Special Collections Receives Teamsters Records and an Endowed Archivist Position
Monday, August 6th, 2007The International Brotherhood of Teamsters has contributed $2 million to The George Washington University to create an endowed archivist position at GW and establish an exhibition of its archives for public display to enhance research on 20th century U.S. labor relations. The Teamsters archives, which date back to the early 1900s, also will reside at GW on permanent loan. It is among the nation’s preeminent collections of primary labor movement documents. The funding is the first part of a comprehensive Teamsters education and archives project in cooperation with the University.
The archives include presidential papers from James R. Hoffa and James P. Hoffa, autographed political cartoons from the early 20th century, and several hundred photographs and memos from the labor and civil rights movements, such as a photo of Jimmy Hoffa with Martin Luther King, Jr., and telegrams from President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The archives also contain a wire recorder, circa 1930s, believed to be one of the few remaining in the world.
The archivist position will be responsible for cataloging the archives and acquiring additional important historical labor documents through GW’s Gelman Library System. These initiatives will arrange the Teamsters archives, making public never-before-seen documents, letters, and photographs and provide access by researchers and labor history professionals to these records.
The University also will begin a collection of valuable materials from all aspects of U.S. labor history that will benefit labor studies in history, law, political science, business, and other academic disciplines. GW plans to collect primary documents, photographs, and recordings from other labor groups. In growing its U.S. labor special collection, the University will remain intellectually neutral, providing researchers with a wealth of information previously unavailable to the public.
The Teamsters Union was established in 1903 and represents more than 1.4 million hardworking men and women throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.
Gelman Library’s Special Collections Department collects, preserves, and makes accessible primary resources and rare materials to researchers within and outside of the GW community. The collection includes more than 25,000 linear feet of archives, books, images, manuscripts, maps, microforms, directories, theses, dissertations, faculty publications, periodicals, and ephemera. The University houses the archives from PNC (Riggs) Bank and of journalist Jack Anderson, among others.
For the full press release, please go to: http://www.gwu.edu/~Emedia/pressrelease.cfm?ann_id=26008


PNC Bank announced on Thursday, October 5, 2006 the gift of its