protecting your family's history

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Lynda Kachurek University of Richmond Osher Institute Course July 2014 PROTECTING YOUR FAMILY’S HISTORY

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Page 1: Protecting your family's history

Lynda Kachurek

University of RichmondOsher Institute Course

July 2014

PROTECTING YOUR FAMILY’S HISTORY

Page 2: Protecting your family's history

Welcome

• Introductions• Course Agenda &

Housekeeping• Protecting Your Family’s

History

• Resources, ideas, and tips• Questions• Looking Ahead:

For Next Week

Page 3: Protecting your family's history

What are family papers?Family papers can include a wide variety of materials:

• Manuscripts• Clippings• Correspondence• Photographs • Audio-visual materials• Scrapbooks• Diaries• 3-dimensional artifacts• Digital items

Page 4: Protecting your family's history

Our Goal:

From This …. To This . . .Unprocessed Collection Processed Collection

Page 5: Protecting your family's history

Or, in some cases, from this . . .

Page 6: Protecting your family's history

Examples of family papers

• official documents: passports, birth, marriage and death certificates• correspondence: letters, postcards, email, telegrams• diaries• scrapbooks• photographs, movie film, video, audio recordings• books: cookbooks, family histories, religious and spiritual texts• artifacts: art objects, clothing, military material, occupational and household items, daily-living material, and furniture• digital materials: laptops, floppies, cell phones

Page 7: Protecting your family's history

Where to start?

•Find place and time to work•Have first round of materials (folders, boxes, pencils, etc.)•Organize •Protect•Enjoy

• Start small• Don’t get

overwhelmed• Start with basics• Move into specifics

Saving Your Treasures

Page 8: Protecting your family's history

Priority #1: The Environment

Page 9: Protecting your family's history

Environmental threats to your family papers

•Temperature and humidity•Sunlight•Bugs

Page 10: Protecting your family's history

•Heat and humidity = Mold

Page 11: Protecting your family's history

•Heat that comes in many forms

Page 12: Protecting your family's history

More environmental threats

•Dirt•Food and drink•The atmosphere

Page 13: Protecting your family's history

Best Practices: Environment• Ideal temperature: 60-72 degrees• Ideal humidity: 40-60%• Consistency is important• Protect materials from dust, light, pests, and mold

• Avoid attics and basements (barns, tool sheds, etc.)• Avoid damp areas• Use your nose

• Don’t let “for now” become “forever”!

Page 14: Protecting your family's history

Priority #2: Organize• From this

• To this

Page 15: Protecting your family's history

Most Important Thing?

Don’t do anything that can’t be undone!• Lamination• Ink• Unintentional Damage

Page 16: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: Flatten• Remove letters and documents from envelopes and flatten.

Page 17: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: Remove Harmful Items

Common items to avoid•Cellophane tape•Paper clips•Rubber bands• Ink pens / markers•Lamination

Page 18: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: Clean• Lightly remove surface dirt with fine brush, document cleaning pads, polymer erasers, vulcanized rubber sponge

Page 19: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: IdentifyUsing soft pencil, provide any identifying information that you can:• Names• Dates• Places• Events• Relationships

Not just photos!

Page 20: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: Select• Survey materials as whole, then work down through individual items• Typical materials of interest include:• Letters, memoirs, reminiscences, oral histories, stories• Diaries, scrapbooks, photo albums• Professional information, business records, minutes/reports • Financial records (some)• Legal documents, speeches, lectures• Genealogical information• Photographs• Films, videos, audio tapes

Deciding What to Keep

Page 21: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: Storage Ideal/Best practice:• Acid free folders, labeled• Acid free boxes, labeled• Photo sleeves• Protective covers

Reality:• Do the best you can

with what you have!

Page 22: Protecting your family's history

Proper Storage Tips

• Store in dark, cool and dry area• Isolate acidic items (old newspapers)• Use appropriate archival containers• Avoid sunlight and UV light •Watch for bugs and mold• Use Mylar or other

chemically inert plastics

Page 23: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do: Preservation Tips

Scrapbooks• Keep their original order if possible• Identify materials removed from scrapbooks with date, source, names, and places. Use only pencil.• Remove any materials in magnetic / sticky photo albums, but do no harm. • Consider taking photos of the scrapbook as it is, for back-up.

Page 24: Protecting your family's history

Photo Tips• Do not take apart any ‘cased photographs’

(daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and tintypes). • Do not flatten tin-types or attempt to clean with solvents.• Avoid touching images with fingers. Hold the edges or

use white gloves. • House photo prints in clear polypropylene or

polyethylene sleeves (Mylar) and in folders and boxes for support. PAT-tested supplies.• Avoid wood-pulp paper, glassine, or polyvinyl chloride

(PVC) for storage!• Store negatives separately from photographs.• Label using soft pencil or in sleeve with label• Use digital copies for display, or UV filtering covers on

framed photos, keep away from direct sunlight

Page 25: Protecting your family's history

Audio recordings

• Store all LPs, discs and tapes (cassette and open-reel) upright, on edge. Do not lay any recording flat.• Keep all tapes away from potential sources of demagnetization, such as loudspeakers, televisions, and heat sources.• Store tapes without rewinding.

Page 26: Protecting your family's history

Digital Objects• CD-ROMS have shown serious degradation in less than 10 years• DVD’s are believed to have shorter life-spans than CD-ROMS• External hard-drives an option, but not foolproof• Can print things that are for permanent retention or storage.

• Make and carry out a plan to migrate (or at least check and refresh) your data to new CD-ROMS or other digital storage on a regular basis.• Create back-ups, in case one set fails. Cloud storage an option!

Page 27: Protecting your family's history

Things to Do:Make an inventory• Helps keep track and locate items• Helps identify gaps in family materials• Assists in “weeding” – what to keep,

duplicates, etc.•What to document?• What items are in which folders• What are the dates of the documents• Which family members are represented• How did you acquire the documents

Page 28: Protecting your family's history

General tips

• Store objects of the same size together.• Do not overcrowd boxes and files.• Keep boxes off the floor.• Avoid using paperclips, glue, tape and rubber bands.• Copy crumbly newspaper clippings to acid free paper.• Have a disaster recovery plan.• Know where items are located.

Page 29: Protecting your family's history

Winding up: Preserving Your Family Treasures• Collections Care• Organization

• Storage

• Temperature and humidity concerns

• Reduce risk of damage

• Your Collections – Examples• Bring in item to work with next class!

• Things we didn’t talk about: • furniture, textiles, china, glassware, etc.

• Now What?

Page 30: Protecting your family's history

Next Steps• Enjoy your hard work• Get interested family members involved• Use materials to generate and discover more• Family gatherings• Create oral histories• Craft a digital story

• Share your materials• Local historical society• Library• Archive• Donate materials!

Page 31: Protecting your family's history

Possibilities• Scrapbook / album

• Time capsule• Storybook

• Oral histories• Personal history / memoir

• Reunions / memory tables / identification / gather new stories

• Digital storytelling / picture sharing• Family history blog

• Donations

Page 32: Protecting your family's history

Tips to Get Started - Projects• Plan• What is the purpose?

• Who is your intended audience?

• What story do you want to tell?

• Who can tell the story?

• Create a timeline• Identify both personal and world events as well as social and cultural changes• Use photographs, scrapbooks or albums to trigger stories and memories• Library resources•Websites to help

Page 33: Protecting your family's history

Just a Few Examples• Minnesota: Everyone has a Story!• Association of Personal Historians: Tell Your Story – Connect Generations!• Finding Your Roots – Share your Story• UR Digital Storytelling • CTLT has equipment, studios, and tech help!

• Leonard Cohen, Dance Me to the End of Love• Cowbird (www.cowbird.com) • Veteran’s History Project

Page 34: Protecting your family's history