National Archives and Records
Administration
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is
an independent federal agency that preserves our nation's
history and defines us as a people by overseeing the
management of all federal records. –
www.nara.gov/genealogy
Enshrined for posterity in the original building in
Washington, DC, are the cornerstone documents of our
government: the
Declaration of Independence, the
Constitution of the United States, and the
Bill of Rights.
But the National Archives and Records Administration is
more than famous documents. NARA is a public trust upon which
our democracy depends. NARA enables people to inspect for
themselves the record of what government has done. NARA
enables officials and agencies to review their actions and
helps citizens hold them accountable for those actions. And
NARA ensures continuing access to essential evidence that
documents the rights of American citizens, the actions of
federal officials, and the national experience.
The Records
The National Archives of the United States reflect and
record more than 200 years of American development; they are
great in number, diverse in character, and rich in
information. The NARA’s 33 facilities hold about 21.5 million
cubic feet of original textual materials – that’s more than 4
billion pieces of paper from the executive, legislative, and
judicial branches of the federal government. The National
Archives multimedia collections include nearly 300,000 reels
of motion picture film, more than 5 million maps, charts, and
architectural drawings, more than 200,000 sound and video
recordings, more than 9 million aerial photographs, nearly 14
million still pictures and posters, and about 7,600 computer
data sets.
Every year the federal government creates
a new avalanche of records. Determining what evidence is
essential documentation is one of NARA's major
responsibilities. Less than 3 percent of the government's
records have enough enduring historical or legal significance
to become part of National Archives indefinitely.
Records in the National Archives document the government's
policies, define how those policies are carried out, and offer
insights into the experiences of individual Americans. They
show the nation's expansion westward, the settlement of the
land, the emergence of industrial America, the challenges of
agrarian commerce, the story of American ingenuity, the fight
for democracy, and the struggle for equality. They help to
guarantee the accountability of the government to the American
people and enable citizens to protect individual rights and
liberties. Presidents and politicians, diplomats and soldiers,
the famous, the infamous, and the ordinary citizen all have a
place here.
Before
the establishment of the National Archives in 1934,
millions of documents were lost due to fires and poor storage
conditions. Now extraordinary care is taken to preserve
essential records. For the most part, they are stored in
specially designed acid-free boxes in fireproof, locked stack
areas where temperature, humidity and light levels are
carefully monitored. Conservators may work for hours to clean
a document, repair a tear, or rebind a leather-bound volume.
NARA and the Public
In addition to preserving the records,
archivists work to make them readily available to a wide
spectrum of citizens such as historians seeking to understand
the past, lawyers preparing briefs, journalists researching
today's stories, agency officials exploring the origins of a
policy, veterans pursuing their legal rights, people tracing
their family roots, and students preparing papers.
Thousands of people call, write, and
visit NARA to get information from and about our records. More
than 300,000 people annually make research visits to archival
facilities, and staff responds to an additional 800,000 oral
and written requests for records and information. Archivists
assist researchers with a variety of topics. What did the
autopsy report on Abraham Lincoln reveal? Who was on the
Hindenberg when it exploded? What has the Air Force
discovered about UFOs? What products were rationed during
World War II?
NARA also serves as a national cultural
institution by involving millions of people in public programs
at all of our facilities. Programs include exhibitions,
behind-the-scenes tours, commemorative celebrations,
educational lectures, film series, genealogical workshops, and
volunteer programs.
NARA publishes the government's daily
newspaper of rules and regulations, the Federal Register,
as well as the Code of Federal Regulations, the
Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, the
Public Papers of the Presidents, The United States
Government Manual, and the U.S. Statutes at Large.
Federal Register publications form an important link
between the federal government and those affected by its
regulations and actions.
NARA: A
Nationwide System
NARA establishes standards for the
adequate documentation of government agencies and activities.
Archivists work with agencies to determine the length of time
their records should be retained before being destroyed or
transferred to the National Archives of the United States, and
archivists maintain schedules of records currently in
agencies' custody.
Semi-active records still in agency
custody become part of computer controlled records center
holdings stored at
regional records services facilities throughout the United
States. The facilities provide reduced storage costs for
agency records that would otherwise overcrowd government
offices. If you have ever filed an income tax form, served in
the military, had a social security number or a passport, your
records may have been stored in a regional records services
facility. These facilities respond to more than 14 million
agency requests for records and information each year and an
additional 2 million from the public.
NARA also maintains the Presidential records, personal papers,
audiovisual collections, and gifts and artifacts of former
Presidents from
Herbert Hoover to
George Bush at 12
Presidential libraries, projects, and museums. As well as
being excellent historical research facilities, the libraries
and museums are designed to give the general public a better
understanding of the life and times of individual Presidents,
the institution of the Presidency, and the American political
system as a whole.
Through the
National Historical Publications and Records Commission,
the National Archives and Records Administration awards
competitive grants to preserve, publish, and encourage the use
of documentary sources that constitute an important part of
our national heritage.
What makes NARA a nationwide resource is
not only these important roles, but its physical presence at
more than 30 sites throughout the country. The National
Archives Building in Washington, DC, is located midway between
the White House and the Capitol on Pennsylvania Avenue. The
National Archives at College Park is a new, state-of-the-art
facility in Maryland. In addition,
regional records services facilities from Atlanta, GA, to
Anchorage, AK, store, preserve, and make available to the
public and federal agencies, records center and archival
holdings, including records of federal courts and field
offices of federal agencies.
By identifying, protecting, and helping
people to use the invaluable records of America's past, the
National Archives and Records Administration plays a unique
and central role in preserving our national heritage and
democratic traditions for all Americans now and in the future.
NARA Records Management Facilities
Alaska - Anchorage - Anchorage, AK
NARA's Pacific Alaska Region (Anchorage)
California - Laguna Niguel -
Pacific Region
San Francisco (San Bruno) -
Pacific Region
Colorado - Denver -
Rocky Mountain Region
District of Columbia (and
Maryland)
www.archives.gov/global_pages/inquire_form.html
Georgia - Atlanta -
NARA's Southeast Region
Illinois - Chicago -
www.archives.gov/facilities/il/chicago.html
Maryland (See District of Columbia)
Massachusetts - Waltham -
Northeast Region (Boston) www.archives.gov/facilities/ma/boston.html
New York - New York -
Northeast Region www.archives.gov/facilities/ny/new_york_city.html
Ohio - Dayton -
Great
Lakes Region (Dayton) www.archives.gov/facilities/oh/dayton.html
Pennsylvania (See
Massachusetts)
Texas - Fort Worth -
Southwest Region www.archives.gov/facilities/tx/fort_worth.html
Washington (State) - Seattle -
Pacific
Alaska Region (Seattle)
www.archives.gov/facilities/wa/seattle.html
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