History in the Making: Establishing an Institutional Archive at The College of The Bahamas:

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15362/ijbs.v21i1.252

Keywords:

Archives - Bahamas,

Abstract

As the College of The Bahamas transitions to a university, an institutional archive housing records of legal, administrative, financial, educational, cultural, and historical significance has been formally established. The COB Institutional Archive will collect and preserve records and documents deemed to have permanent value, thereby making them accessible for future researchers. The archive, presently located in the Harry C. Moore Library Special Collections area, will include not only institutional records, manuscripts and documents but also College catalogues and other published ephemera.

Author Biography

Antoinette Seymour, The College of the Bahamas

Archivist Libraries and Instructional Media Services

References

College of The Bahamas. (2014). Master plan final review [Powerpoint presentation]. HKS Architects. https://ufdc.ufl.edu/l/AA00086688/00001

College of The Bahamas. (2013, July 11). PM: Oral and public history institute critical to country's future [Press release]. http://www.cob.edu.bs/News/Archive/FDT launch.php

Purcell, A. D. (2012). Academic archives: Managing the next generation of college and university archives, records and special collections. Neal-Schuman.

Walker, B. L., & Ballance, V. C. (2015). Forty years of development: Library services at the College of The Bahamas. International Journal of Bahamian Studies, 20(2), 41-47. https://doi.org/10.15362/ijbs.v20i2.232

Wooldridge, B., Taylor, L., & Sullivan, M. (2009). Managing an open access, multi- institutional, international digital library: The Digital Library of the Caribbean. Resource Sharing & Information Networks, 20(1-2), 35-44. https://doi.org/ 10.1080/07377790903014534

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Published

2015-07-02

How to Cite

Seymour, A. (2015). History in the Making: Establishing an Institutional Archive at The College of The Bahamas:. International Journal of Bahamian Studies, 21(1), 4–6. https://doi.org/10.15362/ijbs.v21i1.252