The National Archives and the World
By Allen Weinstein, Archivist of the United States. Originally published in the January/February 2008 edition of Archival Outlook
Each year the National Archives’ Washington, D.C. headquarters receives more than one million visitors who come for a variety of reasons: to view the Charters of Freedom and the unique Public Vaults U.S. history exhibit and/or to engage in genealogical and other research projects using the more than two billion pages of documents found in this building alone.
Add to this number the additional hundreds of thousands of visitors to our 12 presidential libraries, 14 regional archives, and other facilities in the Washington, D.C., area. A substantial number of these visitors are from other countries, and the staff of the National Archives takes pride in welcoming them from virtually every corner of the globe.
We share with some countries—for example, Canada and the United Kingdom—a range of programs attesting to close collaboration with our counterparts there. At the same time, NARA is the largest single dues-paying member in the major organization of national archivists and records keepers, the International Council on Archives, and remains active in efforts to strengthen the programs and prospects for that body.
The National Archives has played a special leadership role in the past three years in forging strong bonds among the archivists of the world’s great democracies, helping to create informal links among the national archivists of the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Scotland, France, Germany, Japan, Australia, Switzerland, and others.
The National Archives has also increased its training programs to assist less-developed nations in improving their archival and records management practices, including multiple sessions of the Modern Archives Institute.
We also launched in the past few years a Distinguished Foreign Visitors Program that welcomes heads of state and government, foreign ambassadors, and other high-ranking officials to the National Archives in Washington, D.C., or to any of our four dozen facilities elsewhere in the country.
These visits often include a special tour involving original documents related to U.S. relations with their own country’s government and citizens. Government leaders from every continent have visited the National Archives as part of this program, and we recently welcomed United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon for a unique tour.
Groups of ambassadors representing various regions of the world, including Europe, Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, have found their way to the Archives, visits that have involved nearly every country in the diplomatic corps. The Distinguished Foreign Visitors Program led the State Department’s newly designated chief of protocol, Ambassador Nancy Brinker, to request that the National Archives host her first reception last October for the entire diplomatic corps—an event usually held at the State Department.
I should note that many of the Archives’ foreign visitors come primarily not to view our archival treasures but to inspect our buildings. The modern, well-equipped National Archives facility in College Park, Maryland, has become the more-or-less “gold standard” among modern archives. A number of foreign government officials come specifically to study its construction and operation.
In turn, several members of our senior staff travel abroad periodically to participate in mutually valuable conferences and seminars in order to share our knowledge of records management and preservation issues with our international colleagues.
I will close this brief survey of the National Archives’ global outreach by returning to an earlier subject. Our closest partner in these transnational efforts remains Library and Archives Canada (LAC).
A visible example of that partnership will be the opening in Ottawa in May 2008 of a major exhibit (with work by the archives curators of both Canada and the United States) on the Treaty of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War and formally recognized the United States of America as an independent nation. The exhibit will move to the National Archives Building in Washington, D.C., later this year.
The head of Canada’s LAC, Ian Wilson, and I, as well as members of our senior staffs, exchange visits regularly and are otherwise in close cooperative contact. We are in the process of developing similar partnerships with the national archivists of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Australia, and other countries.
The National Archives of the United States proudly conveys its vast documentary resources on American history to interested people throughout the world, both at home and abroad, and will continue to welcome our visitors with creative exhibits and programs.
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