Many state archival agencies have done little to appraise and preserve office files created by state legislators, and few private repositories have collected these papers on a systematic or comprehensive basis. Professional literature that could provide guidance, either by example or by prescription, for the disposition of these files, is virtually nonexistent. This article attempts to take a first step to remedy that situation by identifying the kinds of papers most likely to appear in legislators' files, discussing the conditions of their creation and official use, and suggesting their possible usefulness to a variety of potential researchers. Rather than finding a model or a list of ready-made appraisal decisions, however, readers are asked to consider various alternatives and to draw their own conclusions based on the needs of individual repositories with their own collecting policies and obligations to parent agencies or user constituencies.
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April 01 1985
Appraising the Papers of State Legislators
Paul Chestnut
Paul Chestnut
1
Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress, Duke University
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The American Archivist (1985) 48 (2): 159–172.
Citation
Paul Chestnut; Appraising the Papers of State Legislators. The American Archivist 1 April 1985; 48 (2): 159–172. doi: https://doi.org/10.17723/aarc.48.2.262367ux2x40q71p
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