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LARGE COLLECTIONS IN MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES WORKSHOP

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Title: LARGE COLLECTIONS IN MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES WORKSHOP


1
LARGE COLLECTIONS IN MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES
WORKSHOP
  • SITUATION OF EXPATRIATE ARCHIVES AND CHALLENGES
    FOR ARCHIVISTS IN MALAWI

2
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
  • Present day Malawi was called Nyasaland until
    1963 when the country became independent from the
    British colonial rule
  • Nyasaland became British Central African
    Protectorate in 1891 and Nyasaland Protectorate
    in 1907
  • Expatriate Community
  • The expatriate community in Nyasaland comprised
    of
  • Missionaries
  • Planters
  • Hunters
  • Traders and
  • Colonial administrators
  • Out of these groups, Scottish missionaries were
    the first to arrive in the country in around 1875
    followed by European traders and other
    individuals in 1884 and colonial administrators
    in 1891

3
Early European population and land position
  • Population
  • In 1891, there were 57 Europeans in Nyasaland
    and by 1894 the number increased to 237 while in
    1896 the number grew to 300.
  • Land position
  • By 1893
  • 1/5 of land belonged to planters, traders and
    missionaries
  • 1/5 of land belonged to the British South African
    Company
  • 1/5 belonged to the British Crown
  • 2/5 belonged to Africans

4
Expatriate Archives
  • From 1875 to 1963, expatriate archives were
    generated by the following groups in Nyasaland
  • Churches
  • Individual missionaries
  • Traders
  • Planters
  • Social clubs
  • Colonial administration
  • Colonial administration records as official
    public records, were managed by various creating
    ministries and departments before being
    transferred to the National Archives for
    long-term preservation.
  • The rest of the expatriate records were managed
    by their respective creators, e.g., churches,
    etc.

5
Expatriate Archives
  • Church archives
  • Records generated by different early church
    organisations in the country form a large part of
    expatriate records after the official records.
  • Some of the church organisations that
    established their mission work in Nyasaland are
  • Universities Mission to Central Africa
  • Free Church of Scotland
  • Established Church of Scotland
  • Dutch Reformed Church Mission
  • The White Fathers
  • The Marist Fathers
  • Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate

6
Expatriate Archives
  • Present Location of Church Archives
  • Some church archives from the above mentioned
    churches were initially deposited in the National
    Archives in Rhodesia, presently Zimbabwe then
    transferred back to the Regional Archives in
    Nyasaland by 1963
  • Other records were brought straight to the
    National Archives in Zomba by heads or senior
    representatives of respective churches

7
Expatriate Archives
  • Trader/Merchant Records
  • Apart from missionary work, some expatriates in
    Malawi came for trade.
  • Different traders and planters belonged to
    different associations for promotion and
    protection of their respective trading interests.
  • The associations maintained important records,
    which form part of the expatriate records.
  • Some of the associations which maintained records
    are

8
Expatriate Archives
  • Nyasaland Merchants Association
  • Nyasaland Tobacco Exporters Association
  • British Cotton Growers Association
  • Nyasaland Planters Association
  • Present Location of the papers
  • Most of the archives for all the associations
    are in the National Archives of Malawi and were
    transferred between 1967 and 1976 by the Chamber
    of Commerce and Industry (1967 and 1976) and the
    Mayor of the city of Blantyre (1968).

9
Expatriate Archives
  • Social records
  • From 1893, the expatriate community in Malawi
    formed and belonged to different social clubs,
    which were intended for sporting, philatelic,
    social and pastime purposes.
  • Over a long period of time, the social clubs
    such as Zomba Gymkhana Club, Zomba Stamp Club
    and Nyasa Yatch Club, accumulated valuable
    expatriate records.

10
Expatriate Archives
  • Present Location of Social Archives
  • Records from all the social clubs were presented
    to the National Archives of Malawi between 1958
    and 1984.
  • Individual private archives
  • Between the end of the 19th Century and the
    middle of the 20th Century, several individual
    missionaries, traders and planters who came to
    Nyasaland maintained their own private papers.
  • Such missionaries as Alexander Hetherwick
    (1860-1939), Henry Edwin Scott, Joseph Booth and
    Marion MacIntyre Russell and traders like Sir
    William Tait Bowle and Francis Dupuis, had their
    own private records.

11
Expatriate Archives
  • Location of individual private archives
  • Some private archives maintained by different
    expatriate individuals were
  • Loaned to the National Archives in 1949 by
    concerned individuals themselves
  • Presented to the National Archives by different
    churches between 1948 and 1963

12
Expatriate Archives
  • ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS IN MUSEUMS
  • THE SOCIETY OF MALAWI MUSEUM
  • First established in 1946 as The Nyasaland
    Society
  • Established by concerned European residents
  • Concern about disappearance of the countrys
    history and culture through physical loss of
    records into private collections, which resulted
    in loss of verbal and visual memory
  • Collection, recording and professional storage of
    information and materials that would otherwise be
    lost, was one of the aims of The Nyasaland
    Society

13
Expatriate Archives
  • Today, The Society of Malawis Library has a
    considerable huge volume of expatriate archive
    collections
  • KuNGONI ART CULTURAL MUSEUM
  • The only art and cultural museum in Malawi that
    documents and preserves the Chewa culture. Chewa
    is the biggest tribe in Malawi
  • The museum is managed by the Catholic mission in
    Malawi and financially supported by various donor
    agencies

14
Expatriate Archives
  • The museum has an archive collection of records
    of early Catholic missionaries
  • CHALLENGES FOR ARCHIVISTS
  • Unavailability of archivists
  • At both The Society of Malawi Museum and KuNgoni
    Art Cultural Museum, there are no archivists to
    manage the valuable archival collections
  • Backlog of unprocessed material
  • Until recently when the National Archives of
    Malawi stepped in to assist, archive collections
    at both museums were not processed and catalogued
    and therefore not accessible

15
Expatriate Archives
  • Unfavourable storage conditions
  • Before the National Archives intervention,
    archival collections at both museums were poorly
    kept - heaped on the floors and exposed to
    fluctuating weather temperatures
  • Delays in obtaining consent from depositors of
    archive materials
  • Most of the private expatriate archives in the
    National Archives of Malawi belong to the
    depositors and before researchers access them,
    authority has to be sought from the owners first
    and sometimes this takes time

16
Expatriate Archives
  • No control over use of material
  • Archive materials both at the two museums and
    the National Archives of Malawi are open for
    public access. There is no control over
    researchers on how they should use the materials
    except for advising on handling of the papers to
    avoid wear and tear
  • CONCLUSION
  • In Malawi, each of the expatriate group created
    and maintained its records. Most of the colonial
    administration records are available in the
    National Archives of Malawi.
  • While some private expatriate records were
    presented to the National Archives of Malawi and
    are available for research, others are in other
    different locations such as The Society of Malawi
    and the expatriates home countries.

17
Expatriate Archives
  • Some serious problems with archive collections
    in both The Society of Malawi Library and KuNgoni
    Art Cultural Museum have been addressed because
    of collaboration between the National Archives
    and the concerned museums.
  • As important research materials, archival
    collections in museums will be enhanced through
    continued collaboration between the National
    Archives and the museums with archival holdings.

18
Reference
  • National Archives of Malawi (1983) Historical
    Manuscripts Inventory Volume 1
  • National Archives of Malawi (1983) Historical
    Manuscripts Inventory Volume 2
  • Pachai, B (1971) Malawi The History of the
    Nation
  • Pachai, B (1972) The Early History of Malawi
  • Pachai, B (1973 ) Land and Politics in Malawi
  • Smith et al (1971) Malawi Past and Present
  • The Eye Magazine (2007) The Society of Malawi
    Historical and Scientific

19
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