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The
De La Salle Christian Brothers Midwest Province
Archival Record & Museum Collections |
DE LA SALLE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS
MIDWEST DISTRICT
ARCHIVES
SELECTED GOVERNING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT,
MAINTENANCE & USE OF THE ARCHIVE MATERIALS AND COLLECTIONS
NAME
The official name of the collections shall be the : DE LA SALLE
CHRISTIAN BROTHERS ARCHIVES - MIDWEST DISTRICT
LOCATION
The archives collections will be housed at a location determined
by the Brother Visitor for the District and/or his Council. At present,
the archives is located within the Brother I. Leo O'Donnell Archives
on the campus of Christian Brothers University , 2455 Avery, Memphis,
Tennessee, 38112, 901-321-3243.
PURPOSE
The purpose of the archives shall be to centralize and organize
the historical materials and records of the District in collecting,
cataloguing, preserving, protecting, and restoring when necessary,
those records and materials pertaining to the history of the Institute
in general and the District in particular. The further purpose of
the archives shall be to make available needed records to those
persons authorized to view such information, materials, records
or collections.
IMPORTANCE
The District Archives serve not only as a historical depository
but as a reminder of years of fruitful service given by the Brothers.
Archival materials provide knowledge of our heritage, an appreciation
for the dedication and sacrifice of those who ca me before - in
whose footsteps we walk, and as an incentive to keep alive and viable
the motivating spirit which marks one as a De La Salle Christian
Brother. For these reasons the expansion and maintenance of the
Archives should be a special concern for the administration and
for the superiors of the district. Consideration must be given not
only to the contents of the Archives but also to space, budget and
personnel.
DEFINITION
The DISTRICT ARCHIVES are the official depository for all documents
and materials of any form, made or received by the District in the
pursuit of its religious and legal obligations and in the transaction
of its business. These documents reflect the in ternal development
of the province, the conduct of its affairs as a legal corporation,
the individual and personal lives of its members, and the people
the Brothers have been called to serve in their ministries.
SCOPE
All accounts of functions, policies, decisions, procedures, operations
and other activities which provide information about the Brothers
of the former St. Louis District, the Central - Chicago District,
the Winona - St. Paul and Minneapolis Districts a nd the Midwest
District, shall be deposited in the Archives permanently. The archives
shall serve as a source of valuable information and serious research,
not a warehouse for storage. The contents are not limited to the
official papers of past administr ative officers but will encompass
anything and everything which helps to preserve the sense of history,
the spirit and the chairsm of the De La Salle Christian Brothers
in the District and worldwide.
THE ARCHIVIST
The Archivist is appointed by the Brother Provincial of the Midwest
District and serves in a staff position under him. His chief function
is to manage and direct the various activities related to the Archives.
RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE ARCHIVIST
The Archivist shall work to create an awareness of how the Archives
can be of service both to the members of the District and to those
they serve, The Archivist shall perform the following services:
1. Publish inventories of archival materials on a periodical basis;
2. Prepare archive-related materials for the Newsletter and other
FSC publications;
3. Assist researchers in their use of archival materials;
4. Develop a program to educate the Brothers as to the materials
that should be preserved;
5. To increase archival holdings by correspondence with individuals
and other sources;
6. Maintain a Records Retention Service, keeping easily available
for a specific time the records of house and departments within
the District.
BASIS FOR POLICY DECISIONS
Most archival materials are protected by private law, that is by
the Constitutions or by-laws of an organization, legislative ordinances,
executive directives and approved policies. Religious profession
records are considered public records and are th erefore subject
to public law. With the exceptional use of those records such as
these that may be subject to public law, all materials contained
or preserved within the archives are considered the exclusive property
of the District (Institute) and are th erefore governed by the policies
of the Brother Visitor and/or his Council. In order to maintain
autonomy of ownership of all materials maintained in the District
Archives, the archives will not accept, nor care for, "on loan"
items or papers from any sou rce other than the Provincial offices.
PRINCIPAL KINDS OF RECORDS AND MATERIALS TO BE MAINTAINED
Current vital community/district records should be maintained in
the archives. These are the records necessary for the rebuilding
of the original "structure" of the community should existing
records be destroyed by some disaster.
All administrative, historical and pertinent records and materials
of the general administration, local houses/institutions, mission
houses, various ministries in which the Brothers were and are engaged
shall be sources from which materials are drawn f or the Archives.
Published Institute documents, histories, newsletters, etc. will
be maintained in the archives. Books, articles and other materials
published or printed by the District, Institute, or individual Brothers
will be maintained whenever possible and availab le.
TRANSFERRAL OF RECORDS
The general rules governing the regular and orderly transfer of
records to the archives are the following:
1. Inactive files should be transferred immediately to the archives;
2. Files used infrequently, less than once a year, should be transferred
to the archives;
3. District administrators, upon leaving appointed or elected offices,
should transfer files, not required by their successors, to the
archives before the day of their departure from office. Files generated
while an elected or appointed person is in of fice are the property
of the office, not the individual, in which they are/were generated.
Files must not be removed from offices at the end of a term of office
except to be transferred to the archives;
MATERIALS USE AND RESTRICTIONS
The DISTRICT ARCHIVES is a private archives and therefore the records
contained therein are NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AT ANY TIME without
written permission from the Brother Provincial and/or his Council.
Those publics outside of the legal bounds of the Institute of the
Brothers of the Christian Schools seeking to do GENERAL research
from PUBLISHED material available to the general public may use
those materials in this category contained in the archive s with
the permission and at the request of the archivist. Without written
permission of the Brother Visitor and/or his Council, no further
research may be conducted.
Ordinarily Brothers of the district or houses or institutions or
any of the apostolates or ministries may have access to the collections
and general files of the archives. The use of these is at the discretion
of the Archivist and may be in consultatio n with the Brother Provincial.
Other files or materials may, at the discretion of the Brother
Provincial and/or his Council, be restricted for designated lengths
of time:
- Administrative records (unless otherwise designated by the administrator)
of every kind shall remain closed for a 25 year period; they can
be used for reference with the permission of the present Brother
Visitor and/or his council in consult ation the Archivist.
- Personal records shall remain closed for a 60 year period;
controlled use of these records may be made with permission of
the Brother Visitor in consultation with the archivist.
- Unpublished written material of a deceased Brother may be made
available to a researcher for legitimate use with permission of
the archivist and in consultation with the Brother Visitor.
-
Drop files on living Brothers are restricted to all but the Brother
and the administrators of the District.
- Published materials are generally not restricted and are available
to anyone for research or reading in the archives room.
- Academic records and/or transcripts will be released only
when requested by appropriate authorities and permission of the
individual concerned. A fee is charged and a letter of request
must be on file.
- In response to inquiries by the family members, friends, researchers
or others for information about present or former, living or deceased
members of the Institute, no information will be released without
a formal request to and approved by the Brother Visitor upon
consultation/recommendation of the Archivist.
GUIDELINES FOR RESEARCH
The following guidelines shall be observed by researchers, whether
members of the Institute or outside researchers:
- Permission to use the Archives must be made in writing to the
Brother Visitor. Upon granting permission, Brother Visitor will
send the letter of request to the Archivist for dispatch;
- Each researcher shall submit to the Archivist a statement of
their purpose of the research and the records to be consulted;
- The use of certain documents may be restricted by statute, office,
origin, or by request of the donor; the researcher may quote from
these documents only with permission of the archivist and with
due reference to the source;
- No one may use the Archives except authorized persons;
- The archivist will oversee the use of all materials requested
in a designated area;
- No letter, memorandum, or document written by a person still
living may be quoted, paraphrased or used in any way without the
written consent of the author;
- The researcher must assume full responsibility for conforming
to the laws of libel and literary property rights which may be
involved in the use of manuscripts and other archival materials.
HANDLING OF ARCHIVAL MATERIALS
Records shall be handled with care, they shall not be traced over
or marked upon; therefore, no carbon, ink or ballpoint pens are
permitted in the research area - pencils only may be used.
If permission is given for reproduction of materials, the process
is carried out by the archivist. Those requesting materials to be
reproduced must pay for them in advance. A reproduction is provided
solely for the convenience of examining the manuscri pt and must
be returned upon completion of the research.
The reproduction may not be further copied, examined or transferred
elsewhere without prior written permission. Permission to reproduce
material does not constitute to publish.
If permission is given for the use of materials for publication,
two copies of the publication are to be sent (at the author's expense)
to the Archives. A thesis or dissertation is considered a publication.
No book, document, manuscript or other item may be removed from
the Archives.
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