Since 1980, the Archives of the American Field Service and AFS Intercultural Programs (AFS Archives) has been a repository and a center for research on the history of AFS by scholars, students, and the AFS network.
The permanent collections of the Archives constitute the single largest concentration of documents, photographs, works of art, recordings, and artifacts—all records of AFS history—in the United States. Much of the AFS collection, if lost or destroyed, is irreplaceable. Many items are unique; others collected since 1914 during the two World Wars in the United States, France, Middle East, North Africa, Italy, India and Burma represent information from a date and environment that cannot be duplicated. The AFS Archives has many collections of significance for researchers of the two World Wars, filmmakers, and scholars of the history of volunteer organizations, medical services and educational exchange.
The Archives is dedicated to making available the enduring legacy of the American Field Service and AFS Intercultural Programs—the story of the Americans who chose to serve as AFS volunteers in both World Wars and the international exchange programs that grew from their post war activities. The Archives holds the collections in trust for future generations.