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University of Illinois at Chicago University Library

Special Collections

Special Collections Home Richard J. Daley Special Collections Library of the Health Sciences-Chicago Special Collections University Archives Online Exhibits

Richard J. Daley Library
Special Collections Department

About Special Collections
The Special Collections Department houses the library's research collections of Manuscripts, Rare Books and Printed Materials. Listed below are some featured collections.

  • Jane Addams Memorial Collection
  • R. Hunter Middleton Chicago Design Archive
  • Midwest Women's Historical Collection
  • The Century of Progress International Exposition Records
  • The Chicago Board of Trade

Department Information

  • Department Contact Information
  • Directions
  • Departmental Policies
  • Reproducing Special Collections Materials

Manuscript Collection
Containing personal papers and organizational records from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the Manuscript Collection holds over 500 distinct collections. Holdings in this list are linked to Finding Aids or more information where available.

Rare Books and Printed Material
Special Collections contains a rich collection of rare books and printed materials. The primary focus of the Rare Books Section is the political, social, architectural and literary history of Chicago, however, the Section also has a number of other notable collections.

The Rare Books Section also houses a collection of antiquarian maps from the Great Lakes Region, the Russian Empire and Western Europe. Rare Books and maps can be found by searching in UICCAT.

Featured Collection

Industrial Areas Foundation Records
Saul Alinsky began his community organizing work in Chicago’s Back of the Yards neighborhood in the late 1930s. He believed that social justice could be achieved by ordinary people through democratic means and argued that controversy was necessary in affecting social change. In August of 1940, with financial assistance from Marshall Field III, Alinsky founded the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) to serve as an umbrella organization for the community groups he was developing across the United States. After his death in 1972, the IAF developed a training institute to teach potential organizers in larger numbers. The modern IAF, a nonpartisan and not-for-profit organization has refined Alinsky’s vision and has created a complex network of broad-based organizations across the United States.

This collection documents the activities of the Industrial Areas Foundation. The records date from 1952 to 2004 and include correspondence, campaign materials, organizers' field reports, newspaper clippings, organizational publications, annual reports, and training materials. The materials prior to 1968 reflect the IAF under Saul Alinsky, while the materials produced since 1973 reflect the modern IAF under Ed Chambers. The materials generated between 1968 and 1973 reflect the transitional period when the training institute originated and IAF activities became more institutionalized.

Last updated: Monday, 22-Jan-2007 16:08:03 CST
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