Archives & Records Center
Address
801 South Payne Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
Alexandria, VA 22314
Hours of Operation
Monday - Friday
By Appointment Only
Monday - Friday
By Appointment Only
Mission of the Archives & Records Center
The mission of the Archives & Records Center is to identify, preserve, and make available to the public records of the City of Alexandria government that have been appraised and selected for historic value.
Regulations Applying to City of Alexandria Public Records
City of Alexandria records are available to the public under the Virginia Public Records Act, Virginia Freedom of Information Act and City Administrative Regulations unless prohibited by law due to confidentiality. However, ALL requests for City documents at the Archives and Records Center require submitting a FOIA request, either to the City Attorney’s Office in Room 1300, City Hall, 301 King Street (703-746-3750) or by email to FOIArequests@alexandriava.gov. To ensure that your FOIA request is received directly by Archives and Records Center staff, please indicate that is where you wish your request to go.
Gifts and Donations
The Archives and Records Center sometimes accepts gifts or donations of records, but only those created by the City of Alexandria government agencies. Acceptance of any such records is at the discretion of the Records Administrator and Archivist.
What Records are Available for Research?
Records at the Archives & Records Center
The collection begins with the late 19th century and continues to the present. A partial listing of the collection includes:
- City Council Minutes - 1922 through 1985
- Annual Financial Statements - 1876 to the present (some gaps)
- Papers of Former Mayors - 1950s to the present
- Stocks and Bonds - circa 1850s through 1900
- Approved Annual Budgets - 1930 to the present
- Annual Reports - 1955 to the present (some gaps)
- Planning Commission Minutes - 1939 through 1998
- Board of Architectural Review Minutes
- Board of Zoning Appeals Minutes
- New Construction Permits - 1930 through 1960
- Building Alteration Permits - 1930 through 1950
- Demolition Permits
- Sign Permits
- Architectural Plans
- Papers of the Bicentennial Commission
- City Directories - 1950 through 1979 (some gaps)
- Scrapbooks
- City Contracts - 1945 to the present
- Auditor’s Reports - 1876 through 1923 (some gaps)
- Site Plans – 1962 through 2000
Other sites with collections relating to Alexandria
- Library of Virginia
- Alexandria Library, Special Collections
- Virginia Historical Society
- Alexandria Clerk of Circuit Court
- Virginia Office of Vital Records and Health Statistics
- Virtual Library of Virginia
- U.S. Census Bureau*
- National Archives and Records Administration*
- The Library of Congress*
*Sites not exclusively devoted to Virginia and/or Alexandria history
Learn more about these and other resources and how to use them in Conducting Your Own Historic Research.
Public Records Advisory Commission
The Public Records Advisory Commission is a seven-member body made up of citizens of the City of Alexandria. It provides guidance to the Records Administrator & Archivist on matters pertaining to archives and records management as well as the implementation of the City’s records management program.
Volunteering and Internships
The Archives & Records Center accepts volunteers and interns who are seeking to fulfill requirements for the various programs of study with which they are affiliated. The work involves assisting the staff with the preservation, processing, production of finding aids for archival collections or digitization. Please contact the Records Administrator by telephone or online, or submit a volunteer application.
Education Programs
School groups can learn about how to preserve important documents.
- Cost: Lessons are free to Alexandria City Public School groups, and $3 per person ($40 minimum) for all other groups.
- Length: 45 minutes
- Limit: 40 students
- Days: Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Good record-keeping is the foundation for government accountability. When records are properly maintained, citizens can examine and keep track of what elected officials, high-level managers, and other government employees are doing. Documents can tell the story of people's ideas and how they behaved at any particular time. The Archives & Records Center preserves and makes available to the public the records of the City of Alexandria, Virginia government.
K-12 students can learn how to handle historic and fragile documents, determine what kinds of documents must be kept permanently, and what preservation measures can be undertaken to ensure that documents survive. To arrange a tour, contact the Archivist through Alex311 or call 703.746.4591.
Directions
From the Beltway, exit at Route 1 North in Virginia. At the third traffic signal, make a left onto Wilkes Street. At South Payne Street, turn left. The Archives & Records Center is on the right immediately after the driveway for the last cemetery (Agudas Achim).
From the GW/Mount Vernon Parkway (Washington Street through Old Town), head west on Gibbon Street until it ends at South Payne Street. Turn left.
ADA Accessibility
The Archives & Records Center is wheelchair accessible. Park in the lot (there is one handicapped space available). There is also an ADA-compliant restroom.