The development of women’s history as a vibrant field of study had a profound effect on the archival profession across the United States. Drawing on her experience as a historian of Virginia women and her work during the past 40 years in the archival collections of the Library of Virginia, Sandra Gioia Treadway will describe the transformations in both fields that she has witnessed during her career. She will reflect on the great strides that archival repositories in Virginia have made in preserving the record of women’s lives and activism while looking ahead to the challenges that remain. Treadway has served as Librarian of Virginia since July 2007, overseeing the Library’s comprehensive collection of print and manuscript materials do...
This article examines the important role that continued collection and preservation of women’s histo...
The digital collections developed by Middle Tennessee State University\u27s Walker Library and its p...
Color page proofs for a tri-fold brochure to introduce the Invisible History Project: Mississippi to...
The field of women???s history emerged and developed through the joint efforts of scholars, librari...
This panel will discuss the creation and educational uses of the Lycoming County Women\u27s History ...
In December 1969 at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association in Washington D.C. wom...
Despite calls for diversity and minority participation in library and information science (LIS) and ...
Edited by Kathleen A. McHugh, Brenda Johnson-Grau,and Ben Raphael Sher, it contains short essays by ...
How can library and archives professionals work with digital humanities researchers to provide a mor...
Program for the 50th anniversary MWWC symposium Women in the Archives: Using Archival Collections in...
In the introduction to the NWSA Convention program, the Convention Coordinators refer to the necessi...
This thesis focuses on the continued activism in the YWCA, the Equal Suffrage League and the League ...
The publication of the first volumes of Notable American Women in 1971 was a watershed event in wome...
Included in this issue: Celebrating Women’s History; International Women’s Day: Acknowledging the co...
The availability of primary sources is vital for any honest history research and it has been the lac...
This article examines the important role that continued collection and preservation of women’s histo...
The digital collections developed by Middle Tennessee State University\u27s Walker Library and its p...
Color page proofs for a tri-fold brochure to introduce the Invisible History Project: Mississippi to...
The field of women???s history emerged and developed through the joint efforts of scholars, librari...
This panel will discuss the creation and educational uses of the Lycoming County Women\u27s History ...
In December 1969 at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association in Washington D.C. wom...
Despite calls for diversity and minority participation in library and information science (LIS) and ...
Edited by Kathleen A. McHugh, Brenda Johnson-Grau,and Ben Raphael Sher, it contains short essays by ...
How can library and archives professionals work with digital humanities researchers to provide a mor...
Program for the 50th anniversary MWWC symposium Women in the Archives: Using Archival Collections in...
In the introduction to the NWSA Convention program, the Convention Coordinators refer to the necessi...
This thesis focuses on the continued activism in the YWCA, the Equal Suffrage League and the League ...
The publication of the first volumes of Notable American Women in 1971 was a watershed event in wome...
Included in this issue: Celebrating Women’s History; International Women’s Day: Acknowledging the co...
The availability of primary sources is vital for any honest history research and it has been the lac...
This article examines the important role that continued collection and preservation of women’s histo...
The digital collections developed by Middle Tennessee State University\u27s Walker Library and its p...
Color page proofs for a tri-fold brochure to introduce the Invisible History Project: Mississippi to...