Years ago, filing was done by numerous ingenious ways. Thomas
Jefferson invented a mechanical device that enabled him to create
copies of all his correspondence at the same time he was composing
the original. Official records were often copied into books or
journals. Later, carbon paper could fill the function of creating
one or more copies of documents simultaneously while creating the
original. As the amount of potential copies of records increased,
so did the need to store them. At first, records were folded into
sections (imagine a business letter received in the mail), and then
stored vertically in narrow pull-out drawers. This was often called
"shuck filing." Over the years archivists have developed clever
ways to unfold these documents without damaging them in their
creases as they are unfolded.
Later, documents were housed in a "new" way, in four-drawer
files. These were invented in the late 19th century, and many are
still in use.
Folders became incorporated in the drawer filing systems, in
order that a searcher could find a specific group of documents
within the drawers. This system continued until the mid-twentieth
century when some manufacturers noticed that libraries and grocery
stores employed an efficient method for displaying books and canned
goods - shelving. These manufacturers created the open lateral
files, and color-coding the files came soon after.
Following is a review of the kinds of filing equipment
available.
When selecting filing equipment, consider the
following: