Acquisitions
| Formats Accessioned | Deaccessions
| Loans & Lending | Use
The Collections Development and Acquisitions Policy supplements
the 2003 Collections Policy, by establishing procedures for the management and
care of collections owned by the Martha's Vineyard Museum (MVM).
This
policy statement provides a description of subjects and formats that the Museum
seeks to collect in accordance with its mission to "promote interest and
understanding of the Island's unique cultural, physical and historical characteristics."
The focus of our collections is on items that contribute to recording, demonstrating,
and/or interpreting the history of the Island. Furthermore, the MVM seeks to continue
to "grow" its collection appropriate to the study of the history of
Martha's Vineyard. To ensure the proper implementation of this
new policy, the Collections Development and Acquisitions Policy outlines specific
staff responsibilities and procedures. This policy statement will be reviewed
annually by the Collections Committee so as to remain current with scholarly and
educational trends as well as curatorial and archival best practices.
Accessions (additions to the collection):
The Museum shall follow current ethical standards as set down by the American
Association of Museums, American Library Association, and the Society of American
Archivists in regard to acquiring and deaccessioning collection items.
Criteria
for Acquisition: Items to be considered, whether as gifts, bequests, exchanges
or purchase shall be judged before acceptance for - their
value in relation to the history of Martha's Vineyard
- whether
or not the same item/items already exist in the collection
- their
potential usefulness for research or exhibition relative to the history of Martha's
Vineyard
- the Museum's capacity to preserve, store and if
appropriate, exhibit the item
- the item is unencumbered by
donor restrictions/provisions
- the adherence to the Native
American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 - no Native American human
remains, funerary objects, sacred objects or objects of cultural patrimony will
be accepted
An item which does not meet the above criteria
but which could be used through exchange or sale to acquire another item of historical
significance to the Martha's Vineyard Museum or to make a cash deposit to the
collection fund for such a purpose or which is felt to be of specific value to
the Museum may also be considered Nature of Ownership:
Items may be added to the collections by means of gifts, bequests, purchases,
or any appropriate transaction by which full and absolute title is effectively
transferred to the MVM. The Museum shall not accept for accessioning items and
collections on "deposit," or "long-term, indefinite or permanent
loan," or in any manner whereby the Museum is not the owner of the items,
except in a unique instance when the Collections Committee approves of such an
arrangement for a uniquely valuable item or collection that would further the
MVM's mission. Acquisition of items shall be accompanied by
documentary evidence warranting ownership in the prior owner and effectively transferring
ownership to the Museum. The Museum will not knowingly acquire for its collections
any item that has been stolen, illegally exported from its country of origin,
or whose recovery involved unscientific or intentional destruction of or damage
to historic sites. Every effort will be made before acquisition to determine that
the item has a clear and legitimate provenance. The MVM will
attempt to acquire whole collections rather than break up assemblages with meaningful
contexts and potential for further research. The Museum's collections shall normally
have no restrictions assigned to them. Any limitation on use, or any restriction
or condition affecting ownership by the Museum, shall be subject to review by
the Collections Committee. The Museum strives to collect "original"
or "first generation media" records, but an exception may be made in
an extraordinary instance when the mission of the Museum will be clearly served
by accepting copies. The curator and/or librarian may make such a determination.
If the Museum acquires or makes such a copy, it shall attempt to receive a copyright
to the images as copied, regardless of media form. If the owner of the original
item retains ownership and/or copyright, such ownership and/or copyright shall
be clearly indicated and the item marked "for reference purposes only." Sensitive
material may be found within collections. The MVM librarian or curator will discuss
with a donor the possibility of restricting parts of a collection to protect the
privacy of the donor or of others. The MVM will normally agree to reasonable and
equitable restrictions for periods of time. Authority to
Acquire: The Museum's curator and librarian and/or designated staff are
responsible for the collection to which the item is appropriate and is to be added.
After considering all the above factors, they may accept on behalf of the Museum
such unrestricted gifts as they deem appropriate (subject to the Collections Policy).
All collection purchases or large gifts are governed by the Collections Policy
and subject to approval by the Collections Committee. All items
acquired, regardless of method, shall be included in the registrar's accession
reports. A copy of these reports shall be maintained as permanent records of the
Museum. These records shall be available to the Collections Committee at all times.
Acquisitions Procedures: A Collection
Committee consisting of at least three members of the Board of the Museum, the
curator, librarian, and interested staff shall be established. The Executive Director
will be advised of all meetings and invited to attend.
The
curator and librarian will accept items on a day to day basis for accession consideration.
The Accession Record/Donation Record Form is filled out for items deposited and
the donor is asked to complete the Donor Survey Questionnaire concerning the history
and background of the deposited material. No acquisition shall
be appraised by a council or staff member for the donor. By law, Library and Museum
staff cannot give tax advice or appraise the monetary value of a collection. However,
staff members may render impartial assistance to donors in seeking independent
qualified appraisers. It is the donor's responsibility to arrange for and bear
the cost of any appraisal. In certain circumstances, it may be possible for a
donor to take a tax deduction for the donation of a manuscript collection or artifact.
(See U.S. Tax Reform Act of 1984 and Internal Revenue Service regulations relating
to the act.) At the Collection Committee meeting, the curator
and the librarian will present their lists of items to be considered for accession.
Also considered will be items to purchase for the collection with collection funds.
Committee members wishing to view collection items may make arrangements with
the curator or archivist. Following acceptance of collection
items, the registrar will give each item an accession number and record all information
concerning the donor and the material in the collection records and file receipts
and any correspondence. The curator will photograph the items, enter them into
the collections' database, and place them in a designated storage area according
to the AASLH nomenclature system. All library donations will be catalogued following
library and archival standards and placed in a designated space. Subject
Areas and Formats of the Collections: The collections are those groupings
of related items accessioned and maintained by the Museum on the history of Martha's
Vineyard in all media formats and on all subjects associated with important individuals,
groups, organizations, events, or places. These items are intended to contribute
to the institution's research, preservation, and educational objectives. For most
of its history, the Museum emphasized collecting materials on the Vineyard's maritime
industry and legacy, European settlement of the Island, Wampanoag cultural artifacts,
relations between the Wampanoag peoples and European settlers, genealogical records,
and the Island's place in American history. However, in the past two decades,
its collecting interests have extended to the present. Subject
Areas collected include, but are not limited to, the history of:
- Architecture: Selected historically significant Martha's Vineyard
(MV) structures and sites of many types.
- Agriculture: Selected
historically significant MV farmers and farm families.
- Business:
Selected historically significant MV businesses, including small individually
owned businesses.
- Colonial America: Selected historical significant
records of the European settlement of the Island. Special attention devoted to
the colonizer's economic, social, cultural, environmental, and political impact.
- Communities:
Selected historically significant records of the development of and changes to
the six municipalities and surrounding areas.
- Conservation:
Selected materials of conservation efforts ranging from the establishment of land
trusts, to land restoration efforts, as well as to environmental activism.
- Education:
Selected historically significant individuals, organizations, and teaching materials.
- Under-Represented
Groups: Wampanoag, African-American, Brazilian, Portuguese as well as other identified
ethnic and social groups; selected historically significant individuals and their
families and specifically identified communities, businesses, clubs, and organizations.
- Families:
Personal, professional, and family papers of selected historically significant
Vineyard families as well as family genealogical materials.
- Government:
Selected historically significant MV government developments and leaders. But,
not records maintained under the authority of a government archive.
- Labor:
Historically significant skilled and unskilled labor organizations and professions.
- Maritime
Industry: Materials on selected historically significant MV seamen and their families
who were involved in the fishing, whaling, or transport industries.
- Military
Conflicts: Experiences of and documentation on selected historically significant
MV soldiers and military units, soldiers and their families during wartime (with
special attention to the Civil War, World War One and World War Two).
- Natural
History: Materials on the geologic formation of the island and its natural habitat,
such as fossils, shells, geological material, and botanical samples.
- Notable
Vineyarders: Historically significant MV individuals who are well-known for their
past activities and contributions.
- Oral Histories: Oral accounts
given by individuals and groups that relate to life on Martha's Vineyard.
- Politics:
Historically significant politicians and political groups from the 17th century
through the 20th century.
- Professions: Historically significant
attorneys, doctors, and other individuals who exemplify the professions.
- Religion:
Historically significant individuals and identified religious communities and
organizations, but not groups which have an active denominational archive on the
island.
- The American Revolution: Selected historically significant
records of the war's domestic, economic, political, social, and other aspects
related to MV.
- Tourism: Historically significant records
of the growing leisure industry and its economic, social, cultural, and political
impact on MV.
- Women: Selected historically significant women
and specifically identified businesses, clubs, organizations; "activism"
relating to economic, education, health, political, and social issues.
- Subject
area collections may include one or more formats described below.
>top
Formats and
Content Types accessioned and maintained by the Museum include, but may not be
limited to:
Printed and Published Material:
- Almanacs
- Atlases (selected and limited)
- Biographies
and Autobiographies
- Books and Pamphlets
- Broadsides
- Directories
- Ephemera
(selected and limited)
- MV Literary Works
- Local
Community Histories
- Maps (selected and limited)
- Memoirs
- Nautical
Charts
- Newspapers
- Pamphlets
- Periodicals
(selected and limited)
- Sheet Music (selected and limited)
Manuscript
and Archival Material - Architectural Records
- Audio
Recordings (selected and limited)
- Business Records
- Correspondence
- Diaries
and Other First Person Accounts
- Legal Records and Deeds
- Maps
and Surveys
- Oral Histories (selected audio recordings)
- Organizational
Records
- Professional, Personal, and Family Papers
- Town
and County Government Records
- US Government Records
Visual Material
- Ambrotypes
- Autochromes
- Daguerreotypes
- Engravings
- Lithographs
- Moving
Images
- Paintings
- Postcards
- Posters
- Sketches
- Tintypes
- Woodcuts
Artifacts The Museum has collected a wide range of artifacts that relate
to Martha's Vineyard. It continues to collect three-dimensional objects. All accessions
have to conform to the MVM's Collection Development and Acquisition Policy.
- Archaeological
- Artwork (Paintings, Prints,
Sculpture)
- Bedding
- Costumes
- Decoys
and Fishing Tackle
- Educational/School Materials
- Ethnographic
Artifacts
- Guns, Swords, Armament and Equipment
- Household
Furnishing
- Household Tools
- Medical and
Scientific Tools and Equipment
- Musical Instruments
- Natural
History
- Navigational Tools
- Photographic
Equipment
- Scrimshaw and Ivory
- Ship Models
- Ship's
Lighting
- Shipwreck Salvage
- Ship's Parts
- Tools:
Ship's Objects
- Tools: Agricultural; Carpentry, Specialized
- Toys and Dolls
- Transportation Artifacts
- Writing
Equipment
Items Ordinarily Not Collected, Except
Selectively With Limitations:
- Active collections that
are still being created or added to
- College and University
records
- General fiction (except MV writers)
- Official
Government Records (except when transferred pursuant to statutory process or by
an authorized agent or legitimate owner)
- Stamps and Postal
Covers
>top Criteria
for Deaccessions: Items to be considered shall
be judged for permanent removal: - they do not have
value relating to the history of Martha's Vineyard
- the object
is a duplicate or triplicate of another item already in the collection
- they
lack potential usefulness for research or exhibition purposes
- the
Museum lacks the capacity to store, preserve, and if appropriate, exhibit the
item
- the Museum is not able to financially support and properly
care for the item
- the condition of the item is beyond reasonable
repair
Deaccessions Procedures: The curator
or librarian shall recommend removal of an item from the collection to the Collection
Committee. All accession records and information concerning the item shall be
assembled by the registrar and available for the committee meeting. Following
a vote of approval, the committee shall approve the method of deaccession for
the item. The item may be given to an approved and impartial
auction house for sale from which the proceeds from such sale shall go into the
collection fund. The collection fund is to be used exclusively for the purchase,
care or conservation of collection items and requires a majority vote from the
collection committee for expenditure. The deaccessed item may
be an exchange by the MVM for an item of similar value and of Martha's Vineyard
relevance through another museum, educational institution, and art, antique or
archival dealer. The item may also be donated by the MVM to another museum or
educational institution. Finally, the MVM may decide to destroy the item. Accession
records shall be marked to indicate the date and method of disposal of an item
shall be filed with the accession records and a list made available for Executive
Director, the Collections Committee, and the Board of Directors. >top
Loans
(items accepted):
Criteria for a
Loan: Items may be accepted for loan by the
Society - as specified by
the MVM Loan Receipt Policy
- after a period
of five years the MVM will notify the owner that the loan agreement must be reviewed
and renewed or ended
Loan
Procedures: The curator or librarian will arrange loans according to the
Loan Receipt Policy. The policy will be kept in the curator's files and the lender
shall have a copy.
Criteria
for Lending: Items belonging to the MVM may
be loaned to another museum or educational institution as specified by the Loan
Conditions and Agreement Policy Lending Procedures:
The Collection Committee shall meet to approve any application for loans from
the MVM collections to another museum or educational institution. If the Committee
approves an application for a loan, the curator or librarian will create a permanent
paper record of the loan. In addition, the curator or librarian will revise the
MVM's collection catalogs to note the loan. >top
Use
and Reproduction of MVM Collection Items:
Criteria
for Use and/or Reproduction: Individuals or
institutions desiring to reproduce photographs, documents or use images of items
from the Museum's collection in publications, films or commercial endeavors must
comply with the MVM's Photography and Photo Duplication Policies. Use
and Reproduction Procedures: The MVM's librarian, curator or director
will present the Use Policy to the applicant who must provide the necessary information
concerning the requested item and its use. Staff members will then determine the
appropriate fee and return a copy of the application form to the applicant and
proceed with the request upon payment of set fee. >top
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