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  • Timeline of archives in New South Wales
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  • From the more detailed Wikipedia page [1] 1821 Establishment of the position of Colonial Secretary and Registrar of the Records who is responsible for government administration in New South Wales. 1879 Letter from J.H. Heaton recommending appointment of Dr G.H. Stanley as Keeper of Archives in the Colonial Secretary’s Office. This proposal was not acted on. 1888 Proposal by George Burnett Barton (1836-1901) brother of Edmund Barton] to establish a repository for public records in NSW 1960 Archives Act proclaimed to commence on 1 June 1961 1963 Appointment of Mr R F Doust, BA as Senior Archivist
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  • From the more detailed Wikipedia page [1] 1821 Establishment of the position of Colonial Secretary and Registrar of the Records who is responsible for government administration in New South Wales. 1879 Letter from J.H. Heaton recommending appointment of Dr G.H. Stanley as Keeper of Archives in the Colonial Secretary’s Office. This proposal was not acted on. 1887 First serious proposals for the establishment of an Archives Office made just before the 100th anniversary of white settlement in Australia in 1888. This led to the publication of the History of New South Wales from the Records and the Historical Records of New South Wales under the direction of James Bonwick (1817-1906) who can be regarded as the first official government archivist in NSW (appointed 13 March 1888.) 1888 Proposal by George Burnett Barton (1836-1901) brother of Edmund Barton] to establish a repository for public records in NSW 1903 Comment by F.M.Bladen, Principal Librarian of the Public Library of NSW ‘It is a disgrace to Australia as an enlightened nation that there is no place where the original papers bearing on the discovery of the continent; the exploration and settlement of the states; the constitutional history and records of their courts of law and judicial and political institutions can be consulted by the student of history.’ 1910 Opening of the Mitchell Library. Trustees of the Public Library consider ‘that no time should be lost towards the establishment of an Archives Office’ 1915 Letter from Sir William Dixson (later benefactor of the Mitchell Library) to the Chief Secretary requesting the establishment of an archives department 1953 Appointment of Allan Horton to the position of Archives Officer at the Public Library of NSW and establishment of Archives Department within the Public Library of NSW 1955 Establishment of Government Records Repository (responsible to the NSW Public Service Board) and work commences on the preparation of archives legislation 1960 Archives Act proclaimed to commence on 1 June 1961 1961 29 June first meeting of the Archives Authority of New South Wales 1963 Appointment of Mr R F Doust, BA as Senior Archivist 1964 Site of about Template under construction acquired for a permanent repository at Kingswood 1967 Allan Horton appointed as member of the Archives Authority of NSW 1973 Retirement of Gordon Richardson, Principal Archivist and appointment of Russell Doust, Acting Principal Archivist 1975 November. Government Records Repository at Kingswood opens 1976 Ian Maclean appointed Principal Archivist 1976 Establishment of the Records Management Office and Archives Office becomes administratively separate from the Public Library of NSW 1978 Archives and Records Management Offices move from the State Library to a new purpose built archives building in Sydney’s historic Rocks area 1979 City Reading Room opens – for the first time the Archives Office has its own separate reading room and exhibition area 1980 John Cross appointed Principal Archivist 1982 Abolition of the Department of Services (previously the Chief Secretary’s Department) 1985/6 25th anniversary. Archives Act 1960 and 1 June 1986 establishment of Archives Authority of NSW 1987 Allan Horton resigns from the Archives Authority on 31 May making him the longest serving Board member. Reading Room opened at Western Sydney Records Centre 1998 Appointment of David Roberts as Director 2 June - State Records Act assented to, effective from 1 January 1999 2003 Review of State Records Act 2005 State Records Act (amendment 15 July 2005) and opening of the Stage 6 Building at the Western Sydney Records Centre, Kingswood. 2005/06 Review of State Records by Council on the Cost and Quality of Government 2006 November State Records moves from Arts NSW to the Department of Commerce 2007 The Convict Records of Australia held by NSW State Records and Archives of Tasmania are inscribed onto the International UNESCO Memory of the World Register 2008 Alan Ventress appointed Director