How to use this guide
The majority of the entries in this guide cover major manuscript collections (that is, numbering fifty items or more). In many
instances, entries begin with a very brief summary of the overall collection in order both to provide context and to suggest to
researchers potentially useful groups of papers into which they might venture in the hope of discovering additional, related
materials. Each entry heading contains the collection or item name, date range, item (or page) count, and the collection or
item call number. In some instances, reference is made to the availability of microfilm, which generally means that the filmed
version of the collection may be leased through interlibrary loan. In such instances, the researcher should contact the Society's
reference department for additional information.
The body of each collection entry includes a narrative description of the African American materials we have found in the
papers, with an indication of their physical location in the collection. In most cases, location is indicated by reference to section
numbers ("sections" of a collection in the Society's archival parlance equate to series or sub-series levels), and in some rare
cases, item numbers (such as item b133). Researchers may be required to go to the Society's
online catalog, and even in
some cases to the old card catalog, for additional supplementary identification of item numbers in order to request specific
material.
Some collections contain so many African American materials that we have only provided samples of items to be found
there. Specific entries will reflect such instances. In other cases, supplementary finding aids are available in the Society's reading
room that provide much greater detail on specific collections than can be included in this publication. For the most part, we have
not included in this guide secondary studies in the Society's holdings (such as theses, dissertations, essays, or speeches) or copies
of materials in other repositories unless the content or rarity of the item seemed to dictate otherwise.
If a collection or portion thereof has been published, an attempt has been made to include that information in the guide
entry. Virginia is assumed in the identification of all localities unless otherwise indicated.
Materials are constantly being identified in and added to the Society's African American manuscripts holdings. The best
source for information on those items is now the online catalog.
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