Poorly Described Folders and Human Hair: Processing Report with ALUA Archivist Shae Rafferty

EPISODE · Apr 16, 2020 · 14 MIN

Poorly Described Folders and Human Hair: Processing Report with ALUA Archivist Shae Rafferty

from Tales from the Reuther Library · host Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University

Shae Rafferty, the Reuther Library’s Labor and Urban Affairs Archivist, explains what happens behind the scenes to get donated collections ready for researchers. She discusses how collections are prioritized for processing, or organizing and describing them to make it easier for researchers to find the information they’re looking for. Rafferty describes some of the memorable things she has found in the collections she has processed, both pleasant (scrapbooks made by friends and Detroit theater ushers in the early 1900s) and unpleasant (human hair). She also recalls finding a deeply important but largely forgotten log of 1940s racial incidents in a folder unhelpfully titled, “Barometer Report,” emphasizing how important it is for archivists to re-evaluate and re-describe the contents of collections to make them more findable for researchers. Related Collections Detroit Commission on Community Relations (DCCR) / Human Rights Department Records Lyrick Club Records Episode Credits Producers: Dan Golodner and Troy Eller English Host: Dan Golodner Interviewee: Shae Rafferty Sound: Troy Eller English With support from the Reuther Podcast Collective: Bart Bealmear, Elizabeth Clemens, Meghan Courtney, Troy Eller English, Dan Golodner, Paul Neirink, and Mary Wallace

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Poorly Described Folders and Human Hair: Processing Report with ALUA Archivist Shae Rafferty

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