Visit to the City & Country Archives with Jordis Rosenberg, School Archivist
146 West 13th Street, NYC
January 21, 2015, 1 PM
Today, I met with Jordis Rosenberg, the archivist at the City & Country School. C&C just celebrated its centennial in 2014 and is also a small progressive private school in downtown Manhattan. I wondered how they organized and processed their archive so I decided to pay them a visit. I thought that the C&C archives and the LREI archives would have many things in common. I also thought that we could learn a lot from their recent experience using archives as part of a centennial celebration.
The C&C archives room is a small, climate controlled room in the basement dedicated to their archives. The room is lined with shelving that holds documents, photos, and artwork by students. There is a good portion of the archive that has not yet been processed, but what has been accounted for is divided into 16 record groups, for example:
RG 1: Bureau of Educational Experiment Records
Early curriculum records and minute observational notes of the school.RG 2: Associated Experimental Schools Records
Notes, letters, and minutes related to the school’s involvement in the AES in the 1930s.RG 3: Caroline Pratt Collection
Articles, manuscripts and correspondence written about Caroline Pratt, as well as the most complete collection of her own written work.
Each record group has a section of shelf space, and the documents are housed in archival boxes appropriate for their contents and labeled. Photos are in binders categorized by activity, not year. A flat file cabinet holds student work and other oversized items.
Jordis, who was not the archivist at the archives’ inception, explained to me that almost all of their archival materials were processed by school librarians and parent volunteers and that they used few outside vendors. They did, however, hire someone to consult with them about designing the grand plan of the project before they began. This might be a good idea for LREI, and we could look into contacting The Winthrop Group, a vendor other schools have used to plan their archives and perhaps a few others.
I asked Jordis about how they handle yearbooks, but it turns out that most classes, except for a span during the 1950’s, did not have a yearbook. They did, however, have a full runs of their sixth grade poetry journal and the eighth grade newspaper from the founding of the school to the present.
Last year, the C&C archives put together an exhibition as part of the school’s centennial celebration that was on view at Jefferson Market Library. This was a good place for them to have an exhibit because it is a publicly accessible historic building that is part of the larger C&C community—and the space was free of charge! This is a venue that LREI could consider when planning its centennial exhibition.
C&C has a small online presence, but most items have not yet been digitized, nor do they have an online searchable finding aid. This is something, Jordis said, we should consider from the outset, as this allows multiple tags for cross-referencing (a photo can have multiple tags such as “comic book club,” “class of 1979,” and “faculty”).
All in all, my visit with Jordis was very helpful and I will probably be in touch with her with future questions.