This I've pasted from another site:
As we go to press, it has come to my attention that in April the MoD (Ministry of Defence) intends to destroy some 6 million records of medals issued to WW1 personnel. I think you will agree that we cannot let them do so.
Our military expert Paul Reed has been looking into the matter and it appears that the private facility used by the MoD to hold the records at Hayes wants to relocate and charge the MoD for moving the cards.
The MoD's response is to get rid of the 140 filing cabinets that contain the cards. The National Archives doesn't want to take on the cards because it has already microfiched them and the microfiche has been digitally scanned (see ww.documentsonline.nationalarchives.gov.uk).
This isn't good enough. This is the only complete and untouched record of First World War soldiers left. Other service records were burned during WW2. Only the fronts of the cards have been scanned and we believe that written on the back of many of these cards is the address that the medals were sent to. Often, it isn't possible to determine whether the record of the medals issued relates to your ancestor or another person without checking this address.
First, the cards need to be preserved. They then need to be scanned properly, front and back, and re-indexed. If the National Archives won't step in, perhaps someone else will. The Imperial War Museum? The Veteran's Association ?
The MoD claims its holds copyright on the cards and that it can do what it wishes with them. I'd argue that these cards are part of the nation's heritage. They are public records, and I'd remind the MoD that the
descendants of WW1 soldiers pay their taxes.
The cards remind us of the enormous sacrifice and loss incurred by men and women in this country during WW1, and of their bravery in adversity. They enable the children and grandchildren of those who died, and those who survived, to find out some of the lost details of their forebears.
To save the cards we must take action. We're instituting a campaign to urge the Minister of Defence, Geoff [Buff] Hoon, and the Director of the National Archives, Sarah Tyacke, to prevent the destruction of these records straight away. Address your letter to us and we'll pass it onto these authorities:
Rt. Hon. Geoff Hoon & Sarah Tyacke
Save the Medal Index Cards
c/o Your Family Tree
30 Monmouth Street
Bath
BA1 2BW
Alternatively, send an e-mail headed 'Save the Medal Index Cards' to us at yfted@futurenet.co.uk
Do it now - the records are due to be destroyed in April.
Garrick Webster
Editor, Your Family Tree
__________________________________________________ ______________
Guys, I urge you to drop these people (at the very least) an e-mail. This vandalism must be averted at all costs. Call me cynical, but I think that the advent of the Freedom of Information Act and this 'decision' are not coincidental. For the sake of 150 bloody filing cabinets? This is absurd.
I am totally against this very bad decision, and have already penned a vociferous defence of archive preservation. These clowns are merely looking at penny saving (so they can waste it on other crap no doubt). Any kind of destruction is final, and there's information contained on those cards that is valuable to both researchers & geneologists (and collectors - now and in the future) and that, if destroyed, will be gone forever.
As we go to press, it has come to my attention that in April the MoD (Ministry of Defence) intends to destroy some 6 million records of medals issued to WW1 personnel. I think you will agree that we cannot let them do so.
Our military expert Paul Reed has been looking into the matter and it appears that the private facility used by the MoD to hold the records at Hayes wants to relocate and charge the MoD for moving the cards.
The MoD's response is to get rid of the 140 filing cabinets that contain the cards. The National Archives doesn't want to take on the cards because it has already microfiched them and the microfiche has been digitally scanned (see ww.documentsonline.nationalarchives.gov.uk).
This isn't good enough. This is the only complete and untouched record of First World War soldiers left. Other service records were burned during WW2. Only the fronts of the cards have been scanned and we believe that written on the back of many of these cards is the address that the medals were sent to. Often, it isn't possible to determine whether the record of the medals issued relates to your ancestor or another person without checking this address.
First, the cards need to be preserved. They then need to be scanned properly, front and back, and re-indexed. If the National Archives won't step in, perhaps someone else will. The Imperial War Museum? The Veteran's Association ?
The MoD claims its holds copyright on the cards and that it can do what it wishes with them. I'd argue that these cards are part of the nation's heritage. They are public records, and I'd remind the MoD that the
descendants of WW1 soldiers pay their taxes.
The cards remind us of the enormous sacrifice and loss incurred by men and women in this country during WW1, and of their bravery in adversity. They enable the children and grandchildren of those who died, and those who survived, to find out some of the lost details of their forebears.
To save the cards we must take action. We're instituting a campaign to urge the Minister of Defence, Geoff [Buff] Hoon, and the Director of the National Archives, Sarah Tyacke, to prevent the destruction of these records straight away. Address your letter to us and we'll pass it onto these authorities:
Rt. Hon. Geoff Hoon & Sarah Tyacke
Save the Medal Index Cards
c/o Your Family Tree
30 Monmouth Street
Bath
BA1 2BW
Alternatively, send an e-mail headed 'Save the Medal Index Cards' to us at yfted@futurenet.co.uk
Do it now - the records are due to be destroyed in April.
Garrick Webster
Editor, Your Family Tree
__________________________________________________ ______________
Guys, I urge you to drop these people (at the very least) an e-mail. This vandalism must be averted at all costs. Call me cynical, but I think that the advent of the Freedom of Information Act and this 'decision' are not coincidental. For the sake of 150 bloody filing cabinets? This is absurd.
I am totally against this very bad decision, and have already penned a vociferous defence of archive preservation. These clowns are merely looking at penny saving (so they can waste it on other crap no doubt). Any kind of destruction is final, and there's information contained on those cards that is valuable to both researchers & geneologists (and collectors - now and in the future) and that, if destroyed, will be gone forever.
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