FCH Annals Style Sheet (last updated 2018)
1. Submit as Microsoft Word format, or RTF. Text should be double spaced. Use 12-point font. Do not include graphics.
2. Place the title of the paper at the top of the first page. Include the author’s name as it should appear in print, and academic affiliation, if any.
3. For spelling, follow The New Oxford American Dictionary. For citation format, capitalization, hyphenation, use of numbers, punctuation, and other matters of style, follow The Chicago Manual of Style (16th edition or later). Exceptions to Chicago not listed here will be marked for correction by the editor. Do not use past volumes of the FCH Annals as a guide.
4. Although Chicago prefers U.S. Postal Service two-letter abbreviations for the names of U.S. states, the FCH Annals continues to use the longer conventional abbreviations for the sake of continuity. This also necessitates the use of periods in U.S. and Washington, D.C.
5. Write dates as Day Month Year. Do not place commas between month and year (e.g., 4 May 1992; June 1924). Dates in citations of newspapers also follow this format. Do not include the date accessed in citations of online sources. When referring to BC or AD, AD comes before the year, BC comes after the year. Do not use other forms of indicators of eras, such as BCE and CE. Inclusive years and other numbers should be typed as 1982–1987, not as 1982–87 or 1982–7.
6. People must be fully identified by full first and last names on first instance; later references may be by surname only. If an individual is generally known by a specific variation of the name, use it. Thus, John C. Calhoun, or John Randolph of Roanoke. For titled individuals, use the title and full name on the first instance.
7. For organizations such as the NAACP, ACLU, and the like, write the name out in the first instance and place the abbreviation after it in parentheses, e.g.: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Subsequent instances may use the acronym.
8. Use underscore rather than italics in the manuscript. These will appear as italics in the publication (when underscore is the form to appear in publication, use bold underscore). Underscore names of ships, titles of books, works of art, and musical compositions. Underscore foreign words and phrases on the first instance only. Omit underscore for foreign words and phrases found in common American English usage (following The New Oxford American Dictionary). For underscore as emphasis added to a portion of a quotation, indicate this in the footnote with the notation "emphasis added."
9. Ellipsis points are separated from each other and from the text by one unit of lateral spacing. There is no spacing between a word and a period when an ellipsis follows, e.g.: “This quoted sentence comes to an end. . . . Some text was omitted between these two sentences;” but, “in this example there is only one sentence . . . even though some text was omitted.”
10. Enclose interpolations or explanations introduced into quotations in square brackets, and keep them to a minimum.
11. Use footnotes, not end notes, in accordance with The Chicago Manual of Style (chapter 14). Do not use the author-date system or parenthetical citations. Do not cite Wikipedia or other websites that may contain plagiarized material.
12. Include pagination. All hyperlinks must be formatted as plain text.
13. Avoid the use of slash (/). Avoid the use of em dashes as an alternative to parentheses or commas. If you must use either, they should be kept to an absolute minimum.
14. Footnote reference numbers are placed after all the material in the paragraph to which they refer. Any material presented after a reference number is not considered to be covered by that citation.
15. The title of the paper must be the same as it appears in the conference meeting program. Submissions will only be considered for publication in the volume of the Annals that corresponds to the meeting at which the paper was presented.
16. Submissions may not have been published previously, and may not be simultaneously under consideration for publication elsewhere.
17. Current officers of the Florida Conference of Historians are not eligible for any of the prizes awarded by the FCH.
2. Place the title of the paper at the top of the first page. Include the author’s name as it should appear in print, and academic affiliation, if any.
3. For spelling, follow The New Oxford American Dictionary. For citation format, capitalization, hyphenation, use of numbers, punctuation, and other matters of style, follow The Chicago Manual of Style (16th edition or later). Exceptions to Chicago not listed here will be marked for correction by the editor. Do not use past volumes of the FCH Annals as a guide.
4. Although Chicago prefers U.S. Postal Service two-letter abbreviations for the names of U.S. states, the FCH Annals continues to use the longer conventional abbreviations for the sake of continuity. This also necessitates the use of periods in U.S. and Washington, D.C.
5. Write dates as Day Month Year. Do not place commas between month and year (e.g., 4 May 1992; June 1924). Dates in citations of newspapers also follow this format. Do not include the date accessed in citations of online sources. When referring to BC or AD, AD comes before the year, BC comes after the year. Do not use other forms of indicators of eras, such as BCE and CE. Inclusive years and other numbers should be typed as 1982–1987, not as 1982–87 or 1982–7.
6. People must be fully identified by full first and last names on first instance; later references may be by surname only. If an individual is generally known by a specific variation of the name, use it. Thus, John C. Calhoun, or John Randolph of Roanoke. For titled individuals, use the title and full name on the first instance.
7. For organizations such as the NAACP, ACLU, and the like, write the name out in the first instance and place the abbreviation after it in parentheses, e.g.: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Subsequent instances may use the acronym.
8. Use underscore rather than italics in the manuscript. These will appear as italics in the publication (when underscore is the form to appear in publication, use bold underscore). Underscore names of ships, titles of books, works of art, and musical compositions. Underscore foreign words and phrases on the first instance only. Omit underscore for foreign words and phrases found in common American English usage (following The New Oxford American Dictionary). For underscore as emphasis added to a portion of a quotation, indicate this in the footnote with the notation "emphasis added."
9. Ellipsis points are separated from each other and from the text by one unit of lateral spacing. There is no spacing between a word and a period when an ellipsis follows, e.g.: “This quoted sentence comes to an end. . . . Some text was omitted between these two sentences;” but, “in this example there is only one sentence . . . even though some text was omitted.”
10. Enclose interpolations or explanations introduced into quotations in square brackets, and keep them to a minimum.
11. Use footnotes, not end notes, in accordance with The Chicago Manual of Style (chapter 14). Do not use the author-date system or parenthetical citations. Do not cite Wikipedia or other websites that may contain plagiarized material.
12. Include pagination. All hyperlinks must be formatted as plain text.
13. Avoid the use of slash (/). Avoid the use of em dashes as an alternative to parentheses or commas. If you must use either, they should be kept to an absolute minimum.
14. Footnote reference numbers are placed after all the material in the paragraph to which they refer. Any material presented after a reference number is not considered to be covered by that citation.
15. The title of the paper must be the same as it appears in the conference meeting program. Submissions will only be considered for publication in the volume of the Annals that corresponds to the meeting at which the paper was presented.
16. Submissions may not have been published previously, and may not be simultaneously under consideration for publication elsewhere.
17. Current officers of the Florida Conference of Historians are not eligible for any of the prizes awarded by the FCH.
fch_annals_style_sheet_revised2018.pdf |