Difference between revisions of "Mormon Archive"

From MormonWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "To archive documents means to keep them organized and accessible in a safe place. Therefore, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has many methods and locations f...")
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
To archive documents means to keep them organized and accessible in a safe place.  Therefore, [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] has many methods and locations for archiving records.  An archive for historical records has been created at the new [[Mormon Church History Library]] in Salt Lake City.  The Church also keeps an archive of all it's records of meetings, membership, ordinances, etc.   
+
[[Image:Vault.jpg|left|frame|alt=Mormon Church Granite Mountain Records Vault|The Granite Mountain Records Vault of the Mormon Church]]To archive documents means to keep them organized and accessible in a safe place.  Therefore, [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] has many methods and locations for archiving records.  An archive for historical records has been created at the new [[Mormon Church History Library]] in Salt Lake City.  The Church also keeps an archive of all it's records of meetings, membership, ordinances, etc.   
  
[[Image:Vault.jpg|left|frame|The Granite Mountain Records Vault of the Mormon Church]]
 
 
There is also the Granite Mountain Records Vault in the Salt Lake Valley mountains, which holds genealogical records currently being digitized for public use.  Construction of the vault began in 1958 and was generally completed by 1963 and considered completely operational in 1965. The site includes a network of storage rooms containing walls of steel cabinets ten feet high. A separate section houses office spaces, shipping docks and microfilm processing stations.  This climate- controlled vault holds  2.4 million rolls of microfilm containing approximately 3.5 billion images. The information links to billions of people in over 100 countries and is recorded in 170 languages. [http://lds.org/ldsnewsroom/eng/news-releases-stories/familysearch-shares-plans-to-digitize-billions-of-records-stored-at-granite-mountain-records-vault]  The enormous collection of secured documents includes unpublished records from churches and governments, parish registries, passenger lists, birth certificates, censuses, deeds, wills, family, town and county histories and even maps. Eventually the vast majority of the collection will be available for online research.  
 
There is also the Granite Mountain Records Vault in the Salt Lake Valley mountains, which holds genealogical records currently being digitized for public use.  Construction of the vault began in 1958 and was generally completed by 1963 and considered completely operational in 1965. The site includes a network of storage rooms containing walls of steel cabinets ten feet high. A separate section houses office spaces, shipping docks and microfilm processing stations.  This climate- controlled vault holds  2.4 million rolls of microfilm containing approximately 3.5 billion images. The information links to billions of people in over 100 countries and is recorded in 170 languages. [http://lds.org/ldsnewsroom/eng/news-releases-stories/familysearch-shares-plans-to-digitize-billions-of-records-stored-at-granite-mountain-records-vault]  The enormous collection of secured documents includes unpublished records from churches and governments, parish registries, passenger lists, birth certificates, censuses, deeds, wills, family, town and county histories and even maps. Eventually the vast majority of the collection will be available for online research.  
  

Latest revision as of 22:11, 13 September 2010

Mormon Church Granite Mountain Records Vault
The Granite Mountain Records Vault of the Mormon Church
To archive documents means to keep them organized and accessible in a safe place. Therefore, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has many methods and locations for archiving records. An archive for historical records has been created at the new Mormon Church History Library in Salt Lake City. The Church also keeps an archive of all it's records of meetings, membership, ordinances, etc.

There is also the Granite Mountain Records Vault in the Salt Lake Valley mountains, which holds genealogical records currently being digitized for public use. Construction of the vault began in 1958 and was generally completed by 1963 and considered completely operational in 1965. The site includes a network of storage rooms containing walls of steel cabinets ten feet high. A separate section houses office spaces, shipping docks and microfilm processing stations. This climate- controlled vault holds 2.4 million rolls of microfilm containing approximately 3.5 billion images. The information links to billions of people in over 100 countries and is recorded in 170 languages. [1] The enormous collection of secured documents includes unpublished records from churches and governments, parish registries, passenger lists, birth certificates, censuses, deeds, wills, family, town and county histories and even maps. Eventually the vast majority of the collection will be available for online research.

"Such a facility provides evidence of the Church’s commitment to not only collecting, but making the collections available to researchers worldwide. Archivists can offer microfilm or digital copies of the records to their reading room patrons without damage to the original vital records. The genealogical world recognizes the Church as a longtime resource in their work, and in that sense, they think of the vault as a bit of an icon, an icon of protection to these important and accessible records."