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Special Collections and Archives

 Links to History and Research Resources

Image from a Richmond postcard circa 1910

This site contains links to internet and online library resources devoted to history and research. It contains sites created and maintained by VCU Libraries, links to Virginia related repositories and collections, online VCU Resources, and other valuable sites. If you have any questions or suggestions for sites to include, please email Special Collections and Archives.

Sites Created and Maintained by VCU Libraries

History Resources -- This is the site you want to start with when seeking history resources for your research. It contains a detailed list of the various history resources located in or available through VCU Libraries. It has links to Internet directories, electronic journals, periodical indexes, and numerous other resources including a section devoted to Virginia history.

Virginia Heritage Project: Guides to Manuscript and Archival Collections in Virginia. This is a resource that Special Collections and Archives has contributed to. Access the growing union database of EAD (Encoded Archival Description) tagged finding aids (or guides) to archival collections in Virginia. Over one hundred of Special Collections and Archives' manuscript collections are part of this database.

Richmond, Virginia History Internet Resources -- Compiled and maintained by Special Collections and Archives, this site has links to nearly 90 web sites focusing on aspects of Richmond history and includes links to Richmond area libraries, museums, and repositories.

Electronic Reference Shelf -- This selection of reference resources ranges from online encyclopedias, dictionaries, and citation style guides to links to information on subjects like entertainment, science, and religion, to name just a few.

Links to African American History Internet Resources -- This page contains a selection of web sites related to African American history and culture and has specific sections of links to African American history in Virginia. It is maintained by Special Collections and Archives.

Special Collections and Archives at VCU's Tompkins-McCaw Library for the Health Sciences houses archives, artifacts, books, manuscripts, photographs, portraits and prints related to the history of health care in Virginia. The archives for the Medical College of Virginia campus of VCU are also located in the department. Their web site includes links to sites on the History of Nursing Resources on the Internet and Virginia Nursing History. All of these sites were created and are maintained by Jodi Koste, Archivist, Tompkins-McCaw Library.

VCU Resources

VCU Administrative Toolkit is a web-based portal designed to allow easy access to financial and administrative policies, activities, training and forms. Special Collections and Archives houses the official records and archives of VCU and its predecessor institutions. For information on what to do with the records of your University office or department, visit the Records Management information site maintained by Technology Services or email Special Collections and Archives.

VCU News Center -- Part of the Division of External Affairs, the public relations arm of VCU, VCU News Center is the leading news and public information efforts of Virginia Commonwealth University and the VCU Medical Center.

Commonwealth Times -- Online version of VCU's student newspaper. Current and back issues of The Commonwealth Times are housed in James Branch Cabell Library's Special Collections and Archives. This collection includes the two forerunners to the current student paper, The Atlas [1929 - 1939] and The Proscript [1939-1969].

Links to Virginia related repositories and collections

Virginia Heritage Project: Guides to Manuscript and Archival Collections in Virginia.

Library of Virginia

Numerous resources can be found at the Library of Virginia. Four sites worth noting here include their guide to Virginia History and Culture Resources on the Internet, an index to the Virginia Cavalcade and their VA-HIST (Virginia History) Discussion Group is a discussion list for research and writing about Virginia history. Researchers can learn more about the work of other scholars, inquire about the location of sources, debate issues, raise questions, and learn about current events in the field (conferences, research grants, position announcements, etc.).

Links to Repositories (archives, libraries, museums, historical societies..)

Repositories of Primary Sources. This listing of over 5,000 web sites describing holdings of manuscripts, archives, rare books, historical photographs, and other primary sources for the research scholar is maintained by the University of Idaho.

A second source for online archival information is Tulane University's "Ready, 'Net, Go! Archival Internet Resources." This site refers the user to the major indexes, lists, and databases of archival resources and includes an archival search engine.

Richmond, Virginia History Internet Resources -- Complied and maintained by Special Collections and Archives, this site has links to nearly 90 web sites focusing on some aspect of Richmond history and includes links to Richmond area libraries, museums, and repositories.

ArchivesUSA A subscription database of archival finding aids.

National Archives & Records Administration (NARA) --- The Archival Research Catalog (ARC) is the online catalog of NARA's nationwide holdings in the Washington, DC area, Regional Archives and Presidential Libraries. ARC replaces its prototype, the NARA Archival Information Locator (NAIL). You can still perform a keyword, digitized image and location search. ARC's advanced functionalities also allow you to search by organization, person, or topic.

National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections (NUCMC) -- NUCMC is a free-of-charge cooperative cataloging program operated by the Library of Congress. On the basis of cataloging data supplied by eligible repositories, NUCMC catalogers create MARC (Machine Readable Cataloging) bibliographic records in the RLG (Research Libraries Group) data base, a national-level database, describe collections held by participants, and establish pertinent name and subject authority headings. Descriptions and locations of the material are then available to researchers throughout the United States and around the world.

Freedom of Information and Copyright Issues

National Freedom of Information Coalition

Copyright Issues: Multimedia and Internet Resources

When Works Pass into the Public Domain

Staff favorites -- Other ways to go back in time

A Moment In Time -- A Moment In Time, produced by Richmond's public radio station, WCVE, is a two minute historical program that reaches over 2,000,000 people everyday and makes history come alive on over 400 public radio stations around the world. The program is hosted by Dan Roberts, an assistant professor of history at the University of Richmond.

American Memory Project -- American Memory is a gateway to rich primary source materials relating to the history and culture of the United States.    The site offers more than 7 million digital items from more than 100 historical collections.

Documenting the American South -- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill sponsors Documenting the American South, a collection of sources on Southern history, literature and culture from the colonial period through the first decades of the 20th century. Projects include: First-Person Narratives of the American South; Library of Southern Literature; North American Slave Narratives; The Southern Home front, 1861-1865; and The Church in the Southern Black Community.

The History Journals Guide -- The History Journals Guide is an international directory for journals and discussion lists in the fields of history and archaeology.

Internet Archive -- Go back in time on the Internet with the Wayback Machine which makes it possible to surf more than 10 billion pages stored in the Internet Archive's web archive. One can browse the Wayback Machine or enter a URL.

The Making of America -- Cornell University Library's Making of America is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. The collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology. This site provides access to 267 monograph volumes and over 100,000 journal articles with 19th century imprints.

Internet History Sourcebook's Project -- The Internet History Sourcebook's Project [IHSP] is a collections of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use. The IHSP is a world wide web project designed to provide easy access to primary sources and other teaching materials in a non-commercial environment.