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Resources Establishing
an Archives This guide is intended to provide some introductory help to persons who have been given the task of establishing an archives program. When an organisation (for example, a school, diocese, business, club, community group, or local government in some States) first decides to look after its archives, the following issues are often important -
This guide provides some elementary advice on how to get started, and (more importantly) where to seek help. First, some definitions
Establishing a new archives program means proceeding carefully at first. The first steps to establishing a successful archives program are to
A newly-appointed archivist will often be confronted with quantities of old records that no-one has cared for, stored in bad conditions, and with few clues as to what they might comprise. If at all possible, avoid the temptation to get started by 'wading in' to tidy up such a mess until you have looked around. Contact other archivists responsible for similar archives programs and arrange to visit to see what they have done and get ideas for your own archives program. Join the Australian Society of Archivists Inc. (ASA). Being an archivist is meaningless without a leavening of professional contact and interaction. Use the ASA to your own advantage, as group therapy, to make new friends and contacts, to acquire new ideas. It's not only what you know, but whom you know! Others share your problems and are willing to talk about them. Read some basic literature about archives and the role of an archivist. Do a survey of what old records exist in the institution that you will need to deal with as part of the archives program. What kinds of records, where they are stored, how much of each kind. Your knowledge of the organisation, ideas from other archivists and archives programs, reading, and survey work, will all be important to you as you think about and plan your archives program. The organisation for whose activities you are responsible, will usually expect you to provide advice about what is needed to carry out the task successfully. This advice needs to be carefully thought out to ensure the archives program is properly understood, especially 'at the top' of the organisation. Decide what resources, facilities and funds the archives program will need. The highest priority will often be a secure space for storing the archives and some room to sort them out, but this does mean a cupboard or a room? What about shelves and storage cartons? Work out a basic business plan for the archives program. One way of doing this is to provide the answers to the following questions:
The Minimum Requirements
for a Successful Archives Program
The Australian Society
of Archivists Inc (ASA) The ASA may be contacted through our national postal address, (PO Box 83, O'Connor, ACT 2601) and the nationwide freephone number (1800 622 251) which gives the contact phone numbers of Branch secretaries. Further information is available through our web site. Ask for our information pack, which includes information about the benefits of membership, samples of our regular publications and a membership application form.
Read This Book Some branches of the Australian Society of Archivists make copies available to members only, at a discount price.
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| CAPTION:
The world’s largest island nation, Australia’s vast coastline and splendid beaches made surf swimming popular, though risky. The surf life-saving reel, designed by Lyster Ormsby, was first demonstrated on 23 December 1906 at Bondi Beach. Two weeks later it was first used to rescue two schoolboys swept out in a rip - twenty-two years later one of those boys, Charles Kingsford-Smith, made the first aeroplane flight across the Pacific Ocean. |
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