Collections
The University Library contains a wide range of diverse and unique collections that can be explored below. Some archival collections may be in the process of being arranged and may take longer to access.
Featured Collections
98 narratives revealing a layered understanding of the Chicana/o movement in Northern California, specifically Sacramento.
Chronicles the Japanese American experience of immigration and settlement to the United States, WWII Internment, redress, and reparations. Includes JAAC finding aid, digital collection, monographs, serials, oral histories, audiovisual materials, and more.
Manuscripts, personal papers, and organizational records document regional and national politics, as well as the literary, community, and cultural life in the Sacramento Region.
All Collections A-Z
Use the filters to explore library collections, discover digital offerings, locate findings aids and more.
Posters pertaining to Native American education, health, and music.
Collection consists of family correspondence, mementos of Julia Norton's transatlantic voyage, and her work in the American Red Cross.
Contains organization files, correspondence, publications, photographs, media and artifacts pertaining to the Older Women's League (OWL), Sacramento Capitol Chapter.
Collection consists of medals, postcards, and publications for Greek Olympics in 1906.
The collection begins with records from 1929 when Emory Bogardus founded the Pacific Sociological Association (PSA) and ends in 2008 upon the retirement of PSA Chief Executive Officer, Dean S. Dorn.
Personal and professional papers of Edgar James Patterson, Sacramento State faculty in the Criminal Justice Department.
Autograph album belonging to May R. Pease. Contains quotations and poetry by family and friends, primarily in Sutter County.
Collection consists of peace officer training curriculum, bicycle safety program, speeches, awards, publications, and research files.
Contains photocopies of correspondence and newspaper clippings regarding Charles M. Goethe and the renaming of the C.M. Goethe Middle School to Rosa Parks Middle School. NOTE: This collection may contain harmful content.
Pagination