Methods & Sources of Historical Research
Notes from a course on methods and sources of historical research at IHR, 11 July 2016 - 15 July 2016
Interspersed by comments and notes which are mine own (DBBD!) and may or may not be representative of IHR views on the matter....
Contents
DAY 1
The Nature of Archives and Primary Source Material
- Notion of difference between primary and secondary sources... but its quite fuzzy
- Primary = unmediated access to past (not processed by another mind)
- Newspapers = a report of what has been told. testimonies are primary but the reporter has chewed thru the material.
- Historians make statements about things which should be believed - by people who don't have access to primary sources
- Having looked at the primary sources = is the reason why people listen to historians
- Does digitization undermine the authority of the historian who derives his/her authority on basis on having the ability to find the primary source material? - should not be - because the historian should define his/her role based on his/her ability to contextualise
- Primary sources tend to be gathered and held in institutions called archives. historians tend to be interested in written material. others look at other types of materials , objects, material culture, etc.
- archive - gatekeepers? destroyed by organisations because deemed not of interest?
- uk? governments destroy 90%? of records - horrifying but also liberating
- previously history was dead white male europeans, now there is a broadening of history
- an archive is a set of staff to administer a procedure of cataloguing and ordering
- the diff between archival and library catalogue is that libraries have certain systems which attempt to divide human knowledge into recognisable chunks
- archive - institutional procedure orders it rather the dewey
- archive - not published material
- library - published
- brick and mortar reality to an archive (not pure virtual)
- talking about it in relation to organisation / but also there is question of power of access / gatekeeper
- point is that we will need to apply a different method of accessing / searching when using archives (compared to libraries) as they are accessed differently
- surrogacy: what is an original? today we like copies, we think of them as being useful.
- digitisation processes
- money, power, etc
- archives -> state / nation building --> even church was doing this
- newspapers - pdf ocr - things missed out: compositor (context of what was around this article, what else would be seen by a real reader of newspaper with many articles), marginalia, emphasis, etc
- Qn to ponder: what is a public record?
Public Records
- public interest, clearly important, to governments, related to the public affairs
- https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-freedom-of-information/what-is-the-foi-act/
- http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/information-management/legislation/public-records-act/
- Public Records - "extremely accurate and almost valueless" (as a definition) - it is basically defined by the Public Records Acts
- http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/
- 5 year weeding through materials - if they are useful keep, if not useful destroy - a system of reviews / 25 year second weed of material --> designated places of public deposit (local record offices) - see: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/archives-sector/our-archives-sector-role/legislation/approved-places-of-deposit/ (eg: records of surrey might be kept in surrey)
- WHY ARE MOST BOAT RECORDS AT Greenwich , National Maritime Museum? - cos boat stuff seems more suitable there
- WHY IS INDIA OFFICE RECORDS IN BL: Kew rationale that anything outside of English, Latin, French - they have no specialisation, so they gave it to British Library.
National Archives Research Guides
GUIDES! we have to think of it in terms of records being scattered to the wind and for various reasons being held at different places and we have to find out where these archives might be kept. Never give up hope!
- How to look for: Abbreviations in merchant seamen’s records (DECODED!) - http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/abbreviations-merchant-seamens-records/
- How to look for: Crew lists and agreements and log books of merchant ships 1747-1860 - http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/crew-lists-agreements-log-books-merchant-ships-1747-1860/
- Great list of other maritime history records held by other archives: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/maritime-history-records-held-by-other-archives/
- Royal Museums Greenwich / National Maritime Museum - http://collections.rmg.co.uk/archive.html#!asearch
- http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/advanced-search
TNA: Searching Example
What if i want to find something about Boots the chemist? What would be the thought process of how to start searching?...
- would they be historically minded and keep their own archive?
- would it be at wellcome collection cos its medical/pharma?
- is there a chemist trade union and do they have a collection?
- business archives council for business archives?
National Register of Archives
National Register of Archives (NRA) - a list of where to find records
Discovery at TNA is a combination of:
- NRA, the National Register of Archives
- ARCHON, directory of archives
- A2A, Access to Archives
- MDR, Manorial documents register
But how do we access this underlying database that is NRA?
Do note to use the Creator option.
Introduction to the Institute of Historical Research
- IHR: http://www.history.ac.uk/
- The IHR is one of 9 member institutes of the SAS - http://www.sas.ac.uk/
- Founded 1921 by historian of tudor politics, a. f. pollard.
- mission is to promote /facilitate study of history
- academic research centres including - victoria county history - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_County_History - BIG RED BOOK
- to request something frm ihr closed stack: ihr.library@sas.ac.uk
- there's a history day 15 nov - http://historycollections.blogs.sas.ac.uk/
Victoria County History
- "Founded in 1899 and dedicated to Queen Victoria, the VCH is an encyclopaedic record of England’s places and people from earliest times to the present day. It is without doubt the greatest publishing project in English local history"
- http://www.victoriacountyhistory.ac.uk/counties
- http://www.victoriacountyhistory.ac.uk/publications-projects/redbooks
- IHR Digital: http://www.history.ac.uk/digital
- http://www.victoriacountyhistory.ac.uk/news/learn-about-local-history-ihrvch-summer-day-school
- http://www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/
Also see: COPAC
- COPAC: http://copac.jisc.ac.uk/about/libraries/ulrls.html
- Copac exposes rare and unique research material by bringing together the catalogues of c.90 major UK and Irish libraries (and growing).
Interesting libraries in the area
- Institute of Archaeology (UCL)
- Library of SOAS
- Warburg
- Heythrop College Library (for religious history)
- Check out SCONUL (when i'm in school again....)
Also see: warburg
- WARBURG: http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/
Senate House Library
- SEE Special collections - http://www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/our-collections/special-collections - access i think is free for non-instituitional researchers
- The Institute of Commonwealth Studies, founded in 1949, is the only postgraduate academic institution in the United Kingdom devoted to the study of the Commonwealth.
- Senate House Library contact: jordan.landes@london.ac.uk
Visiting Archives
- BRITAIN vs REST OF WORLD / Interesting locations of Scottish and Irish records - may be scattered due to politics - you are likely to spend time in several places
- Going into british imperial holdings - the decolonisation moment. in most cases there was a transfer of records or archival system. but
- USEFUL GUIDE FROM SOAS: https://www.soas.ac.uk/library/archives/specialist-guides/skills/file95710.pdf
"There is currently no single, unified online catalogue for searching across all archive collections in the UK..." :'-(
- useful link from this guide - http://www.asiamap.ac.uk/index.php
- Singapore in UKIRA - http://www.asiamap.ac.uk/collections/collection.php?ID=332&Browse=Region&Region=4
- MAJOR TIP: GET A WELLCOME LIBRARY CARD - great online resources
- France - Biblotheque Nationale
- Germany - many records lost due to berlin bombing, decentralised records due to federal govt system
- CONCLUSION: IT VARIES ACROSS THE WORLD
- papers vs material culture collections such as the ones at LAARC: material not usable by nonspecialist.
- http://archive.museumoflondon.org.uk/laarc/catalogue/
- for that reason they tend not to have public facing catalogues as their material would anyway require specialists to handle or contextualise them
- for maps, plans, ordnance survey - check BL first
Day 1 - Random thoughts
- DEBBIE'S NOTES: copies of letters, drafted until perfect.... the originals i was so excited about are they original?
- D.J. Cohen et al., ‘Interchange: The Promise of Digital History’, The Journal of American History, 95/2 (Sep., 2008), pp. 452-491
- L. Putnam, ‘The Transnational and the Text-Searchable: Digitized Sources and the Shadows They Cast’, American Historical Review, (April 2016), pp. 376-402.
Thinking about the origins of Singapore's National Archives
- how similar is it to british system?
- From NAS website http://www.nas.gov.sg/nas/AboutUs/History.aspx: While the establishment of the National Archives of Singapore (NAS) has a relatively short history, it can trace its roots back to the creation of the post of Archivist within the Raffles Museum and Library in 1938. Then, Tan Soo Chye was appointed to trace, record, organise and preserve the historical colonial records and to perform research and administrative work spanning both the library and museum. In 1967, the National Archives and Records Centre Act was passed, and NAS was established the following year in 1968. In 1993, NAS together with the National Museum came under the management of the National Heritage Board. Due to a reorganisation of government ministries and portfolios, the NAS has since been transferred to become an institution under the National Library Board on 28 March 2013.