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Guide to Smithsonian Institution Archives, Libraries & Special Collections

The Megatherium Club, a group of young naturalists who often collected for the Smithsonian during the mid-nineteenth century. Standing left, Robert Kennicott; standing right, Henry Ulke; seated left, William Stimpson;seated right, Henry Bryant, circa 1850s.

Archives Division
Smithsonian Institution Archives

Capital Gallery Building
Suite 3000
600 Maryland Ave, SW
P.O. Box 37012  MRC 507
Washington, DC 20013-7012

202.633.5870
202.633-5927 fax

osiaref@si.edu
siarchives.si.edu

Hours
Monday – Friday
9am to 5pm
Appointment
Recommended

Archives Division

The Archives Division collects, preserves, and makes available the official records of the Smithsonian Institution, the papers of Smithsonian scholars and other staff members, and the records of related professional organizations. The Division provides reference services to the general public and to staff of the Smithsonian Institution. It carries out a program of records management for Smithsonian offices, advising them on the disposition of records and pertinent documentary materials, and operates a records center for the storage of temporary records.

  Highlights: The Archives maintains over 25,000 cubic feet of holdings, which include institutional records, personal papers, and special collections. Official records provide a comprehensive history of the development and activities of the Smithsonian; its role in 19th century American science, especially natural history; Smithsonian involvement with cultural and social issues; and the development of museums as cultural institutions. Holdings include the records of the following current and former Smithsonian museums and bureaus: Anacostia Museum, Archives of American Art, Cooper-Hewitt/ National Design Museum, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, National Air and Space Museum, National Museum of African Art, National Museum of American History, National Museum of Natural History, National Portrait Gallery, National Zoological Park, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and the United States National Museum.

A broad range of Smithsonian special programs and projects are also documented in the collections including the Smithsonian Institution-Peace Corps Environmental Program, the International and Environmental Programs, the Office of Program Support (documenting international exhibitions including the Sao Paulo and Venice Biennials), the International Exchange Service, and the International Whaling Conference and International Whaling Commission.

In addition, the Archives maintains the personal papers of Smithsonian scientists and historians; papers of scholars and researchers affiliated with the Institution; and records of professional organizations. Highlights include the papers of past Smithsonian secretaries, such as Joseph Henry, Spencer F. Baird, and Charles D. Walcott; the papers of Riccardo Giacconi, Farouk El-Baz, William H. Dall, George Brown Goode, Joseph H. Hirshhorn, Fielding B. Meek, and Fred L. Whipple; special collections such as the Harriman Alaska Expedition Collection, field reports of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Vail Telegraph Collection; and the records of the American Association of Museums, the American Ornithologists Union, the History of Science Society, the Museum Computer Network, the National Institute, the Society of Systematic Zoology, the Society of American Mammalogists, the Smithsonian Science Information Exchange, and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

  Automated indices and collection-level descriptions are available to more than 1,100 collections in the Archives to assist in reference and information retrieval. SIA uses SIRIS (www.siris.si.edu) to report collections that are available for research.  SIA also maintains a website that includes finding aids to collections, virtual exhibitions, records guidance, and details regarding location, access and use.

Institutional History Division
Capital Gallery Building
Suite 3000
600 Maryland Ave, SW
P.O. Box 37012  MRC 507
Washington, DC 20013-7012

202.633.5910
202.633-5927 fax

hensonp@si.edu
siarchives.si.edu/sia/ihd.html

Hours
Monday - Friday
9am to 5pm
Appointment Required

Metro Stop: L'Enfant Plaza

Institutional History Division

  Highlights: The IHD maintains and prepares finding aids to the Smithsonian Institution Oral History Collection and Videohistory Collection. The IHD maintains several databases on the history of the Smithsonian, including an annotated bibliography on the history of the Smithsonian, an annotated bibliography of legal documents relating to the Smithsonian, a chronology of major events in the history of the Smithsonian, and a database providing access to images documenting the history of the Smithsonian. These databases are available through SIRIS. The IHD also maintains special finding aids on such varied topics as the history of employees at the Smithsonian, especially African-Americans and women, Latin American natural history, oceanography, systematics and a database on the Board of Regents. The IHD provides research assistance to scholars and Smithsonian officials conducting research on the history of the Smithsonian and provides advice on oral history and videohistory methods.

  The Joseph Henry Papers Project, a unit within the Institutional History Division, was established in 1967 to gather, edit, analyze, and publish the manuscripts of Joseph Henry (1797-1878), a pioneer American physicist and the first Secretary of the Smithsonian, in eleven letterpress volumes. It also provides reference services to the public and to Smithsonian staff members concerning the life of Henry, the early history of the Smithsonian, and the development of American science during the mid-nineteenth century. JHPP holdings include copies of approximately ninety thousand manuscripts from over three hundred depositories. Information regarding these manuscripts has been entered into a database at the JHPP. In addition, the JHPP curates the Bell-Henry Library, which contains the scientific library of Alexander Graham Bell and the personal library of Henry.

The JHPP website can be viewed at http://siarchives.si.edu/history/jhp/jhenry.html