Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace

The Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace is the presidential library of Richard Milhous Nixon, 37th President of the United States, located at 18001 Yorba Linda Boulevard in Yorba Linda, California. The nine acre (36,000 m²) campus is situated on and surrounding the grounds of the house where Nixon was born and spent his childhood, today in a suburban area of Orange County, California near California State Route 57 and California State Route 90 (Imperial Highway).

The Nixon Library is not part of the Presidential Libraries System of the National Archives and Records Administration, but owned and operated by a private foundation. Approximately 46 million pages of official White House records from the Nixon Administration are stored at the NARA center in College Park, Maryland in accordance with the Presidential Recordings and Materials Preservation Act of 1974 (PRMPA). The Nixon Presidential Materials Staff (nicknamed the "Nixon Project") have no affiliation with the Nixon Library, but has lent materials to the Library in the past. (see Nixon record controversies)

In January 2004, Congress passed legislation that provided for the establishment of a federally-operated Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda. Specifically, the legislation amended the Presidential Recordings and Materials Preservation Act of 1974, which mandated that Nixon's Presidential Materials were to remain in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. Under this new legislation, the materials may now be moved to a federally operated facility outside of the Washington, D.C., area.

In March 2005, the Archivist of the United States and the Executive Director of the privately-run Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace Foundation exchanged letters on the requirements that will allow the Nixon Library and Birthplace to become the twelfth federally-funded Presidential Library operated and staffed by the NARA as early as February 2006. [1]

Contents

Facilities

The Nixon Library Museum, housed in a 52,000 square foot (4,800 m²) building which opened on July 19, 1990, offers a narrative of Nixon's life and career. Behind the museum is the Birthplace, the house constructed by Nixon's father, restored as it was 1910. The graves of Nixon and his wife, Pat Nixon are located on the grounds of the Birthplace.

As of 2005, the Nixon Library and Birthplace is preparing for its transition from a private library to a Presidential Library governed and operated by the National Archives. They are in the process of retrofitting the facility to house Nixon's Presidential and pre-Presidential Materials. The National Archives is assisting them in planning for appropriate space to house these materials. [2]

Library collections

The Archive, which opened in March of 1994, houses approximately 6.2 million pages of records as well as extensive photographs, film reels, and recordings.

Core collection

The primary holdings of the Nixon library are papers and effects from Nixon's personal and political lives.

Donated collections

Nixon record controversies

Traditionally, materials and records of a U.S. president were considered to be his personal property upon leaving office. The Watergate scandal and Richard Nixon's subsequent resignation from office complicated the issue, however.

On September 8, 1974, Richard Nixon made an agreement with the head of the General Services Administration, Arthur F. Sampson. Nixon would turn over most materials from his presidency, including tape recordings of conversations he had made in the White House; however, the recordings were to be destroyed after September 1, 1979 if directed by Nixon or by September 1, 1984 or his death otherwise.

Alarmed that tapes documenting Nixon's White House years might be lost, Congress abrogated the so-called Nixon-Sampson Agreement by passing S.4016, signed into law by President Gerald Ford on December 19, 1974 as the Presidential Recordings and Materials Preservation Act. It applies specifically to materials from the Nixon presidency, directing the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) to take ownership of the materials and process them as quickly as possible. Private materials were to be returned to Nixon's estate while those "relevant to the understanding of Abuse of Governmental Power and Watergate" as well as relating to the ordinary constitutional and statutory duties of the President and his White House staff were to be released to the public.

Screening of the tapes was completed by NARA staff as early as 1987, but only 63 hours of White House tapes had been released between 1974 and 1992. In March of that year, presidential historian Stanley I. Kutler, a professor of history and law at the University of Wisconsin, with the advocacy group Public Citizen, filed suit to accelerate release of Nixon materials. Nixon intervened, arguing that NARA's priority should be to return private conversations to him, and in August 1993 obtained a court order directing NARA to stop further release of tapes until all private or personal materials had been returned to him.

Because of the legal situation, the Nixon Library was constructed and operated using private funds instead of being administered by NARA. The dispute continued after Nixon's death in April 1994.

On April 12, 1996 the three parties reached a settlement under which the injunction would be lifted and a schedule for release be adopted. The first materials released under this agreement, 205 hours of Abuse of Governmental Power conversation excerpts, were provided November 18, 1996. The second release on October 16, 1997 consisted of 154 hours of complete conversation recorded in the Cabinet Room from February 1971 through July 1973. The first chronological release was on October 5, 1999, it consisted of 443 hours of complete conversations, February through July 1971. The second chronological release was on October 26, 2000, it consisted of 420 hours of complete conversations, August through December 1971. Included are conversations recorded in the Oval Office, in the President's Old Executive Office Building office, and on his telephones.

The Nixon estate continues to argue, with the agreement of Kutler/Public Citizen, that NARA is not entitled to retain copies or originals of personal or private materials pursuant to the 1978 Presidential Records Act, which excludes such items from the official records which become the property of the United States after a president leaves office.

Similar controversies over the release of presidential records have involved papers from the administations of John F. Kennedy and George Herbert Walker Bush.

External links

See also: Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace, 1946, 1947, 1952, 1960, 1963, 1968, 1974, 1987, 1990