Preserving the historical record of Canadian mining and metallurgy

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Norman R. Ball
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
535 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

"Many people in the mining and metallurgical industries were brought up to embrace Henry Ford's pronouncement that ""History is bunk"" but it is not generally known that the same Henry Ford created and paid for one of the finest technological museums in the Western World. I am aware that many people feel that industry history is something you ask aging executives to do or that history is a clip-andpaste compendium of pictures re-discovered every 25 years or on the occasion of issuing a press release on plant expansion. Moreover, there are many who fear historians as somewhat deranged individuals interested only in corruption, injustice and sensational labour strife. Good history lies somewhere between the controlled P.R. handout and the hysterical attack. Writing good history is a difficult creative act based on the application of experience, insight, wide knowledge and careful reasoning to available evidence. To date, the Canadian mining and metallurgical industries have achieved a great deal but left too little evidence and it is this lack of evidence which must be corrected before it is too late. It is the purpose of this article to stimulate thoughts with regard to archives, one of the more important vehicles for the preservation of such evidence."
Citation

APA: Norman R. Ball  (1999)  Preserving the historical record of Canadian mining and metallurgy

MLA: Norman R. Ball Preserving the historical record of Canadian mining and metallurgy. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1999.

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