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The Texas Library Association

Archives and Local History Round Table 1950-2000: Fifty Years of Promoting the Role of Libraries In Preservation and Access to Primary Information

John H. Slate, CA Dallas Municipal Archives

Formed out of an interest in archives and local history collections within Texas libraries, the Archives and Local History Round Table has been the Texas Library Association’s advocate for the preservation of and access to archival and primary source materials, more especially materials relating to Texas local history. The Round Table “seeks to further the activities of libraries, museums, and local governments, which collect and preserve historic material and disseminate historical information about Texas.” Until the formation of the regional Society of Southwest Archivists in 1972, no other professional group in the state existed to promote and encourage archival education, preservation of historically valuable library materials, and the professional management of archives and local history special collections.

Like many TLA units, the Archives and Local History Round Table (ALHRT) began as an informal interest group that met at the annual TLA meeting and at other professional

conferences, such as ALA and the Southwest Libraries Association. When the unit formed half a century ago, TLA had six divisions, four committees, and a handful of informal “sections,” analogous to Round Tables. Today, ALHRT is one of 22 Round Tables and is in the company of 33 Committees, five Interest Groups, and four Divisions. The charter membership of the group at the first meeting was 21; in 2000 the membership was173.

Prior to the creation of the Archives and Local History Round Table, archival issues among TLA members were discussed primarily within the confines of the College and University Libraries Division, though increasing attention was being given to the wealth of local history contained in public libraries around the state.

Allied interest among public and academic librarians in the preservation and access issues surrounding archives and local history materials paralleled the development of the archives profession in the United States and the rise of library professional specialization. The Society of American Archivists, for example, was only fourteen years old at the time of ALHRT’s creation. More specifically, the missionary efforts of the deputy archivist of the United States, Dr. T. R. Schellenberg, and the introduction of academic and federally-sponsored archives seminars for librarians in the 1940s and 1950s created considerable interest among a number of Texas librarians in strengthening the longstanding but not fully realized connections between special collections in libraries and formal archives.

In the late 1940s, a core of librarian/archivists met at the annual meetings of TLA and the Southwestern Libraries Association to discuss issues of mutual interest. Among these pioneers was Winnie Allen, Llerena B. Friend, and Marcelle Hamer at the collections of the University of Texas, Dr. William S. Dix, director of the Fondren Library at Rice Institute (later University),

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Dorothy W. Knepper, director of the San Jacinto Museum of History Association, Ray C. Janeway of Texas Tech University Library, and Abby Moran, Fort Worth Public Library.

A general consensus was reached in a petition signed by 37 TLA members to create an archives and state and local history division and was presented to TLA president Arthur M. Sampley. He acknowledged the petition February 22, 1950, and the TLA Executive Board authorized the Division at a meeting of the Southwestern Libraries Association in San Antonio on November 9, 1950. In a February 26, 1951 form letter sent by Dorothy W. Knepper, the following objectives for the group were outlined:

1. To try to eliminate duplication, overlapping, and competition among various collecting agencies and to establish a basis of cooperation for the collecting of archival and related materials;

2. To exchange the use of services and facilities, such as microfilming, photographing, photostating, binding, decontaminating equipment, et cetera;

3. To establish a standard form for recording and describing archival material;

4. To publish a union list or catalog of archival holdings of Texas libraries, if financial aid can be secured;

5. To exchange mimeographed lists and descriptions of material, until a union list of archival holdings in Texas libraries is published.

While some of the preceding goals were not formally achieved, some were, such as the sharing and dissemination of inventories and collection descriptions. More importantly, however, the discourse and dialogue creating a network among professionals had begun in earnest. The early years of the unit were primarily occupied with the tasks of organizing and promoting

fundamental archival education and developing local history resources for TLA members. Two early chairs devoted considerable time and energy to the unit, Winnie Allen and Abby Moran. Allen, Archivist of the University of Texas, and Moran, librarian in the Genealogy Section of the Fort Worth Public Library, displayed unbounded enthusiasm and effort in creating programs and bringing distinguished speakers to the meetings and workshops.

Until 1960, the Archives and State and Local History unit was designated a Division. After the 1960 TLA conference the category of Round Table was created; Archives and State and Local History became a Round Table. In 1975 the name of the unit was changed to its present form, the Archives and Local History Round Table.

Many special programs have been presented over the last fifty years. The topics and speakers have included Dr. Joe B. Frantz, speaking on “Business Records in County

Archives”(1953); George W. Hill, Texas State Historical Survey Committee, “Education of Archivists and Local History Librarians in Texas” (1962); Dr. Cornelius C. Smith, Jr., “William Sanders Oury: History Maker of the Southwest” (1968); Dr. Larry D. Sall, Texas State Archives, “The Regional Archives Program of the Texas State Archives”(1977); Warren Stricker,

Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, “The Alamo in Books” (1998) and many others. For several years during the 1990s, Dr. Donald G. Davis, Jr. of the University of Texas at Austin Graduate School of Library and Information Science sponsored student presenters from his course in Texas library history as a part of the Texas Library History Colloquium. Also since the

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1990s, ALHRT has sponsored history-oriented walking tours or guided bus tours at the Annual Conference. Initiated by Carol Roark, the tours have provided exercise for Annual Conference attendees and insights into the local history of San Antonio, Dallas, Fort Worth, and Houston. Besides the annual meeting, professional development workshops have been held. As early as 1951 the unit held demonstrations of archival methods and techniques, hosted by Winnie Allen in Austin. According to a mailed announcement, the workshop included instruction on materials handling, mending techniques, and filing and copying methods.1 In November of 1953 a program was sponsored by the group on the preservation of county records, stimulated by a paper delivered at the 1953 Annual Conference by Witt B. Harwell of the Texas State Library.2

Perhaps the greatest achievement of the unit was its relationship with Dr. T. R.

Schellenberg, deputy Archivist of the United States. Schellenberg, one of the most influential American authors on archives and public records and the author of the seminal text Modern Archives; Principles and Techniques (1956), spoke on “The Relation of the Archival and Library Professions” at the ALHRT business meeting in Houston in 1959. Though not organized under the sponsorship of the group, he gave a one-day seminar in Fort Worth in the same year. Although it began as an ALHRT-sponsored program, a four-week intensive “Institute on

Archival Management” was taught on the University of Texas at Austin Campus in the Summer of 1960 by Schellenberg.

However sporadic, a newsletter has kept members of the unit in touch with ALHRT activities and announced upcoming events since the early days – from the mimeographed one -sheets from the enthusiastic typewriter of Abby Moran to the printed newsletters of later years (often supported by generous donation of Amigos Preservation Services).

In 1999, ALHRT revisited its educational roots to help spread interest throughout TLA in broad preservation-related subjects by co-sponsoring several programs through the Preservation Interest Group, steered by Thomas F. R. Clareson. Issues such as book and document repair, disaster planning, and imaging have been canvassed in recent years.

Archives and Local History also have periodically presented awards and other recognitions to distinguished Texans for their interest in the preservation of Texas history. Beginning in 1964, awards have been given to such advocates as Dr. Rupert N. Richardson, Dr. H. Bailey Carroll, Walter E. Long, Dora Dieterich Bonham, and Dr. Chester V. Kielman.

Despite lean years and occasional low membership and low enthusiasm, the unit endures. After fifty ye ars, the Archives and Local History Round Table has demonstrated that the care of and access to archives and local history continues to be a vital area of interest to professional librarians in Texas. And as interest in local history, genealogy, and specia l collections continues to grow, so will the interest in how best to provide and care for these permanently valuable resources.

1

Workshop announcement, Division of Archives and State and Local History, [ca. September, 1951] Texas Library Association Archives.

2

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Special Thanks for Help and Encouragement to the Following: William W. Hardesty Gloria Méraz Audrey N. Slate ALHRT Chairs 1999-2002: Elaine Davis Kathy Sparkman Michael Miller

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Chairs of the Archives and Local History Round Table Texas Library Association

1950-2000 1951-1952 Winnie Allen, University of Texas at Austin

1952-1953 Winnie Allen, University of Texas at Austin 1953-1954 Winnie Allen, University of Texas at Austin 1954-1955 Seymour V. Connor, Texas Tech University 1955-1956 Doris Clower, Southern Methodist University 1956-1957 Grace Phillipi, San Antonio Public Library 1957-1958 Margaret B. Pratt, Dallas Public Library 1958-1959 Winnie Allen, University of Texas at Austin 1959-1960 Abby Moran, Fort Worth Public Library 1960-1961 Dorman Winfrey, University of Texas at Austin 1961-1962 James M. Day, Texas State Library

1962-1963 Doris Clower, Southern Methodist University 1963-1964 Mrs. Fischer Osburn, Texas State Library 1964-1965 Edna P. Deckler, Fort Worth Public Library 1965-1966 Mildred Gervasi, Southwestern University 1965-1967 Katherine Drake Hart, Austin Public Library

1967-1968 Carmen Perry, Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library 1967-1969 Katherine Ard, Texas State Library Field Consultant 1969-1970 Andrew Johnson, Lamar State College of Technology 1970-1971 Sister M. Claude Lane St. Pius X High School (San Antonio) 1971-1972 Catherine McDowell, Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library 1972-1973 Lucile Boykin, Dallas Public Library

1973-1974 Leonard J. McCown, Dallas Baptist College 1974-1975 Ann D. McDermott, Texas Christian University 1975-1976 Louise H. Frederick, Richardson Public Library

1976-1977 Larry J. Wygant, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 1976-1978 Charlotte Olin, Kimball Art Museum

1978-1979 Kenneth A. Mjaaland, Jr., Carrollton Public Library 1979-1980 Marie B. Berry, San Antonio Public Library 1980-1981 Katherine ‘Kippy’ Jagoe, Dallas Public Library 1981-1982 Lloyd Bockstruck, Dallas Public Library 1982-1983 Gary L. Jennings, Dallas Public Library 1983-1984 Ellen K. Berg, Bishop College

1984-1985 Jo Kimbro, Southwest Texas State University

1985-1986 Linda Cheves Niklas, Stephen F. Austin State University 1986-1987 David Murrah, Texas Tech University

1987-1988 Doris (Dorothy) Glasser, Houston Public Library

1988-1989 George Gause, University of Texas-Pan American University 1989-1990 William Howard, Houston Public Library

1990-1991 Bradley Sue Howell, Woodrow Wilson High School (Dallas) 1991-1992 Gerald Saxon, University of Texas at Arlington

1992-1993 Dora Guerra, University of Texas at San Antonio 1993-1994 Deborah Austin, Fort Worth Public Library

1994-1995 Thomas F. R. Clareson, Amigos Preservation Services 1995-1996 Carol Roark, Dallas Public Library

1996-1997 Mark E. Martin, T.L.L. Temple Memorial Library and Archives 1997-1998 Mark E. Martin, T.L.L. Temple Memorial Library and Archives 1998-1999 John H. Slate, Texas African American Photography Archive 1999-2000 Kathy Sparkman, Baylor University

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Texas Library Association

Archives and Local History Round Table

1950-2000

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