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Article
American Historians and European Archival Theory: The Collaboration of J. Franklin Jameson and Waldo G. Leland
Archival Science (2006)
  • Randall C. Jimerson, Western Washington University, Western Washington University
Abstract
J. Franklin Jameson and Waldo G. Leland remain forever linked in American archival history as the founders, respectively, of the National Archives and the American archival profession. From the immediate post-Revolutionary period until the eve of the First World War, American historians recognized that their nation's early history remained locked in European archives. However, not until the pioneering efforts of Leland, working under supervision of Jameson during the early 20th century, did any of these historical researchers bring to the United States, along with the voluminous copies of archival documents, the emerging tenets of European archival theory. This is the story of the collaboration between Jameson and Leland, and of Leland's efforts to professionalize American archival practice on the basis of European archival theory.
Keywords
  • Archival history—United States,
  • Archival history,
  • Archival theory,
  • John Franklin Jameson,
  • Waldo Gifford Leland,
  • Carnegie Institution of Washington
Disciplines
Publication Date
December, 2006
Publisher Statement
© Springer International Publishing AG DOI: 10.1007/s10502-007-9047-5
Citation Information
Randall C. Jimerson. "American Historians and European Archival Theory: The Collaboration of J. Franklin Jameson and Waldo G. Leland" Archival Science Vol. 6 Iss. 3 (2006)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/randall_jimerson/21/