Envoy to the Archives

Regular price €33.99
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
20th century Black intellectuals
A01=William L. Fox
African American biography
African American intellectual networks in London
African American intellectuals
African American travel histor
African American women in librarianship
American history and empire
archival access and historical preservation
archival biography
archival heroism
archival labor and recognition.
archival recovery of slavery records
Author_William L. Fox
biography of a trailblazing manuscript librarian
biography of Ruth Anna Fisher
Black excellence in scholarship
Black history
Black scholars in London
Black women and the preservation of history
Black women archivists
Black women in British cultural institutions
Black women in global history
Black women in public service
Black women shaping American history
Black women shaping history
British Museum research history
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
connecting transatlantic scholarship in the 20th century
digitization and preservation of source materials
digitization precursors
document preservation history
documenting slavery and racial issues through archives
documenting the transatlantic slave trade
early Black librarians
early digitization efforts
early document preservation
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
expanding research through international archives
Fisher's influence on academic research
forthcoming
Fox's personal recollections and archival insight
groundbreaking historical biography
Harlem Renaissance connections
Harlem Renaissance intellectual networks
hidden figures in librarianship
hidden histories uncovered
hidden stories of recordkeeping
historical digitization precursors
historical preservation pioneers
historical research pioneers
history reshaped by archival discovery
impact of archives on US historiography
institutional history of US National Archives
interwar years and archival innovation
Japanese American journalists
Library of Congress agents
Library of Congress history
Library of Congress London agent history
library science trailblazers
lost papers of Black thinkers
major achievements in library science
microfilm and photostat technology in archives
overcoming barriers in professional library work
overlooked historical figures
personal connections to major Black thinkers
photostat and microfilm history
pioneering Black woman archivist
pioneers of historical access
race and memory in archives
racial justice in archives
rare document discovery
reconstructing American memory
rediscovered American records
rescuing historical truth
role of librarians in revealing lost histories
Ruth Anna Fisher biography and legacy
transatlantic archival research
transatlantic document recovery
transatlantic recordkeeping
transatlantic slave trade archival research
twentieth-century African American scholars
uncovering hidden records in British archives
US National Archives origins
US-UK historical ties
W. E. B. Du Bois and US historical research
women in archival work
women in historical discovery
women preserving American heritage
women's history

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349408
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

How a pioneering manuscript librarian and intellectual uncovered buried records that reshaped America’s past

As the London-based agent of the US Library of Congress, Ruth Anna Fisher (1886–1975) profoundly shaped the field of US history. Working at the British Museum and Public Record Office between the world wars, she was responsible for a vast program of identifying and copying up to a million documents related to American history, with prescient attention to the transatlantic slave trade. This monumental achievement has provided countless scholars access to source materials that might have remained hidden in repositories throughout Britian without Fisher’s brilliant discernment and tireless labor.

In Envoy to the Archives, William L. Fox offers the first full-length biography of this remarkable American intellectual. Born to a prominent African American family in northern Ohio, Fisher was keenly aware of racial issues throughout her life. She was associated with key thinkers in the Harlem Renaissance and the twentieth century transatlantic world, including W. E. B. Du Bois, Harold Laski, and J. Franklin Jameson. A trailblazer in historical research, Fisher was among a small group of Black women who first joined the ranks of professional library work, and her efforts in London coincided with the creation and consolidation of the US National Archives in the 1930s. She also mastered technologies that were new at the time, including photostat reproduction and microfilm—precursors to the many historical digitization projects of our own era.

This engrossing biography adds to the growing body of work centered on Black women archivists, librarians, and curators. Fox draws on a wide range of archival sources, including the personal papers of prominent Black thinkers (Fisher’s were destroyed in the bombing of London in 1940), and various institutional records at the Library of Congress and the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Fox also knew Fisher personally, adding warmth and insight into this captivating portrait.

William L. Fox is president emeritus of St. Lawrence University. His previous books include Lodge of the Double-Headed Eagle: Two Centuries of Scottish Rite Freemasonry and Valley of the Craftsmen. He is the biographer of the twentieth century Harvard theologian and longest-serving dean of the Harvard Divinity School, Willard L. Sperry.

More from this author