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FYS 178 Honors: The French Broad River and The Appalachian Trail: Home

Your one-stop guide to help facilitate your Archival research and create your Honors projects.

What You are Using in Special Collections

For this class you will get to choose from the following collections to complete your projects:

1. The Bill and Alice Hart Collection

2. The Carolina Mountain Club Collection

3. The Upper French Broad Defense Association Collection

4. Riverlink Collection

Special Collections & Archives Access Fall 2023

  • Special Collections is open by appointment; please email to reserve a time; we are generally open for appointments M-Th from 9-4.
  • Phones and cameras without flash are allowed for taking pictures or scans of any Special Collections materials.
  • Please do not bring food or drink with you to Special Collections.

Please contact us to make an appointment for the Reading Room or for a Virtual Appointment.

(828)251-6645 or email us at speccoll@unca.edu

 

Using Special Collections

What are Special Collections?

Ramsey Library's Special Collections contain a variety of primary materials that document the history and culture of Asheville and Western North Carolina.  Materials include manuscript collections, photographs, maps, oral histories, company records, church and synagogue records, scrapbooks, and other materials. A list of collections available for research is available on the Home Page for Special Collections.

Special Collections also includes rare and small-press books and pamphlets with an emphasis on Asheville and the surrounding region.

How Do I Use Special Collections and Archives?

What can I expect to find in an Archive?

  • Archives and special collections can contain manuscript collections, personal papers, business records, photograph collections, oral histories, maps, audio and video recordings, rare books and periodicals, university and/or corporate records, and other sources. Because archives and special collections contain unique materials, each archive and special collection has its own distinct set of materials. Often an archive has a particular collection focus or concentration - for instance, UNCA's Special Collections concentrates on collecting materials related to Asheville and Western North Carolina, but there are exceptions to this general rule. For instance, we have a lot of materials related to World War I.

What is a "finding aid," and how do I use it?

  • Finding aids describe what you can expect to find in a collection. Finding aids will include such information as:
    • the title of the collection
    • a description of what's in the collection
    • information about the person or organization who created the collection
    • citation information
    • how big the collection is (sometimes called "extent" and stated in linear or cubic feet)
    • a list of what is in each box in the collection (sometimes called "container list" or "collection inventory")
  • Here's an example of a finding aid, in this instance for the Walter Julius Damtoft Collection in UNCA's Special Collections.
    • Finding aids can look different and have variations on the types of information in them. This is another, older finding aid for the Upper French Broad Defense Association from UNCA's Special Collection. While it looks different, it still has the same basic information.

Special Collections and Assistant Archivist

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Ashley McGhee Whittle
Contact:
205C Ramsey Library, CPO #1500
UNC Asheville
One University Heights
Asheville, NC 28804
(828)251-6645
Website