National Archives of Guyana

The National Archives of Guyana (also known as the Walter Rodney Archives) is the legal depository for official records and local newspaper publications in Guyana. Established in 1958, the National Archives are situated in D'Urban Park on Homestretch Avenue in Central Georgetown. In 1972 it was made a Department of the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport in the Government of Guyana.[1][2][3]

National Archives of Guyana
Government Department overview
Formed1958 (1958)
JurisdictionGuyana
HeadquartersD'Urban Part, Homestretch Avenue, Georgetown
Minister responsible
  • Officer-in-Charge
Parent departmentMinistry of Culture, Youth and Sport
The sad state of document management December 2015

History

The National Archives of Guyana were founded in 1958. They were originally located in a building on Main Street.[4]

In 1982, the Government of Guyana passed the National Archives of Guyana Act, which made the National Archives a Department of the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport, and the Archivist an Officer-in-Charge with duty to report to the Ministry.[2]

In the year 2000, the National Archives of Guyana acquired and installed a microfiche unit.[2]

In 2008, the National Archives were relocated to Homestretch Avenue. At this time they were renamed the Walter Rodney Archives in memory of the Guyanese historian and political activist, Dr. Walter Rodney.[3][4]

Holdings

The National Archives of Guyana is a repository of official state records and local publications, including newspaper publications, from Guyana. In the mid-1980s, the National Archives recorded holdings that measured in at 510,000 linear feet.[1] The holdings date back to the 18th Century - the Dutch colonial period in Guyanese history.[5]

The Guyana Immigration Records Digitization Project

In 2013, the National Archives of Guyana launched The Guyana Immigration Records Digitization Project.[6] It is an online search tool for the archives. Phase 1 of the project was to have all the data digitized by the end of 2014. Unfortunately, most data has not been digitized as 2017 (4 years after the launch date). Phase 2 was to have digital images of the records on the search engine, unfortunately this phase has not begun at all.[7]

The public has demanded this online search tool be created since 2002.[8]

gollark: (to tag page X as being part of category Æ (yes, I have unicode support somewhat) you would just stick something like `[[tag!Æ]]` in)
gollark: Cool, yes?
gollark: So, instead of a dedicated tag system you can just use links and a list of backlinks.
gollark: The "typed" bit means that you can specify that the link is a "tag" or something, and that will be shown on both ends.
gollark: When you create a link on page X, it is shown as a backlink on page Y, *with* a snippet of the context surrounding the link.

References

  1. Stephenson, Yvonne V. (1993). "Guyana". In Robert Wedgeworth (ed.). World Encyclopedia of Libraries and Information Services. ALA Editions. pp. 332–333. ISBN 9780838906095.
  2. Department of Culture. "The National Archives: Conserving the Nation's Heritage". Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  3. GINA (3 February 2012). "It's a storehouse of Guyanese treasures". Guyana Chronicle. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  4. Stabroek Staff (12 October 2008). "Naming the Archives". Stabroek News. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  5. Knews (19 April 2010). "National Archives looking to expand with local and overseas support". Kaieteur News. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  6. "National Archives of Guyana". guyananationalarchives.com. Retrieved 2017-08-04.
  7. Jason Yhap (2013-05-14), Launching of The Guyana National Archives Web Portal, retrieved 2017-08-04
  8. "Archive: Indian Indenture Database Project - Guyana News and Information Discussion Forums". www.guyana.org. Retrieved 2017-08-04.
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