LCCN, August 27, 2013

ISSN 2324-6464

 

About the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections

By Peter Goodman

NUCMC Cataloger

Cooperative and Instructional Programs Division

 

The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections (NUCMC) is a
free-of-charge cooperative cataloging program operated since 1959 by the
Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.  NUCMC catalogers create online
records in OCLC WorldCat on behalf of eligible archival repositories
throughout the United States. As of 2013, catalog records have been created
describing approximately 130,000 collections in about 1,800 repositories.

 

As one of two NUCMC catalogers, I work with a variety of repositories
(minority, special focus, religious, as well as state and local
institutions) in 17 states. I maintain relationships with the repositories,
which includes intake of new collections, asking questions as needed to
catalog the material, and sending out finished records to the repositories.
Knowledge of cataloging and authority control is essential for proper
description of the collections.

 

During a typical day, I use paper finding aids as well as web-based
information to create MARC records which are input directly into the OCLC
WorldCat database. The completed records are available for researchers who
can search either the local NUCMC "gateway" or OCLC's ArchiveGrid.  Based
upon what they learn from the description of a collection in the
NUCMC-supplied catalog record, the researcher can contact the repository and
arrange to look at the material he or she needs, either in person or via
facsimile. 

 

I often conduct research online and in print resources to find information
about names, places, dates, and other pertinent information to aid me in
cataloging the collections. For example, I may have the papers of John Smith
located at the Maine Historical Society. But which John Smith is he? Often,
the repository will provide dates or other identifying information, but
sometimes the clues are insufficient and I will do an online search to help
me distinguish among the various John Smiths who may be the author or
subject of the collection. Once I have that information, I can create
authorized headings which will be inserted into the MARC record. The rest of
the cataloging then follows: adding the scope note (the heart of the
record--it tells the user what is contained in the collection), subject
headings related to the collection, and other data that help the user locate
the collection within the repository.

 

One of the repositories with which I work closely is the Moorland-Spingarn
Research Center at Howard University here in Washington, D.C. This is a rich
resource for African American history from the perspective of an important
HBCU, which stands for Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Among
the collections at Moorland-Spingarn is a large group of oral histories
recorded in the 1960s and 1970s covering the civil rights movement. A subset
of these oral histories concerns the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the
impact of that legislation on the men and women who shaped the civil rights
movement. The recent news regarding the Supreme Court decision about the Act
led me to prioritize the cataloging of those oral histories and make the
records available to researchers around the country. The people interviewed
include Rosa Parks, Vernon Jordan, Robert Kastenmeier, Hubert Humphrey,
Jacob Javits, and many others, including several Members of Congress.

 

Working with NUCMC materials is challenging but also rewarding. I hope this
brief summary provides you with a good overview of the important work NUCMC
accomplishes for the U.S. archival community and researchers who use
archives and primary source material. For more information about NUCMC,
please visit: 

 

http://www.loc.gov/coll/nucmc/

 

Melanie Polutta

Library of Congress

LCCN Editor

 

 

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