A finding aid is a resource that contains contextual and structural information about a collection of records within an archive.
Finding aids place archival resources in context by including information about the collection, such as:
Archives are materials created or received by a person or organization in the conduct of their affairs and preserved because of the enduring value of the information they contain or as evidence of the functions and responsibilities of their creator.
Typically, archival collections are described from general to specific, starting with the whole (collection), then proceeding to the components (series, subseries, folders, and items [within the folders]).
A place where things can be stored and maintained, including any type of organization that holds documents, including business, institutional, government archives, and manuscript collections. Current Repositories in College of Charleston are:
A set of archival or manuscript materials that share the same provenance or were created in the same administrative unit.
A group of similar records that are arranged according to a filing system and that are related as the result of being created, received, or used in the same activity.
A body of documents within a series readily distinguished from the whole by filing arrangement, type, form, or content.
A group of documents related by use or topic, typically housed in a folder (or a group of folders for a large file).
Extent
A description of the physical amount of material described.
Finding aids in College of Charleston's ArchivesSpace are divided into three sections:
Here are a few terms that you will encounter while browsing in ArchivesSpace:
Where a user can access the bulk of information about the intellectual and physical characteristics of archival materials, as well as information about creators and topics.
The components of a Resource Record that correspond to various levels of archival description, such as the "Series", "File", or "Item" levels. Archival objects can be intellectual entities, such as "Series" and "Sub-Series", or the archival materials, themselves, described at the "File" or "Item" level.
Used for both born-digital and digitized materials and includes the metadata record, content file(s), and a link or digital wrapper.
An Identification number assigned to resource, accession, and digital object records that uniquely identifies the object within the repository. This is also known as the Collection Number.
Please contact Special Collections or the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture for help finding collection material and to make appointments to access material.
Special Collections will respond to questions Monday through Friday, 9:00 AM – 4:00 PM.
The Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture will respond to questions Monday through Friday, 10:00 AM - 4:30 PM.
We recognize that our finding aids and catalog records may contain offensive or harmful language. To learn more, read our statement on language in archival and library catalogs.