Meet the Archivists 2014: using business records for research
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Transcript of Meet the Archivists 2014: using business records for research
Using Business Archive CollectionsKiara King, Ballast Trust Archivist
What are Business Archives?
Business archives are the historical records of for profit businesses, business-related bodies and businessmen and women.
Why are they important?
As Scotland’s businesses and industries were and are crucial in shaping its economic and social development, so business archives naturally have a wider value to society. They can be found in most archive repositories.
Why do businesses keep archives?
They provide:
• Information value
• Evidence and proof of business transactions
• Support for legal requirements and to defend intellectual property
• A work tool to managing resources and staff
• Inspiration and documentation of product innovations
• Confidence in a brand and customer loyalty
Records and archives are a business tool
By keeping archives, businesses capture today’s experience, knowledge and business
know-how for future use.
Why do we keep businesses archives?
Users of business archives
Internal
Legal
Marketing
PR
Corporate Social Responsibility
Design & production
External
Researchers
•Corporate histories
•Social histories
•Economic histories
Family historians
Local historians
Press
Design inspiration
Corporate Records
• Memoranda and Articles of Association
• Minute books
• Share registers
• Letter books
Financial Records
• Annual reports and accounts
• Balance sheets
• Account books
• Ledgers
Types of records found in business archives
Production Records• Technical plans/drawings• Models/prototypes
Employee Records• Staff files• Accident books• In-house magazines
Marketing & Sales Records• Advertisements• Sales ledgers• Packaging
How to start: identifying possible sources
Online resourcesAll of these links are available at http://www.scottisharchives.org.uk/businessarchivesOnline catalogues
• www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra is now discovery http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/
• www.nas.gov.uk/
• www.archiveshub.ac.uk
• www.scan.org.uk (Scotland)
• www.a2a.org.uk (England & Wales)
• http://ssa.nls.uk/ (film archives)
• www.rcahms.ac.uk
Guides
• http://www.abh-net.org/archives.html
• http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/records/research-guides/business-history.htm
• http://www.neha.nl/w3vl/unitedkingdom.html
Using archive catalogues
• Different types for levels of description
• Collection level descriptions
– Collection guides
– Subject based source lists and guides
• Item or piece level descriptions
– Catalogues (online, word lists, paper copies)
Arrangement
• Records only make sense in context of the archive as a whole and in context of the objects and activities of creating organization
• Arrangement - to reveal the structure of the archive - provenance and original order
• Not always possible - sometimes classification is necessary
Description
Provides user and manager of archives with information on:• Context of records• Physical characteristics• Intellectual content
Offers access points for the archives
Description is a surrogate for the original record
Archives description is hierarchical and goes from general to specific (macro to micro)
• Information given at highest level possible• Descriptive levels
• Fonds (collection)• Series (class)• File (basic unit of handling)• Item (piece)
Finding archives – Discovery (formerly NRA)
Discovery search result
Discovery search filter by creators
Discovery search filter by business
Discovery result for Harrison McGregor & Guest Ltd
Discovery result for Harrison McGregor & Guest Ltd
Remember: things to consider
Context• Individual records cannot be viewed in isolation
• Always look at the archive catalogue for similar or related material and secondary sources
• What organisation/business created this record?
• Why was it created? Is it a true record of the facts?
Format• We make assumptions about documents without thinking
• Format points to the type of information held within the record: printed hand-written or annotated
Content• Legible or illegible?
• Why was this document created? By whom and for whom?
• What is the informational content?
See how business archives and other archives promote themselves:@ballasttrust = Understanding technical records since 1987! We work with business archives - processing
records of shipbuilding, locomotive & engineering industries mainly.
@Design_Archives = Eighteen archives of British and international industrial and communication design at the Faculty of Arts University of Brighton
@the_abh = Tweets for the Association of Business Historians dont necessarily reflect the views of the council or membership. RTs = interesting not endorsement #bizhis
@POHeritage = P&O Heritage Collection exists to preserve and celebrate the maritime history and collections of one of the best known shipping companies in the world.
@CoopArchive = Co-operative Archive : Archive repository based in Manchester, UK for the records of the co-operative movement
@coke_archives = The Coke Archives' Twitter feed updated by our Archivists. Ask us history, pop culture, or collectors questions
@RBS_Archives = History and heritage information from The Royal Bank of Scotland Group's Archives team. They also run @JohnoftheBank Tweets from John Campbell an18th century banker tweeting events of the 1745 Jacobite siege of Edinburgh in real time. Drawn from his diary.
List of business archives on twitter here https://twitter.com/i/#!/BallastTrust/business-archives
Business Archives on Twitter
Get in touch
Business Archives Council of Scotland
www.gla.ac.uk/archives/bacs/
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @ballasttrust