North Dakota Archives and Libraries: Difference between revisions

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[https://library.ndsu.edu/ndsuarchives/institute-regional-studies-collections North Dakota State University Libraries]<br>P.O. Box 5599<br>Fargo, ND 58105-5599<br>Phone: (701) 231-8914<br>[https://library.ndsu.edu/ Website]<br>[mailto:ndsu.archives@ndsu.edu/ Email]<br><br>  
[https://library.ndsu.edu/ndsuarchives/institute-regional-studies-collections North Dakota State University Libraries]<br>P.O. Box 5599<br>Fargo, ND 58105-5599<br>Phone: (701) 231-8914<br>[https://library.ndsu.edu/ Website]<br>[mailto:ndsu.archives@ndsu.edu/ Email]<br><br>  
The manuscript collecting program of the Institute for Regional Studies Archives preserves personal papers and organization records of enduring historic value to support the research needs of undergraduates, graduate students, faculty and other scholars at NDSU and beyond. The uniqueness and strength of the Institute manuscripts lies in its extensive holdings of more than 1,200 collections. They range in size from a single letter to a more than a 100-box set of business records. These manuscripts document such phenomena as the agricultural development of the state, particularly the bonanza farming era; the everyday life of the early pioneers; the era of the Nonpartisan League; and the women of North Dakota as seen in diaries and their varied organizations. Also documented are the lives and works of North Dakota literary figures, our many ethnic groups and the development of an urban society through City of Fargo and Cass County records.
The manuscript collecting program of the Institute for Regional Studies Archives preserves personal papers and organization records of enduring historic value to support the research needs of undergraduates, graduate students, faculty and other scholars at NDSU and beyond. The uniqueness and strength of the Institute manuscripts lies in its extensive holdings of more than 1,200 collections. They range in size from a single letter to a more than a 100-box set of business records. These manuscripts document such phenomena as the agricultural development of the state, particularly the bonanza farming era; the everyday life of the early pioneers; the era of the Nonpartisan League; and the women of North Dakota as seen in diaries and their varied organizations. Also documented are the lives and works of North Dakota literary figures, our many ethnic groups and the development of an urban society through City of Fargo and Cass County records.
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=== Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections ===
Chester Fritz Library<br>
University of North Dakota<br>
3051 University Avenue Stop 9000<br>
Grand Forks, ND 58202-9000<br>
Phone: (701) 777-4625<br>


=== Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections  ===


[http://webapp.und.edu/dept/library/Collections/Chester Fritz Library]<br>University of North Dakota<br>3051 University Avenue Stop 9000<br>Grand Forks, ND 58202-9000<br>Phone: (701) 777-4625<br><br>
[http://digitalhorizonsonline.org/cdm/<br> Digital Horizons], Town and county histories, photos of homesteaders and oral interviews conducted with Germans from Russia dating back to the 1800s are just a few of this site’s treasures depicting life on the northern plains
[http://digitalhorizonsonline.org/cdm/<br> Digital Horizons], Town and county histories, photos of homesteaders and oral interviews conducted with Germans from Russia dating back to the 1800s are just a few of this site’s treasures depicting life on the northern plains


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