Difference between revisions of "Clinton Library Archives"

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(References)
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*"Clinton Papers Release to be Bush's Decision," ''Washington Post,'' September 19, 2004.
 
*"Clinton Papers Release to be Bush's Decision," ''Washington Post,'' September 19, 2004.
 
*Jennifer Lee, " Archiving Digital Records From the White House," ''New York Times,'' January 25, 2001.
 
*Jennifer Lee, " Archiving Digital Records From the White House," ''New York Times,'' January 25, 2001.
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*Cathleen McGuigan, "Bill's New Bridge," ''Newsweek,'' September 13, 2004.
 
*Kevin Sack, "Pardon is Trouble for Clinton Library," ''New York Times,'' February 18, 2001.
 
*Kevin Sack, "Pardon is Trouble for Clinton Library," ''New York Times,'' February 18, 2001.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 
*[http://www.clintonfoundation.org/library_archives.htm Clinton Presidential Center online library archives]
 
*[http://www.clintonfoundation.org/library_archives.htm Clinton Presidential Center online library archives]

Revision as of 17:28, 22 January 2008

The Clinton Library Archives are housed at the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock, Arkansas, and administered by staff members of the National Archives and Records Administration. The archives include approximately 35,000 cubic feet of material. This material includes 77 million pages of documents, 1.8 million photographs, 88,000 rolls of film, 12,500 videotapes, and assorted electronic files. Also in the archives are 14,000 books from Clinton's personal library.

From November 2000 to January 2001 eight C-5 transport planes flew 625 tons of archival material from Washington, DC, to Little Rock. On January 20, 2001, the National Archives removed 177 computers used during the Clinton administration, copied their drives, and reformatted them for reuse by the Bush White House. NARA retained 40 million government-related email messages in its sweep of Clinton's offices and network servers. All physical documents and other memorabilia were stored temporarily at a defunct Oldsmobile dealership until the Library Archive building came online on July 28, 2004.

The windowless basement storage area is approximately half a football field long, with boxes stacked in compact shelving twelve feet floor to ceiling. It is attached to the main exhibition space of the Clinton Library, but is not part of the so-called "bridge to the twenty-first century" main structure. Shortly before the Library groundbreaking Bill Clinton asked the two chief architects of the archives, James Polshek and Richard Olcott, to pull the two structures further away from each another as dictated in the original plan. "He was absolutely right," says Olcott. "Ordinarily you wouldn't make that big a change so late in the process. But when it's the president - well, of course."

NPR reporter Alex Chadwick describes the Clinton Library archives basement facilities as "like slightly smaller versions of the final shot from that first 'Indiana Jones' movie, the one where someone's wheeling away the lost Ark of the Covenant amid a maze of boxes."

Digital files will form the core of an online-accessible digital archive of Clinton-era primary material. The Clinton Electronic Records Project charged with creating the digital archive is directed by Sam Watkins. In 2004 the first collection of 20,000 searchable pages of public comments made by the president while in office became available on the Clinton Library website. Also available on the site in 2004 were 2,600 speeches, 2,400 press briefings, 467 radio addresses, and 380 photographs.

The first archivist of the Clinton Library Archives was David Alsobrook. He began operating the archives in November 2004 with thirty employees. In an interview before the Clinton Library opening he said, "What presidential libraries do, they remind all of us that we're not Republicans or Democrats; we're Americans all. And so in that sense, we are a unifying cultural aspect of the National Archives. At least I feel like that, and that's just my personal opinion."

In accordance with the provisions of the Presidential Records Act of 1978, Clinton administration documents were not generally available for the five years after Bill Clinton left office. In November 2001 President George W. Bush signed an executive order that allowed sitting presidents to deny release of the records of prior administrations regardless of the wishes of the president who generated the papers in the first place. This rule was strengthened by President Bush's Executive Order 13292 in March 2003. The order further restricts access to sensitive national security information in presidential papers. All presidential papers, excluding those of national security interest, become public in 2013, twelve years after Clinton left office.

On February 23, 2005 approximately 100,000 pages of Clinton administration domestic policy documents were made available to the public. The records included information on the President's initiatives in welfare reform, health care, education, employment, and the arts. The Library Archives also released material on the Commission on Holocaust Assets, which was set up to determine the distribution of assets of World War II victims in America following the war.

References

  • "Access to Presidential Papers under Scrutiny," American Libraries, 35.10 (November 2004): 14.
  • Alex Chadwick, "Profile: Taking a Tour of the New William J. Clinton Presidential Library with Archivist David Alsobrook," National Public Radio: Day to Day, November 17, 2004.
  • "Clinton Documents To Be Made Public," New York Times, February 23, 2005.
  • "Clinton Papers Release to be Bush's Decision," Washington Post, September 19, 2004.
  • Jennifer Lee, " Archiving Digital Records From the White House," New York Times, January 25, 2001.
  • Cathleen McGuigan, "Bill's New Bridge," Newsweek, September 13, 2004.
  • Kevin Sack, "Pardon is Trouble for Clinton Library," New York Times, February 18, 2001.

External links