====================== HES POSTING ====================
From: Walter Hill <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Special issue of Prologue, on African American Historical Research
The summer issue of Prologue, Quarterly of the National Archives, has as
its theme "The Impact of Federal Records on African American Historical
Research." The issue is scheduled for release in mid-June 1997.
Established in 1934, the National Archives and Records Administration
(NARA) is the depository for the permanently valuable records of the
Federal Government. NARA holdings consist of records that extends from
colonial times to the present. While the records are arrange according to
the filing schemes of the individual government agencies, they contain
valuable subject matter histories. The staff of the National Archives have
created finding aids and guides to these records. Five broad categories
of National Archives contain information on African Americans: civil,
military, legislative, judicial, and Presidential. The records are in
textual(paper) and non-textual (photos, film, video, maps, electronic)
format. Researchers visiting the National Archives come from a variety of
backgrounds, and the largest constituency group are genealogists.
Prologue, Quarterly of the National Archives, is the journal devoted to
promoting the records of the National Archives. Writers who are interested
in historical subjects, and who have used the records of the National
Archives publish essays in the journal. Prologue was established in 1969
to inform the American people, especially those interested in the history
of the Nation, of the valuable records of the National Archives. Volume
29, Number 2, Summer 1997, will be a special issue devoted to African
American historical research. While past issues have contained over thirty
full-length essays on African Americans, and numerous references to records
relative to African Americans, this will be the first issue exclusively
devoted to discussing Federal records and African Americans.
This issue pursued the theme "The Impact of Federal Records on African
American Historical Research" for several reasons. The history of the
relationship between African American and the Federal government is unique.
Federal records contain an enormous amount of documents that are extremely
important in the researching and writing of African-American history. They
have broaden the parameters for historical research, they enhance research
in non-federal sources. This special edition of Prologue hopes to: further
establish the usefulness of Federal records, and why they continue to be an
important source for history; meet the needs of scholars and other
researchers by identifying and improving access to records that are useful
for explorations of Afro-American history; and inform NARA's constituents,
libraries, universities, archival repositories, and the American public
that Federal records document the relationship of African Americans and the
Federal Government from colonial times to modern times. The issue will
cover Civil War and Reconstruction, labor issues, Civil Rights, Pictorial
Histories of African Americans, research aids, and genealogy. The sixteen
essays written by NARA archival staff members and scholars all will enhance
our knowledge of Federal records and Afro-American history.
To find out more information about the issue and to order it, please
contact:
http://www.nara.gov./exhall//prologue/prologue.html
Walter B. Hill, Jr.
Senior Archivist
Subject Area Specialist in Afro-American History and Federal records
<[log in to unmask]>
============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============
For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]
|