American Civil Liberties Union Records Processing Funded

nhprc

The See­ley G. Mudd Man­u­script Library is pleased to announce that the National His­tor­i­cal Pub­li­ca­tions and Records Com­mis­sion (NHPRC) has awarded the library fund­ing to process a 2,000 lin­ear foot addi­tion to the Amer­i­can Civil Lib­er­ties Union Records, mak­ing these impor­tant mate­ri­als more acces­si­ble to researchers. Work on this two year project will com­mence in July, with com­ple­tion set for June 30, 2011. Adri­ane Han­son, who pre­vi­ously com­pleted NHPRC-funded projects to process the George Ken­nan and James For­re­stal Papers and Mudd’s eco­nom­ics col­lec­tions, will man­age the project.

The ACLU is the pre-eminent civil lib­er­ties orga­ni­za­tion in the United States and these records doc­u­ment its impor­tant work in the areas of civil rights, chil­dren and women’s rights, free­dom of speech (and all First Amend­ment ques­tions), due process, the right to pri­vacy, and church-state sep­a­ra­tion issues. The ACLU describes itself as “our nation’s guardian of lib­erty, work­ing daily in courts, leg­is­la­tures and com­mu­ni­ties to defend and pre­serve the indi­vid­ual rights and lib­er­ties that the Con­sti­tu­tion and laws of the United States guar­an­tee every­one in this coun­try.” Since its incep­tion in 1920, the ACLU has played a part in nearly every sig­nif­i­cant Amer­i­can social or polit­i­cal issue in the 20th century.

The col­lec­tion con­sists of offi­cial records of the organization’s national office in New York City, as well as records of its regional offices in Wash­ing­ton, D.C.; Atlanta; and Den­ver. Found within these records are mate­ri­als doc­u­ment­ing spe­cial ini­tia­tives such as the Children’s Rights Project, the Repro­duc­tive Free­dom Project, and the Women’s Rights Project. Span­ning the lat­ter third of the 20th cen­tury, these records doc­u­ment the ACLU’s par­tic­i­pa­tion in many of the nation’s impor­tant civil lib­er­ties events, includ­ing the civil rights move­ment, Native Amer­i­can rights issues, women’s rights, includ­ing abor­tion rights, as well as highly politi­cized issues such as the Robert Bork Supreme Court nom­i­na­tion hear­ings, the 1990 Texas flag burn­ing case (Texas v. John­son), and the Iran-Contra hearings.

The Amer­i­can Civil Lib­er­ties Union (ACLU) Records Pro­cess­ing Project aims to process nearly 2,000 lin­ear feet of post-World War II ACLU records to make them acces­si­ble to researchers. Due to the poten­tial for restricted mate­ri­als, this entire group of records is cur­rently closed. Upon com­ple­tion of pro­cess­ing, the great major­ity of these records (over 90%) will open imme­di­ately, with much of the remain­ing restricted mate­r­ial open­ing within a few years. These record will join the over 1,200 lin­ear feet of processed and unre­stricted ACLU mate­r­ial the library already holds (The Roger Bald­win Years, 1917–1950 and Amer­i­can Civil Lib­er­ties Union Records 1947–1995) that doc­u­ments the ACLU’s his­tory from its found­ing in 1920 into the post-World War II period.

Look for future blog entries describ­ing the progress of this project.