Community service in the collections
July 11, 2008 LAARC, Volunteers, Archaeology, Specialist projects
Museum of London’s archaeological archive is the home of the Museum’s collection. The big warehouse in Hackney is the largest in Europe and 10km of shelving houses fascinating finds that have been unearthed in London. Clearly the archive is an incredibly important place but it faces a great threat…dust.
Dust, grime and dirt are all enemies at the archive and so it was decided that a big clean was needed to rid the space of its arch nemesis. The cleaning and clearing of the archives was scheduled for 16-20 June 2008. Staff, volunteers and members of the City of London Police rolled their sleeves up to give the archive its first deep clean since opening in 2002.
From Officers to Inspectors, all ranks were involved in the big clean over 2 days. How had the tables turned so that they were now the subjects of community service and why had they chosen the archive? These particular officers work for the City Police’s Specialist Crime Operations, where anonymity is of the utmost importance as there is a lot of covert work involved, and so this was the perfect opportunity to render a service to the London community whilst retaining discretion. Another officer added ‘The archives just fitted the bill and we wanted to see your coach!’ referring to the Lord Mayor’s Coach which is being temporarily housed at the archives whilst the redevelopment of the lower galleries of Museum of London is in progress.
From one genre of detective to another; Graham White from Southend-on-Sea, is a long-serving and dedicated volunteer at the archive with a qualification in Archaeology. Usually his job entails examining and documenting artefacts from previous digs which is of huge importance to the cataloguing system at the archive; yet, he is on the clean today and is very positive about the positive effects that it will inevitably have on the preservation of the artefacts of the building.
This optimism is shared by the two work experience students currently at the Archives. Sam Ridgeway, also from Southend-on-Sea, studies at Westcliff High School for boys and gained his work experience through Museum of London. Having already been involved with the archive for a week, the prospect of cleaning does not seem to have dampened his spirits - ‘well it certainly needed a clean!’ Dressed in their white boiler suits with dusters at hand, it seems that although unconventional work experience, this has not put off Nick Beaver who started as soon as the big clean did. Nick studies at Berkhamsted Collegiate School who helped him get in touch with the archive due to his interest in History and English. He doesn’t mind a bit of hard graft with the cleaning at all and is looking forward to a sneaky peek at exactly what goes on in the archives before returning home to Watford.
The clean up operation was a huge success with a horrifying amount of dust removed and the Museum’s collections preserved for a few more years to come. The yellow rubber gloves and masks have been put away until next time…
Check out our photos for a glimpse of the archive cleaning operation.
