How-to guide for making a gift to Special Collections
Information to provide when proposing a donation
When contacting Special Collections about a potential donation, it is helpful to provide the following information by email to the Special Collections Archivist. If you are unable to provide all these details, please tell us what you can about your proposed gift.
Books and other published items
When proposing books or other published materials for donation, please provide a list detailing the title, author, publisher, date and place of publication, and condition note for each book. This list provides crucial information about the donation and allows the Library to properly assess the materials. We also ask that you provide a short note about how you came to own the materials (for instance, were the documents purchased, inherited, or found?).
Archival materials
When proposing archival materials for donation, please provide the following information in order to help us understand what types of materials are in the archive and how, when, and why they were produced.
Name of the creator
- Let us know who created or compiled the records. This could be one or more individuals, a family, or an organization. Provide us with the full name(s) of the creator(s), if known.
Administrative or biographical history
- For archives created by an individual, provide their date of birth, date of death (if applicable), education history (schools attended and degrees achieved), and a brief summary of their professional experience.
- For archives created by organizations, provide the date the organization was established, date of dissolution (if applicable), and a summary of the organization’s mission, activities, and notable projects.
- For family archives, provide a brief family history. If a family tree is available, this can also be provided for additional context.
Size of the donation
- Is it a small donation or a large one? Help us understand how much material you are hoping to donate by providing an estimated size of the gift. This estimate can be very general (i.e. number of boxes) or more specific (i.e. cm of textual records; number of photographs; number of audio recordings, etc.).
Types of records
- Let us know what types of records are included in the archive. These records might be text on paper or in other analog formats, or they might be born digital or digitized.
- While every archive is different, the archive of an individual or family might include correspondence, journals, diaries, photographs, slides, negatives, maps, drawings, and audio and video recordings, among other documents.
- The archive of an organization might include correspondence, calendars, certificates, ledgers, meeting minutes and agenda, reports, newsletters, job postings, financial documents, and human resources files, among many other types of records.
Dates
- When were the records created? While it can be challenging to determine when all the documents in an archive were created, please provide us with an approximate date range for the materials in question. For example: materials in this archive were created between 1942 and 1968; the materials in this archive were created and compiled in the 1940s and 1950s.
Topics covered and context
- Please provide a brief description of the topics covered in the archive. This does not have to be an exhaustive list; it is simply to allow us to better understand the records and the stories they might tell.
- If known, tell us a bit about how the records were created, accumulated and stored.
- If the records were created by an organization, please tell us about what functions and activities are documented in the records.
Provenance
- Tell us a bit about the provenance of the records in the archive, including a brief overview of how you came to have the materials (for example, are you the creator, a family member or an employee? Did you purchase the records? Inherit them?). Please also provide a note about how long you have been in possession of the records