AHA Today

The AHA Responds to the Relocation of the National Archives for Black Women’s History

Debbie Doyle | Jul 7, 2014

On June 12, 2014, AHA President Jan Goldstein and Executive Director Jim Grossman sent a letter to Jonathan Jarvis, the director of the National Park Service, regarding the relocation of the National Archives for Black Women’s History. The archives were originally housed at the Mary McLeod Bethune Council House National Historic Site in Washington, DC. In February, the archives were relocated to the National Park Service Museum Resource Center in Landover, Maryland. The carriage house where the archives had previously been housed requires extensive renovations to protect the collection.

Historian Peniel E. Joseph and Washington Post columnist Colbert I. King expressed concern about the move in February. In a February 28 letter to the Post, Jarvis expressed the Park Service’s commitment to the preservation of the archives, writing that “The Bethune archives belong at the Bethune House, but not at the expense of losing them.” The Association acknowledges the competing interests between housing the archives in their historic context and storing sensitive archival materials in a location with appropriate environmental controls, and notes with encouragement that the Bethune house website indicates that NPS is continuing to assess the feasibility of returning the documents to the carriage house. The letter urges the NPS to return the archives to the historic site if feasible.

AHA Council Letter to NPS

This post first appeared on AHA Today.


Tags: AHA Today Advocacy Archives African American History National Park Service Women, Gender, Sexuality


Comment

Please read our commenting and letters policy before submitting.