too (it keeps me accountable).
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