809Walsh Collection Paper

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    1/16

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    2/16

    GMF Walsh 2

    Governors' Mansion Foundation, General Files 1966-1998

    The records of the Governors Mansion Foundation (GMF) are treated as part of the

    Private Collections of the Washington State Archives. The private collections are those kept in

    the State Archives despite the fact that they are not primarily created by the government in the

    course of official business. The GMF was accessioned in two batches, or groups of similar

    documents that were received separately and accessioned separately. 25 identical archive boxes

    make up the 12.5 cubic feet of the collection. One, consisting of 7 boxes, has general files from

    1990 -1998 and articles, brochures and speeches as well as the check registers and notes on

    functions and miscellaneous items. The other batch has 18 boxes, arranged chronologically by

    year and thereunder by subject with files titled minutes, financial reports, committee reports,

    correspondence, news releases, art acquisitions, etc. These records reflect the activities of the

    GMF in the year in question. The file title list tells the story of the activities of each year and

    gives a good overview of the business of the GMF merely by looking at the file titles listed in the

    box contents.

    The first document in the collection is a copy of the Articles of Incorporation from 1966

    for CRISP, Citizens Responsive to the need for Improving State Properties. This was the

    springboard organization for the GMF and actually had a wider scope. The first five folders tell

    the story of the beginnings of the GMF which was in fact started to pre-empt a group that wanted

    to tear down the mansion and put up a modern structure more in keeping with the Northwest.

    The then First Lady of Washington State, Nancy Evans, was instrumental in re-forming CRISP

    into the GMF to forestall this other factions success. Because the GMF appropriated their roots

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    3/16

    GMF Walsh 3

    from CRISP they cleverly became the status quo and were able to claim more authority than the

    other, unnamed group. The second document is a notarized copy of the Articles of Incorporation

    of the GMF.

    The first files contain by-laws, correspondence, press releases, brochures, acquisition

    documents, membership lists, speeches (by Nancy Evans and others), interior design documents,

    legal files, promotional materials, financial records, landscape design documents, meeting files,

    reports, curator reports, newsletters, and other materials related to the functions and activities of

    the Foundation. Some of the functions of the different documents are quickly discernable

    because of their color or format. Internal Governor Office memos are blue, telephone messages

    are pink, and press releases are green. The thin yellow papers are carbon copies. There are many

    handwritten letters discussing the formation of the GMF and soliciting support from ladies from

    around the State. There are handwritten and typed drafts of speeches, many with corrections and

    what seem to be last minute changes added in the margins. Quite a few of the letters have

    annotations either indicating when they were answered or, in the case of attached carbon copies,

    sent.

    Many of the documents are on printed letter head stationary from lawyers, interior

    decorators, antique merchants or GMF trustees. Many of the bills are marked OK to pay by

    hand. A room by room list of what furniture, artifacts and objets de arte are in the mansion can

    be compared with the wish lists of articles to acquire, many of which include color swatches and

    sketches. The documents related to fundraising are quite impressive with carefully targeted lists

    of foundations. The members of the GMF were quite capable of raising and spending healthy

    amounts of money right from the beginning.

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    4/16

    GMF Walsh 4

    Substantive Attributes

    The provenance of the collection is the GMF. Everything in the collection has been

    created or received by members of the Foundation in the course of doing business. Creators of

    records include curators, decorators, State General Auditor, governors and first ladies. A

    documentary film has been amply exploited by the GMF over the years for publicity, outreach

    and fundraising.

    Nancy Evans was interviewed for the Washington State Centennial celebrations being

    held at the Governors Mansion in 1989 and she stated We may feel were too young to have

    history, but if we dont start thinking long-term it may be too late. She would certainly approve

    of the existence of this collection which is due to the efforts of one archivist at the Washington

    State Archives, David Hastings. In fact, it seems to be almost a pet project of his. The State

    Archive is only mandated to collect and maintain the records deemed archival that are produced

    as part of the functioning of the State government. However, in addition to these, the Archives

    maintains over 100 collections as sub groups in a record group it titles its Private Collections.

    They include a wide variety of items that may have continuing usefulness to researchers and are

    considered part of the collective story of the State. The GMF is a non-government entity, but

    because it concerns a very important government building, the Foundation was encouraged to

    transfer its records to the Archives and thus far the members have been quite happy to find a

    good home for them.

    For the GMF this agreement is extremely advantageous because it conserves, in optimum

    professional conditions, and at no cost to the Foundation, all the records that it creates.

    Archivists are the specialists to manage the transition from present to past, concerning

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    5/16

    GMF Walsh 5

    collaborative actions and experiences, in such a way that the past remains useful for future

    presents(Menne-Haritz, 2000, p. 347). The foundation has access to professional archivists and

    pristine storage facilities free of charge, and at the same time others can also access these same

    documents.

    Pugh states that individuals first seek information from other individuals within the

    organization (1998). Although she was undoubtedly referring to staff in formal organizations, the

    same is probably true to some degree in others as well. In this case that could be more difficult

    due to the changing nature of the GMF. Consider the shifting composition of the membership

    due to the fact that it is a voluntary association complicated by issues like the social prominence

    of some of its members and the changing inhabitants of the mansion and their political

    associations. Having the State Archives act as depository for these documents helps ensure

    preservation and access. The records here reflect a blending of the public functioning of the

    Foundation and the private lives and connections of the members both among themselves and

    with government officials and private business professionals associated with the ongoing

    functioning of the GMF.

    The documents in the files do not represent a smooth continuity from inception to present

    day. In fact, it seems to be feast or famine. Some events are documented from many different

    sides and in great detail, while others are merely referred to obliquely or can only be detected by

    later documents. For example, in Box 8 (1979) there are documents where the phrase ladies of

    the foundation has been crossed out and foundation is written above. Later in the same file a

    document changes women to the board members. From this point forward it is difficult to

    find any reference to the foundation members except in the most professional terms. Before that

    they had always been the ladies or Mrs. John Doe, always with their husbands names. Staid

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    6/16

    GMF Walsh 6

    social propriety gives way to a more liberated and professional terminology that does reflect the

    most up-to-date changing societal values.

    Acquisition and Appraisal

    The documents in this collection are both informational and evidentiary. They tell what

    has happened and how it has happened. We can trace the history of the structure of the

    Foundation from its predecessor, CRISP, through its own incorporation and the changes in

    bylaws that have substantially changed the governance of the Foundation. We can trace how it

    has responded to the changes of the society upon which it depends and also how it has

    sometimes resisted changing with that society. It is easy to see how new demands changed the

    interior decorators role to a curator, how more authoritative experts were consulted and how a

    program with docents was implemented to make the contents of the mansion open to the public

    while it continues to serve as the private residence of the States First Family.

    One reason the Washington State Archives has been interested in obtaining and

    maintaining the collection is because the creating organization fluctuates with time. The

    Foundation is strictly private and composed of volunteers; they are not governed by the state

    records management laws, and there is no set schedule for acquiring new documents. It is, after

    all, a social as well as a maintenance organization and the inhabitants of the mansion change with

    the State elections so there are also political considerations. In the GMF, records are traditionally

    kept in members homes and passed on when officers change The Archives waits until GMF is

    ready to send more material.

    That is why, although the Foundation continues to function, no new records have been

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    7/16

    GMF Walsh 7

    accessioned for nearly ten years. They are still with members of the GMF. That also means that

    there are no electronic documents. The State Archives will either wait until someone from GMF

    contacts them with more documents or they will give a gentle nudge (Hastings 2008) when

    they think the time is appropriate. It is conceivable that some of the earlier gaps could be filled

    when a Foundation member discovers some forgotten documents in a cupboard or drawer at

    home. The fact that the State Archives maintains the records gives permanence to the

    organization, credence to their decision making for future incarnations, and it protects records

    that have no physical safe space. In truth, the physical documents, and so their continuing

    usefulness, may be safeguarded solely in this collection.

    The collection does not seem to have been weeded as there are often multiple copies

    (carbon, printed or photocopied) of the same document, sometimes as many as a couple dozen

    photocopies of the same meeting agenda or minutes, for no evident reason. There is one certified

    carbon copy of the articles of incorporation and six more carbon copies. Some documents may

    be deemed unimportant to the archives, such as photographs of furniture that was offered to the

    GMF, but which the foundation never seriously considered for acquisition. The collection seems

    to be being held in safekeeping for some future actions of this kind, perhaps when more of the

    records are acquired, or when there is time left over from the more pressing obligations of the

    State Archives. As Jimerson (2003, p.135) stated:

    appraisal is both science and art. It requires careful and systematic thinking

    about the nature of evidence and information, but it also depends on

    understanding of the uses of manuscripts and archives, the concerns and prioritiesof the repository, and the nature of the sources themselves.

    Probably this process of identifying the documents that have continuing usefulness to the

    archives is not yet completed in this collection. They are being preserved now with an eye to a

    future time when that process can be completed in order to preserve that portion of them that has

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    8/16

    GMF Walsh 8

    historical usefulness. If space is not at a premium in the archives, perhaps the collection will

    simply be kept as is and no more than this preliminary processing will be deemed necessary.

    Arrangement

    There are no restrictions on access to the collection, but neither is it easy to find because

    it is within the Private Collections record group. I learned of it while doing some work for the

    Foundation library. I was directed to David Hastings, an archivist in the State Archives, who

    gave me permission to examine it. However, when I first went to the archives the reading room, I

    was told that they had no knowledge of the collection and that I would have to provide an

    accession number or know where it was located. Subsequently I made an appointment by email

    and was given full access to the collection, as anyone else would be.

    Once located, the finding aid, although quite succinct, is valuable. O'Toole stresses that

    knowing how records came to be, what functions they document, what information they contain,

    and how that information can be used is fundamental to understanding archives and manuscripts.

    Most of this is easily ascertainable from the finding aid, and more of it can be deciphered from

    examining the documents themselves. Obviously, the problem in this case, is that a searchable

    finding aid or an annotated finding aid as described by Light and Hyry is not available to help

    others find this collection. It would make these records much more accessible.

    A strong case can certainly be made that the documents are in original order because

    there are so many that turn up in strange places within the files. Sometimes the correspondence is

    grouped with incoming and outgoing letters stapled together while other times the answer to an

    earlier letter may be much further back in the same file or (in at least one case) in a different file

    altogether. Here are two of the most curious examples. A letter to H. R. Haldeman is found in the

    middle of the 1972 file labeled Interior Design. How and why it came to be there is a complete

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    9/16

    GMF Walsh 9

    mystery. When asked, the reading room staff member available expressed interest in the

    document, but merely shrugged her shoulders when asked about the location. Another example is

    a 1988 file labeled Standing Committees Chamber concerts that has concert proposals and bills

    for piano tuning and restoration as well as a letter and CV from a highly qualified art historian

    who wants to work for the Foundation. Curiously enough, this woman became a member and is

    still a trustee of the Foundation, so the document was presumably not lost before it was used.

    All these records have been created by the different GMF members and committees in the

    course of carrying out the work of the foundation. Sometimes one individual would be

    responsible for nearly all the documents created or coordinated in a functional area such as the

    treasurer. For other functions, such as the regional committees for fundraising, documents were

    created simultaneously by subcommittees operating in different geographical areas. All the

    different records were then sent in various formats (especially in the first years), or sometimes

    may have been reported by telephone (because the regional report appears as notes added to

    another document) to the executive committee, which in turn created their own minutes of

    meetings and sent out directives to the various other sections functioning in the Foundation. So,

    all these complex records being created by an organization of volunteers, even if they all had the

    best intentions, seems a recipe for mayhem at some point, and this is sometimes reflected in the

    collection.

    All in all though, the organization is quite admirable. In general letters have been kept

    together, bills are together, reports are together and in each aggregation there is a chronological

    order that is fairly well kept. It is easy for the user to take up a file and find useful and intelligible

    information. At times it may be difficult to describe what is actually in each part of the

    collection, but the raw material is certainly there and if a researcher needed information on the

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    10/16

    GMF Walsh 10

    GMF it is definitely obtainable, although sometimes it will require a bit of work on the part of

    the examiner. Although all the file folders had titles, none were numbered with either the box

    number or the place that it occupied in the box. If a file were replaced in the wrong position it

    might be very difficult to see that it was not in its proper place.

    A melding of the two accessions would seem to make sense. In many cases the

    documents could simply be added to the existing files in the appropriate box according to the

    year in which they were created. In a few instances, it would be more appropriate to make new

    file folders. If the two accessions are not combined it will continue to make studying the

    documents awkward as the researcher must go back and forth between boxes in order to check

    information that could be in the same box, for example fund raising letters sent by the

    Foundation in 1979.

    Description

    The description of this collection is far from complete. The only description available

    outside the State Archives itself is found on their own website, which can be accessed either

    directly at www.secstate.wa.gov/archives/or through others like NUCMC or NAGARA. Here iswhat is found at the State Archives site:

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    11/16

    GMF Walsh 11

    This limited description, while complete as far as document types, doesnt perhaps give a

    very good feel for what the collection actually represents or contains. The finding aid, available

    only in the archive and only upon request, gives a file level inventory by box that is much more

    descriptive. If this collection is actually a work in progress, and a means of preserving material

    that will later be described more fully to make it more accessible to the researcher, then this is

    understandable and acceptable. It is also far better than the documents molding forgotten in some

    basement cupboard or tossed out by a volunteers heirs who have no idea what the documents

    are.

    Nevertheless, a standardized descriptive record for this collection is needed. Without a

    MARC record or EAD, it cannot be accessible to more than a very limited group of investigators

    who either know of its existence or serendipitously stumble upon it. Without this metadata it is

    Record Group: Private Collections Subgroup: Governors' Mansion Foundation

    Record Series: Governors' Mansion Foundation

    Dates: 1966-1998

    Volume: 12.5 c.f.

    Description: Records documenting the efforts of the Governors' Mansion

    Foundation to preserve, restore and furnish the Governors' Mansion. Includes articles of

    incorporation, by-laws, correspondence, press releases, brochures, acquisition

    documents, membership lists, speeches (by Nancy Evans and others), interior design

    documents, legal files, promotional materials, financial records, landscape design

    documents, meeting files, reports, curator reports, newsletters, and other materials

    related to the functions and activities of the Foundation. Arranged chronologically, then

    by subject.Repository: State Government Archives - Olympia

    Finding Aids: File Level Inventory

    Total Cubic Feet: 12.500

    Media Type: Boxed Paper (cu. ft.)

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    12/16

    GMF Walsh 12

    impossible for either user or archivist to adequately identify, manage, locate, or interpret the

    information in the collection. If archives had many collections like these it would soon be

    impossible to use them. Once the box content lists are obtained, which is only after asking for

    them by specifically by exact name in the State Archives, the file level inventory is reasonably

    complete. Getting there is the problem.

    In the description reproduced above some of the basic and required MARC data elements

    such as local call number, subject access fields and preferred citation note are absent. Other

    elements, like the physical description and the summary are combined in one general entry. Not

    only does this make it more difficult to find the exact information wanted, but it precludes it

    being part of a digital database like NUCMUC or Northwest Digital Archives. When this

    common language is not used, it also restricts access because it requires more effort on the part

    of the researcher first to find the collection and second to ascertain the contents of the collection.

    The woeful inadequacy of the information that is currently available online contributes to the

    user being dependent on the archives staff, and thus less able to access the information about the

    collection and indubitably the collection itself.

    Preservation, Access and Use

    The documents in this collection seem to have been untouched by the archivists hands in

    terms of preservation. Staples and paper clips, rusting and not, are attached to all kinds of

    documents in these files. A few documents remain folded. The pages of one typed list of donor

    contributions from 1980 were stuck together where the ink had bled. There is an indiscriminate

    mix of materials (Photographs, newspaper clippings, drawings and sketches). None were found

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    13/16

    GMF Walsh 13

    in any kind of protective covering or leafed in special paper.

    Many of the boxes were so empty that the files and the documents contained in them

    were bowed. Several files were completely overstuffed and almost impossible to remove from

    the box with one hand or handle without papers spilling out. It certainly seems that the

    preservation part of this collection has not been done yet.

    The environmental conditions of the repository are certainly first rate, and the Archives

    will be moved to a new, purpose built building in 2012. The attention to the user was also

    superlative (after that first dismal encounter) with the reading room staff ever solicitous, willing

    and able to accommodate the user by answering any and all questions and always having

    materials at the ready. Presumably the anomaly here is the collection being examined and not the

    archive. Whether or not other collections in the Private Collections are in a similar condition is

    difficult to say. My impression is that these are special projects being untaken by the archivists

    when they can steal time from their official duties. Certainly the staff had no information about

    the collection other than the location of the file level inventory.

    This collection is valuable to the GMF itself because of the changing nature of the

    organization. If a volunteer is contemplating recovering a chair, they can easily access the steps

    that were gone through by the decorator in 1982 and read the opinions given then about what

    fabric to use, what colors were deemed appropriate, what the cost was or which firms were

    considered for the job.

    Decorators and historians might also enjoy using the collection for reference or research,

    as well as auditors or accountants wishing to conduct a case study. Sometimes the contents are so

    messy that some perseverance on the part of the researcher is recommended. There are currently

    no restrictions on access nor does there seem to be any necessity for it. The Foundation can

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    14/16

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    15/16

    GMF Walsh 15

    Governor's Mansion Foundation. (1989). Centeniel Celebration [Brochure]. Olympia, WA

    Hastings, D., personal communication, January - February, 2008

    Jimerson, R. C. (2003). Deciding what to save. OCLC Systems & Serces, 19, from http://0-

    www.emeraldinsight.com.www.whitelib.emporia.edu/Insight/ViewContentServlet?Filena

    me=Published/EmeraldFullTextArticle/Articles/1640190403.html

    The Library of Congress, (2008, March 13th). Encoded archival description. Retrieved May 5,

    2008, from EAD tag library Web site: http://www.loc.gov/ead/tglib/appendix_a.html

    Light, M., & Hyry, T. (2002). Colophons and annotations: New directions for the finding aid .

    The American Archivist. 65, 216 - 230.

    Menne-Haritz, A. (2000).Archival training in a changing world. The American Archivist. 63, 3 4

    1 3 5 2.

    Organization of American Historians, (1993). Historians and archivists: Educating the next

    generation.Joint Committee on historians and archivists of the American Historical

    Association, Organization of American Historians and Society of American Archivists,

    from http://www.oah.org/pubs/archivists/historiansandarchivists.pdf

    OToole, James M. Understanding archives and manuscripts, Chicago: Society of American

    Archivists, 1990.

    Pearce-Moses, R. (2008). A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Retrieved April 21,

    2008, from Society of American Archivists Web site:

    http://www.archivists.org/glossary/index.asp

    Pugh, M. J. (1998).Information-Seeking in organizations and archives . Cultural Resource

    Management. 21 - 06, 10 - 14.

    Washington State Secretary of State, (2008). Washington State Archives. Retrieved February 1,

  • 8/14/2019 809Walsh Collection Paper

    16/16

    GMF Walsh 16

    2008, from Private Collections - Governors' Mansion Foundation 1966-1998 Web site:

    http://www.secstate.wa.gov/archives/search_results.aspx?q=mansion+foundationion

    Yakel, E. (2003). Information literacy for primary sources: Creating a new paradigm for archival

    researcher education. OCLC Systems & Services, 20, from http://0-

    www.emeraldinsight.com.www.whitelib.emporia.edu/Insight/ViewContentServlet?Filena

    me=Published/EmeraldFullTextArticle/Articles/1640190403.html