A Quick-and-Dirty Guide to What’s Worth Keeping Forever
by Sarah Glassford, PhD, MLIS
1. FORMAT
Materials worth keeping can take any of the following forms:
a. Digital (documents, images, emails, webpages, etc.)
b. Audio-visual (reel-to-reel film, VHS tapes, slides, photographs, microfilm, sound recordings, artwork, etc.)
c. Textual (paper files, published materials, etc.)
d. Ephemera (posters, tickets, programs, newspaper clippings, brochures, etc.)
e. Artifacts (tools, clothing, dishes, furniture, toys, pins, awards, etc.)
2. CONTENT
Materials worth keeping are usually valuable for one or more of the following reasons:
a. Administrative Value
The item offers evidence of the day-to-day affairs of the organization or activity
Ex. 1 Appointment book of the former CEO of the organization
Ex. 2 Agendas and minutes from the meetings of committees and other bodies who make important decisions for the organization (ex. Board of Governors, Executive Committee, National Sub-committee on Fundraising, etc.)
b. Legal Value
The item offers evidence of the organization’s legal affairs
Ex. 1 Deed of sale for former national headquarters building
Ex. 2 Organization’s Charter and By-Laws (different versions over the years)
Ex. 3 Documents relating to organization’s role in litigation
c. Fiscal Value
The item documents the organization’s financial affairs, responsibilities, and accountability
Ex. 1 Budgets and financial statements
Ex. 2 Materials used by staff or volunteers as part of a fundraising campaign
d. Evidential Value
The item illuminates the nature and work of the organization, including its origins, functions, values, and activities
Ex. 1 Rough notes from a brainstorming session regarding a potential new program
Ex. 2 Annual reports and other organizational publications
Ex. 3 Training manual from a program run by the organization
Ex. 4 Correspondence within organization or between organization and others
e. Informational Value
Contains information about persons, places, or subjects associated with the organization and its activities
Ex. 1 List of volunteers or donors to a special aid campaign
Ex. 2 Photographs, or other audio-visual material depicting staff and volunteers, aid recipients, special projects, facilities, etc.
Ex. 3 Poster for a workshop jointly hosted by the organization and University of Ottawa Women’s Studies Students’ Association
Ex. 4 Thank-you note from an aid recipient explaining what aid meant to them
f. Intrinsic Value
Something about the item gives it inherent worth, such as its age, its content, the way it was used, the circumstances of its creation, a signature on it, a seal attached to it, etc.
Ex. 1 Childhood diary of organization’s founder — contains no information related to the organization, but is one of the few documents written by the founder to have survived
Ex. 2 Fundraising collecting tin from 1956 — the jar and label have no value in themselves, but its use as a fundraising tool by ordinary people during one of the organization’s most successful campaigns makes it historically significant
3. ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
a. Does the item help tell a story that might not otherwise be known
b. Is the item in acceptable condition, or is it irreparably damaged/unasable?