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History, as a discipline, comes out of the archive. The archive is not the
library, but something else entirely. Libraries spread knowledge that’s
been compressed into books and other media. Archives are where collections
of papers are stored, usually within a library’s inner sanctum: Nathaniel
Hawthorne’s papers, say, at the New York Public Library. Or Record Group 31
at the National Archives—a set of Federal Housing Administration documents
from the 1930s to the ’70s. Usually, an archive contains materials from the
people and institutions near it. So, the Silicon Valley Archives at
Stanford contains everything from Atari’s business plans to HP co-founder
William Hewlett’s correspondence

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http://bit.ly/37qixwW+

-- 
Peterk
Dallas, Tx
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