Our archival collections are enriched by the generosity of people and organizations that donate their records to our collections. Generally, the Archives acquires material that documents Trent University and the culture and history of the region. New archival acquisitions are considered by the University Archivist, in light of our mandate, the Archives Policy, and other factors, including the condition of the material or the Archives' capacity to store and care for the collection.
Donors can request a tax receipt for their donations, which requires a monetary appraisal to be conducted. Please consult our our Monetary Appraisal Guidelines.
Donation Process
- Contact the Archives to inquire whether the material is of interest. Please explain the content and context of the material, as well as the formats, date range, and approximate quantity. If there is a reason why you think we are the best home for the material, please explain its relationship to our mandate.
- If the Archives is interested in acquiring the material, you will be sent a gift agreement form to complete. This form states that you are assigning legal ownership and, usually, other intellectual property rights (where you own them) to Trent University Archives. It will also ask whether
- You would like your donation to be anonymous
- You would like to place any restrictions on access or reproductions of the material
- You would like any items not deemed of archival value returned to you
- You would like an appraisal for tax receipt for the donation
- Physical/digital transfer of the records will be arranged. Wherever possible, donated materials should be organized and include a list of contents. Before rearranging material, please consult with the Archivist to ensure the archival integrity of the collection remains intact.
- The donation will be processed (re-housed, arranged, and described), and the finding aid will be added to the Archives Database. The Archives receives many collections each year, and your donation will be added to the processing queue. This step may take more than a year to complete, especially if the collection is large and/or disorganized.
- The final finding aid will be shared with you, and if a tax receipt is requested, the appraisal will be completed and the University will issue a tax receipt.
- Materials not retained will be returned to you, passed to a more suitable repository, or shredded after consultation with you.
Guidelines for Faculty Members
Faculty papers are rich archival resources. They help document the university's administration, research, and teaching, as well as the broader lives and community engagement of faculty members. We welcome conversations about potential donations with faculty from all disciplines.
Faculty records, including research and teaching material, are considered private records and are not subject to FIPPA (Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act). If your papers include official university records (such as those created as an administrator), they will be treated as University Records.
When sorting and selecting papers to be forwarded to the Archives, keep in mind the sorts of questions that researchers, historians, social scientists, and biographers might ask in the years ahead if they access your papers. They may want to know about your life, your research approaches, your teaching methods, your publications, and your community work. Your materials also help understand the history of your department, discipline, communities, and scholarship, in general, during your time.
The most important sources of information will reflect you personally and your relationships to family, friends, colleagues, the university environment, and the larger worlds in which your research interests are located. This includes the following:
- Day books, diaries, and journals
- Personal and professional correspondence
- Project and research files
- Materials relating to professional and scholarly associations, grants, publishing, and conferences
- Materials documenting your program/course development and teaching practice
- Early drafts of a published work (but not galley proofs or multiple drafts)
- Committee files
- Photographs and other media
We cannot accept, and will either return, shred, recycle or otherwise dispose of the following:
- Material which arrives unannounced and unsolicited; materials are acquired by the archives only after approval by the University Archivist
- Published material, including reports, government documents, offprints, and photocopied articles, that are available in libraries (with limited exceptions). We dedicate our limited storage space to house original material that can not be found elsewhere.
- Photocopied research files, documents, or materials of any kind which came from another archival institution
- Book collections. Please see the library's donation guidelines if you are looking for a home for your books/library
- Multiple copies of any documents
- Personal records of students such as grade sheets, advisee files
- Personal records of colleagues such as CVs of job candidates, or letters of recommendation, etc.
Before organizing your materials for donation, please get in touch with the University Archivist (archives@trentu.ca) to discuss your donation.