Beinecke Library's
New Processing Facility
Ellen Doon, Yale University
In March of this year Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library opened a new, off-site archival processing facility. The new operation
expands its existing Manuscript Unit to include eight new positions, as
part of the Library's commitment to process its backlog and keep up with
new accessions.
The Beinecke Library is fortunate to have a robust acquisitions budget,
and over time this has resulted in an archival processing backlog of over
12,000 linear feet (and growing). Until 2007, six Beinecke archivists
divided their time between archival processing, cataloging of manuscript
items and small collections, and other responsibilities within the Unit
and the Library. Archival processing was done in cubicles with some adjacent
shelving, but this space made efficient processing of large collections
difficult. In 2005, the Library decided to expand the Unit, adding more
staff and providing them with enough space to process large collections
quickly.
The Library hired New Haven-based architect Craig Newick to design a flexible
processing unit in leased space in an office building near the Yale campus.
The result is a highly functional and pleasant workspace in one large
room, which occupies nearly an entire floor of the building. The layout
of the space places archivists within easy reach of their projects. Workstations
line one wall, with movable partitions to allow for reconfiguration and
reallocation of space. Down the center of the room is a row of tables,
which are lightweight enough to be moved easily to accommodate any desired
configuration. Fixed shelving lines the opposite wall, totaling 1800 linear
feet, so that the entirety of a large collection is accessible to the
archivist during processing. The space also includes a supply and copier
room, a meeting room, a staff lounge, and an office.
Under my direction, five archivists (Susan Brady, Lisa Conathan, Heather
Dean, Sandra Markham, and Molly Wheeler) and two archives assistants (Andrea
Benefiel and Clayton McGahee) have now begun work in the new facility.
This space is intended for processing the richest of Beinecke's large
archival holdings: among the collections the new staff will process in
the near future are the Joseph Brodksy Papers, the archive of the Theatre
Guild, the William Carlos Williams Papers, the Archibald MacLeish Papers,
and the Livingston Family Papers. We will be experimenting with processing
these collections at varying levels of description, depending on the complexity,
research value, and preservation needs of the material. Collections are
closed to researchers while in process, and the Unit is committed to returning
collections to the Beinecke by established deadlines, which are published
on the Beinecke Library's Web site, at http://www.library.yale.edu/beinecke/index.html.
The additional space and staff allow Beinecke's Manuscript Unit to meet
its goals of processing both backlog and newly acquired large collections,
while continuing to provide access to a high volume of new acquisitions
of small collections and single items. This has been a year of great change
for the Unit and the Library, and we now look forward to getting down
to work.
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