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Articles

Selling Fashion: Realizing the Research Potential of the House of Fraser Archive, University of Glasgow Archive Services

Pages 170-184 | Published online: 19 Jul 2013

References

  • The author wishes to acknowledge the assistance of Victoria Peters, AHRC Project Archivist at Archive Services, in the writing of this article.
  • Michael Moss and Alison Turton, A Legend of Retailing: House of Fraser (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1989).
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF10, Dickins & Jones Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF51, John Barker & Co. Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF2, Fraser, Sons & Co. Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF67, John Walsh Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF165, Mawer and Collingham Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF15, Dallas’s Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF128, Army and Navy Stores Ltd.
  • University of Glasgow Archive Services, House of Fraser Archive, HF34, John Falconer & Co. Ltd.
  • Moss and Turton, A Legend of Retailing. Clare Rose has also used the Archive in her research, see Clare Rose, Making, Selling and Wearing Boys’ Clothes in Late Victorian England (Ashgate: Aldershot, 2009), and Clare Rose, ‘Buying and Selling Clothes’, in C. Rose, K. Honeyman and V. Richmond eds, Clothing, Society and Culture (London: Pickering & Chatto, forthcoming 2010).
  • See University of Glasgow Archive Services online catalogue, http://cheshire.cent.gla.ac.uk/ead/search.html [accessed 09/07/2009 ]; Access to Archives, http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/ [accessed 13/06/2009]; Scottish Archive Network, http://www.scan.org.uk [accessed 13/06/2009].
  • Sue McKemmish and Michael Piggot eds, The Records Continuum: Ian Maclean and Australian Archives First Fifty Years (Clayton, Vic: Ancora Press in association with Australian Archives, 1994); Sue McKemmish ed., Archives: Recordkeeping in Society (Wagga Wagga, NSW: Centre for Information Studies, Charles Sturt University, 2005); Richard J. Cox, Managing Records as Evidence and Information (London: Quorum Books, 2001); Association of Canadian Archivists, Archivaria; Society of Australian Archivists, Archives and Manuscripts.
  • Archivists generally work with records which have been selected for permanent preservation due to their long-term historical or evidential value. These archives are transferred to the management of an archivist when they are no longer required by the creating organization for administrative purposes. Records Managers work with an organization to manage the records required for its business activities. A Records Manager will establish policies and procedures for the management and organization of these records, including procedures for the disposition (destruction or retention) of records when they are no longer required for day-to-day administrative purposes.
  • For a description of the Australian system of archival cataloguing, see L. Richmond and V. Peters, ‘Divided No More: A Descriptive Approach to the Record-Keeping Continuum’, in A. Tough and M. Moss eds, Record Keeping in a Hybrid Environment: Managing the Creation, Use, Preservation and Disposal of Unpublished Information Objects in Context (Oxford: Chandos Publishing, 2006).
  • International Council on Archives, General International Standard for Archival Description, Second edition (Ottawa: ICA, 2000); International Council on Archives, International Standard Archival Authority Records for Corporate Bodies, Persons and Families (Paris: ICA, 2004); International Council on Archives, International Standard for Describing Function, First edition (Paris: ICA, 2008).
  • The National Archives, ‘Access to Archives’, http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/ [accessed 13/06/2009 ]; Scottish Archive Network, http://www.scan.org.uk [accessed 13/06/2009].
  • The National Archives, ‘Your Archives’, http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk [accessed 13/06/2009 ].
  • The House of Fraser Archive online finding aid will be accessible through the University of Glasgow Archive Services website, http://www.gla.ac.uk/ archives [accessed 13/06/2009 ].
  • Gateway to the Archives of Scottish Higher Education, http://www.gashe.ac.uk [accessed 13/06/2009 ].
  • UK Archival Thesaurus, http://www.ukat.org.uk [accessed 13/06/2009 ], Library of Congress, ‘Thesaurus of Graphic Materials’, http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/tgm1/ [accessed 13/06/2009].

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