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History
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The
dedication of the new Archival Center for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles
is the latest phase of a program inaugurated almost four decades ago
by the late James Francis Cardinal McIntyre. |
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Though
an archivist had been named for the old Diocese of Los Angeles-San
Diego, as early as 1927, Msgr. Peter Hanrahan never functioned in
any other but a titular role. He later described the collection of
those early days as "a mass of unarranged materials in a walk-in
vault with a combination lock at the old cathedral rectory."
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Charles
C. Conroy served the ecclesial community of Southern California for
many years as unofficial historiographer. A retired university professor,
Dr. Conroy utilized the archives for his monumental treatise on The
Centennial 1840-1940, but he never made any headway at organizing
the holdings. |
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In
the final months of 1962, Cardinal McIntyre had a new wing added to
the northeastern end of the Chancery Office, which was located at
1531 West Ninth Street in Los Angeles. An archivist was formally appointed
and, on the following July 8th, the Chancery Archives were formally
blessed and designated as an archdiocesan department. |
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A
reporter was present for that ceremony and he later ventured the opinion
in the Los Angeles Times that the Chancery Archives would "eventually
constitute the largest collection of ecclesiastical documents in the
Western United States." Indeed there was a prophetic ring to
those words. |
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During
the next nineteen years, efforts were made to augment and catalogue
the widely diversified assortment of documents, brochures, books and
other historical mementoes associated with the development of the
Catholic Church in California's southland. |
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The
initial holdings were quadrupled within the first decade and it became
increasingly clear that the quarters on Ninth Street would not be
able to adequately serve the ever-growing needs of the archdiocese.
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On
a number of occasions, the necessity for larger quarters was discussed
with Cardinal Timothy Manning and Msgr. Benjamin G. Hawkes. Several
possible solutions were presented, all of which were carefully studied
by His Eminence and the Vicar General. Early in 1980, Msgr. Hawkes,
a member of the Board of Directors for the Daniel Murphy Foundation,
presented a letter from the Cardinal requesting a grant with which
to build a wholly separate structure for the archives on property
adjacent to San Fernando Mission. |
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With
the endorsement and encouragement of Sir Daniel Donohue, the foundation
generously agreed to erect a building which would serve as the major
participation by the Catholic Church in the bicentennial celebration
for El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora de los Angeles. Ground was broken
on the Feast of Saint Pius V, April 3rd. On the following February
5th, the first of twenty-three truckloads of historical materials
arrived from the Chancery Office, thus launching the Archival Center
on its tenure of service. |
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It
is especially fitting that this first independent archival facility
erected under diocesan auspices in the United States be located within
the shadow of a California mission -- for it was among these venerable
foundations that it all began for Christ along El Camino Real. |
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