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The Mills Archive is a centralised archive and resource library
that allows users to store and retrieve information and records
about traditional mills and milling. It was set up in response
to an expressed need to preserve and where possible integrate
the various threatened sources of information on the windmills
and watermills of the UK and the rest of the world.
Searches will also include information from other collaborating
resource libraries where mill collections are held. The Internet
is the most useful gateway to the collection, but facilities
will also be made available for researchers to visit the library
to consult books and other material
The fate of collections
Large general archives may accept material but often can only
act as a safe warehouse. There is a need for a specialist
repository not only to care for mill-related collections but
also to make the material available to researchers and enthusiasts
over the Internet. Three issues are paramount:
- Preservation
- Time is running out for old collections.
- Paper is bulky to store and may deteriorate rapidly.
- Films, slides, photographs (including microfilm)
and video/audio tapes age even more rapidly.
- Even modern electronic media are not permanent.
- Business archives such as those of millers and millwrights
are also vulnerable and contain much valuable information.
- Knowing what is available
- Most collections rely on personal memory although
some collectors create databases either as simple
card indexes or on a computer.
- All indexes, however created, may suffer from idiosyncrasies
of the compiler or the nature of the collection or
make assumptions about the knowledge and needs of
the user.
- Many indexes are just aide-mémoires for
the collector and rapidly lose their value as the
collection grows and the collector ages.
- Access to the collection
- Even when you know an item exists can you get hold
of it?
- Finding things in your own collection can be a challenge;
it is even worse when the collection is elsewhere.
- In theory the Internet allows easy access to catalogues
and digital images held on different sites,
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In practice access to the best historical information
may be restricted or difficult and there are many
copyright and standards issues to trap the unwary.
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