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Article
Documents and Archives in Early America
Archivaria
  • Randall C. Jimerson, Western Washington University, Western Washington University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2005
Keywords
  • Power of archives,
  • Archival functions,
  • Selection,
  • preservation,
  • and access
Disciplines
Abstract

Concern for documents and archival records in America began with religious motives and concern for colonists' rights. By the late 18th century historians increasingly relied on original documents to establish facts and "objective" truth. Beginning with the Revolution historical documents served patriotic and nationalistic purposes, such as veneration of heroes. Efforts to preserve irreplaceable documents resulted in two separate but closely linked traditions-"multiplying the copies" through documentary editing and publication, and establishing repositories to protect original documents. This marked the beginning of archival consciousness in America, led by private historical societies. Archives served the needs of the social elite and confirmed their power.

Subjects - Topical (LCSH)
Archives--United States--History
Geographic Coverage
United States
Genre/Form
articles
Type
Text
Language
English
Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Randall C. Jimerson. "Documents and Archives in Early America" Archivaria Vol. 60 (2005) p. 235 - 258
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/randall_jimerson/15/