Archive collections
The methods of acquisition for archival material are:
- transfer from Council Departments
- transfer from Records Management Units
- donation
- deposit on indefinite loan
- purchase
Acquisitions are accepted in accordance with current terms and conditions. Please see Terms of Agreement for the Deposit of Archives at Dorset History Centre (2020). DHC will endeavour to ensure valid title to material offered to it and reserves the right to refuse legally questionable material.
Loans of archives for specific purposes or periods may also be accepted.
Potential acquisitions will be assessed by professional staff from the History Centre at the time of their accession to assess their suitability for long term preservation.
Items will only be purchased if they are deemed to be of cultural or informational importance to the history of Dorset.
Donations or deposits will be acknowledged in writing.
DHC is indebted to all those who have placed records in its care for use by the public.
At the same time depositors of collections on indefinite loan receive substantial benefits.
There is a formal deposit agreement between the owner and the Service. This sets out the obligations of each.
Under this agreement the Service undertakes to store the archives appropriately, to carry out necessary cataloguing, conservation or reprographic works within its resources and priorities and to make them available to the public.
To justify the expenditure in preserving, conserving and cataloguing deposited archives, the agreement stipulates that collections should normally remain in the DHC for at least twenty years or a charge may be made to cover part of the costs incurred.
There is no mandatory charge for the deposit of archives at Dorset History Centre. However, the financial implications associated with long-term storage are significant. In order to off-set the costs to DHC’s funding authorities, depositors of records are encouraged to make a voluntary contribution towards the costs of storage on a per box basis.
They are also asked to consider associated costs of cataloguing, conservation and digitisation. This information is made available on a separate sheet.
DHC, in consultation with a collection’s owner or donor, may transfer groups of documents to a more suitable repository, if it is found that they belong more properly with records in another repository.
DHC, in accordance with the wishes and requirements of donors and depositors, evaluates and selects for destruction or return to the owners, documents not deemed to be worthy of permanent preservation. The final appraisal of collections will take place when they are catalogued.
Transfer and appraisal will comply with all legislative requirements, notably the Public Records Acts.