From VOA:
“What is the US National
Archives?”
(The National Archives building
in Washington, D.C.)
When John Carlin started his job
at the head of the U.S. National Archives back in June of 1995, he was shocked
to learn that government emails were not being preserved. “They, at that time,
did not consider email as a record, and I said, ‘Folks, I may not be an
archivist, but those are records,’” says Carlin, who served as archivist for a
decade. “By September I was able to go through the process of getting that
changed. More and more records now are coming in the archives in the electronic
form.”
The National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA) is the official records keeper of the United States
government. Among the records in its possession are presidential papers and
materials, which former president Donald Trump is trying to keep out of the hands
of the congressional committee investigating the January 6 attack on the U.S.
Capitol. Presidential libraries are part of the National Archives and White
House records are kept forever. “Authentic history is not possible without
records that have been kept and preserved so their authenticity is backed up
100 percent,” Carlin says. “Accountability goes forward for a long time and
people who work for the White House including the president, him or herself,
can and should be held accountable. And, without those records, that cannot be
done."
(Archivist John Carlin with
President George W. Bush (L) and Laura Bush as they view George Washington's
Inauguration speech at the National Archives, Jan. 19, 2005.)
Overall, only 1%-3% of all of the
materials created by the U.S. government during the course of conducting its
business are considered important enough, for legal or historical reasons, to
preserve for all time. “The National Archives holds over 15 billion pages of
textual records, over 18 million maps, charts and architectural drawings, more
than 43 million images, more than 365,000 reels of film and over 110,000
videotapes, to say nothing of the billions of electronic records,” says Meghan
Ryan Guthorn, acting deputy chief operating officer of the agency. “We're
focused on openness, cultivating public participation, and strengthening our
nation's democracy through public access to high-value government records. I
kind of like to think of the agency like the nation's filing cabinet.”
NARA keeps its holdings in 44
locations across the country, including the iconic National Archives building
in Washington. For Carlin, the former archivist, some of the most memorable
materials include those related to the 1963 assassination of President John F.
Kennedy. “I mean, literally, they tore apart the room that JFK died in from the
assassination on that day in Dallas. Everything was kept,” Carlin says.
“Everything in the room was kept.” President
Franklin D. Roosevelt established the National Archives in 1934, but the agency
has items that date back to before the nation’s founding. Well-known documents
like the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution are in the
National Archives, but so are naturalization records that can verify the U.S.
citizenship of immigrants, and military records of everyday citizens. “We do
not throw military personnel records away. And we don't set a date for very
practical reasons,” Carlin says. “Anybody that leaves the military, in order to
be eligible for veteran benefits, has to prove they left honorably and that
requires a record. And that record is kept in our archives in St. Louis. And it
has to be kept preserved and made accessible.”
(A staff member retrieves
documents at NARA’s Lees Summit federal records center in the state of
Missouri.)
The public has access to many of
these records. However, some archival materials are withheld from the public
for a variety of reasons, including national security concerns, donor wishes,
court orders and other statutory or regulatory provisions. The National
Archives encourages public participation. “Maintaining the records and, just as
importantly, if not more importantly, providing public access to them, can help
illuminate the history of a nation,” says Ryan Guthorn. “The preservation of
records documents the activities of a country's government and citizens over
time. It’s a really important way to track how a country has evolved and how
the rights of citizens have been protected and managed by the government.”
Presidential historian Shannon
Bow O’Brien says access to original documents is critical because while
people’s memories may differ, the actual records tell the true story. “These
tell us what they were doing, when they were doing it, how they were doing it,
what they said,” says O’Brien, a professor in the government department at The
University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts. “If you look at the
documents, or you look at the paper trails that are in the archives, you can
see the decision-making processes, you can see why things develop the way they
developed.” The public can explore National Archive holdings via an online
catalog and expert archivists are on hand to answer questions online.
Today, Carlin worries the agency
continues to lack sufficient funding to properly do its job. “If you don't have
enough staff upfront to work with the agency, particularly electronic records,
there's going to be mistakes and records lost along the way that should have
gone to the National Archives,” Carlin says. During his decade-long tenure as
archivist, Carlin pursued federal and private funds to renovate the National
Archives building in Washington, and added public exhibits as part of an effort
to enrich the overall visitor experience. “The very fundamentals of our whole
system are right there,” Carlin says, referring to the Charters of Freedom —
the Declaration of Independence, Constitution, and Bill of Rights. “It's
incredibly important and valuable that citizens take advantage of that
opportunity to go there and spend a couple hours and really learn a lot about
what has made this country great and what has to be supported going forward for
it to stay great.”
^ It’s important to keep
everything that shows how and why things happened in the country and that’s
what the National Archives does. I would love to see and work at the National Archives. ^
https://www.voanews.com/a/what-is-the-us-national-archives-/6338538.html
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