
Links to related sites
On the Fort Lewis College
campus--
Beyond Fort Lewis College--

Links to archival repositories of
primary sources worldwide:
-
UNESCO Archives Portal. Access
to over 6,000 websites of archival institutions around the world; is
also a gateway to resources related to records and archives management and to
international cooperation in this area.
- NUCMC.
National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections.
Describes archival and manuscript collections and items in research libraries,
museums, state archives, and historical societies located throughout North
America and around the world.
- NAGARA.
National Association of Government Archives and Records Administrators
links to government archives at federal, state, and local levels.
- U.S. National Archives (NARA)
Archival Research Catalog (ARC): the online catalog of NARA's nationwide holdings in the Washington, DC area,
in Regional Archives, and
in Presidential Libraries. Currently, the amount of archival materials
described in ARC represents roughly over 55% of NARA's traditional holdings
(more than 1.8 million cubic feet of holdings are described), and
more than 126,000
digital images of National Archives archival materials. Those numbers
continue to grow. Not all finding aids and images on the NARA web site
are currently described in ARC yet, but that is a goal.
Links to other archival repositories in the
Four Corners states:
Links to other museums in
the Four Corners states:
- Anasazi
Heritage Center (Dolores, Colo.)
- Animas
Museum (Durango, Colo.)
- Arches National Park
(Moab, Utah)
- Aztec Ruins National
Monument (Aztec, N.M.)
- Canyon de Chelly
National Monument (Chinle, Ariz.)
- Canyonlands
National Park (Moab, Utah)
-
Canyons of The Ancients National Monument (Montezuma and Dolores
counties, Colo.)
- Chaco Culture National
Historical Park (between Gallup and Farmington, N.M.)
- Chapin Mesa
Archaeological Museum (Mesa Verde National Park, Colo.)
- Children's Museum
of Durango (Durango, Colo.)
- Crow Canyon
Archaeological Center (Cortez, Colo.)
- Durango and Silverton
Narrow Gauge Railroad Museum (Durango, Colo.)
- Edge
of the Cedars State Park Museum (Blanding, Utah)
- Fred Harman Art
Museum (Pagosa Springs, Colo.)
- Gateway Museum &
Visitors Center (Farmington, NM)
- Hovenweep
National Monument (north and west of Cortez, Colo.)
- Museum of Western
Colorado (Grand Junction, Colo.)
- Ouray
County Museum (Ouray, Colo.)
- Salmon Ruin Museum and the San Juan County Archeological
Research Center and Library (Bloomfield, N.M.)
- San
Juan County Historical Society (Silverton, Colo.)
- Telluride
Historical Museum (Telluride, Colo.)
-
Southern Ute
Indian Cultural Center (Ignacio, Colo.)
-
Ute Indian Museum (Montrose, Colo.)
- Strater Hotel
(Durango, Colo.)
Links to Southwest Studies centers
(listed in approximate order of their founding):
- Center of Southwest Studies
established in 1964 at Fort Lewis College (Durango, Colo.).
Interim Director: Jeanne Brako. Email.
- Hulbert Center for
Southwestern Studies established in 1984 (before acquiring the Hulbert
Center in 1984, Southwest Studies became a program in 1971 and moved to a
separate office in about 1982) at Colorado College (Colorado Springs,
Colo.). Director: Victoria Levine.
Email.
- Southwest Collection/Special Collections
at Texas Tech University (Lubbock, Texas). Paul Carlson.
Email.
- The Southwest Center
established circa 1985 at The University of Arizona (Tucson, Ariz.).
Director: Joseph Wilder.
Email.
- Center for Southwest Research and
Special Collections in the Libraries at The University of New
Mexico (Albuquerque, N.M.). Director: Michael Kelly.
Email.
- Center for the Study
of the Southwest established in February of 1990 at Southwest Texas
State University (San Marcos, Texas). Director: Mark Busby.
Email.
- Center for Greater
Southwestern Studies and the History of Cartography created by the History
Department in 1991 at The University of Texas at Arlington (Arlington,
Texas). Director: Richard Francaviglia.
Email.
- William P. Clements Center for
Southwest Studies
established in the fall of 1996 at Southern Methodist University
(Dallas, Texas).
Director: David Weber. Email.
- Southwest Studies
Program established circa fall of 2000 at Northern Arizona University
(Flagstaff, Ariz.) (an academic program for a Southwest Studies minor).
Coordinator: Miguel Vasquez.
Email.
- Center for
Southwestern and Mexican Studies established circa fall of 2000 at
Austin College (Sherman, Texas). Co-Directors Light T. Cummins and
Patrick Duffey. Email.
Affiliations and memberships of
Fort Lewis College's Center of Southwest Studies:
Links to websites useful to the archival, museum,
oral history and records management professions:
Tools for
archival work
Center of Southwest Studies
Page last modified: April 04, 2008