Citing documents from archival sources requires elements that vary from a published work. Unpublished works may include:
The following elements may be required regardless of the citation style used and should be recorded during archival research:
Examples using Turabian (Chicago) Style
Mills Quick Reference, 1st floor Z 253.C53 2003
Citations: Note and Bibliography
The elements to include for note and bibliographic citations vary. For note citations, the main element is usually a specific item (letter, diary, memo, etc.) and is cited first. In a bibliography, the main element is usually the collection in which the specific item can be found, the author(s) of the items in the collection, or the depository for the collection. Specific items are not used in a bibliography unless only one item from a collection is cited (Turabian Manual, 2007).
Letter: Footnote or Endnote Citation
Clara H. Abey to Johnson, 14 December 1912, box 1, file 1, Pauline Johnson fonds, William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, McMaster University Library (Given names may be omitted if the identities of sender and recipient are clear from the text).
Letters: Bibliography Citation
Clara H. Abey fonds. William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, McMaster University Library.
Examples using the MLA Style
Mills Quick Reference, 1st floor LB 2369 .T8 2007
Citations: Works Cited
The elements to include depend on the format of the item being cited. Letters, diaries, manuscripts and typescripts are cited differently. Please consult the MLA style guide for more detailed examples than those provided below.
Diary
Molony, William O’Sullivan. Diary. 1913-1914. MS numbered album 22, World War, 1914-1918
collection. William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, McMaster University
Library.
Manuscript
Laurence, Margaret. The Stone Angel. 1964. TS box 1, files 1-3, Margaret Laurence fonds.
William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, McMaster University Library.
For complete citation instructions, please consult the appropriate manual in the Quick Reference section of Mills Library or visit the Citation and Style Guides page.
*What is a fonds? A fonds is a term used to refer to all of the archives of a common provenance or source. For example, the ‘Margaret Laurence fonds’ is another way of saying ‘Margaret Laurence archives’.