
This article was originally published on October 7, 2019.
Civil rights activist Rosa Parks, poet Nikki Giovanni, President Bill Clinton and President George H.W. Bush have all walked on the same campus that you do nearly everyday.
Surprised? So was Librarian Julia Daniel Walkuski. While looking through campus archive photos, Walkuski says it鈥檚 exciting to see the number of prominent people interacting with students, faculty and staff during UM-Dearborn鈥檚 60 years.
鈥淲e have so much history here. I can鈥檛 believe how many high-profile people鈥檚 photos and papers I鈥檝e seen while looking through the library鈥檚 archive. Artists, activists, philanthropists, political figures 鈥 we鈥檝e had the majority of presidents from the past 50 years here,鈥 says Walkuski, Mardigian Librarian and newly named archivist. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all in the campus archives.鈥
As interesting as UM-Dearborn鈥檚 history is, Walkuski 鈥 and anyone on campus who鈥檚 tried to find historic information 鈥 says it鈥檚 not always the easiest to find what you鈥檙e looking for or the circumstances that created some moments in campus history. With that in mind, she has a request to people with long-term ties to campus: 鈥淧lease reach out to me. I鈥檇 like to go through the archives with you and hear what you remember about items we have in our collection.鈥 She says the more information people share, the better the archive will be for everyone.
Besides meeting with people who have experienced campus life for decades, Walkuski has been busy improving the archive in other ways. Earlier this year, she researched how to make the items available for all, working with a U-M School of Information graduate student to develop a strategic plan for the archive.
The takeaway? Instead of grouping items by donation date, group them by subject matter and digitize. The campus archive is now in the reorganization process.

鈥淚 understand why the archiving process here was by donation date. Many archives do it that way and it works for them,鈥 says Walkuski, a certified archivist. 鈥淏ut we have so many requests for images tied to a campus anniversary or celebration 鈥 for example Homecoming 鈥 that it makes sense to group materials by subject instead of going through folders and boxes in an effort to find information about the annual event.鈥 In addition to the reorganization, she鈥檒l create 鈥渇inding aids,鈥 which are documents that contains details about what materials 鈥 for example, speeches, programs, images and years of each 鈥 are included in the archive collections.
While looking through the collections, Walkuski has noticed that there鈥檚 a bit of a gap with items shared with the archive in the digitized age. So she鈥檇 like faculty, staff and retirees to contact her with any materials you have that are tied to campus events, research or experiences. For people to get the most out of the archive, involvement is key.
鈥淪end what you have to me; digital files are fine. There is a bit of a gap in our collection today, and in the recent past, because we keep it on the computer and might not think about it. Or it鈥檚 not thought of as history because we are living it now. But it may be important when talking about campus in the future, and we don鈥檛 want to lose parts of the university鈥檚 story because documents aren鈥檛 tangible like they used to be.鈥
Walkuski says reorganization is only a first step. She鈥檚 also working with UM-Dearborn student Maggie VanBuhler to digitize the collection. With the collection size and reorganization, it may take a few years, but Walkuski says it will get done. And, based on suggestions from U-M Information Sciences, the library is also looking into content management systems.
鈥淲e want this information shared and the goal is to have the archive available to you right at your fingertips.鈥