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The Danvers Archival Center
is a department of the Peabody Institute Library
of Danvers, Massachusetts. The Peabody Institute
Library is the town's public library, established
in the mid-nineteenth century through the philanthropy
of George Peabody. Conceived in 1970 as part
of the Danvers Historical Commission Master
Plan, the purpose of the Archival Center is
to collect and place in one central location,
protected from fire, atmospheric, and insect
damage, all the written and printed materials
relating to the history of Danvers and Salem
Village, Massachusetts.
The significance of the Archival Center rests
with the fact that it was the first of its kind
to bring together such a large collection of
public and private records of a single community
for purposes of preservation and accessibility
to researchers. The archives houses probably
the most extensive and varied collection of
materials relating to an individual municipality
in New England. The collections on permanent
deposit include the local history holdings of
the Danvers Historical Society, the library,
numerous churches and town organizations, and
official records of the Town of Danvers.
The Archival Center collects through gifts,
purchase, and in cases where the material belongs
to still-functioning corporate organizations,
permanent deposit materials on paper relating
to the history and development of Salem Village
and Danvers, Massachusetts. Items collected
include books, pamphlets, monographs, manuscripts,
periodicals, maps, photographs, newspapers,
audio and video tapes, films, broadsides, microforms,
and architectural drawings.
[Map dated 1872]
Collections include the following:
1. PRINTED MATERIALS ON LOCAL HISTORY. Included
in this segment of the collections is printed
material relating to the Town of Danvers, from
general histories of Essex County and Danvers
to volumes devoted to specialized topics such
as the Danvers Historical Society Collections
from 1913. There are complete runs of the Statements
of Accounts of Danvers from 1845, Valuations
of Danvers from 1856, Danvers School
Reports from 1839, Street Poll Lists
from 1890, and numerous biographies of Danvers
notables, including Israel Putnam, John Greenleaf
Whittier, Samuel Parris, John Endecott, Samuel
Holten, George Peabody, and Grenville Dodge.
Augmenting the printed collection are general
reference sets important to local study, including
Acts and Resolves of the Province of Mass.
Bay; Journals of the House of Representatives
of Massachusetts; Essex County Quarterly
Court Records and Files, 1636-1686; and
the Essex Institute Historical Collections
from 1859.
2. GENEALOGY. While the Archival Center does
not attempt to gather an all encompassing collection
of family histories, it does endeavor to acquire
genealogies of important Danvers families, including
the Putnam and Porter families. Reference volumes
for genealogy include vital records to 1850
of most Massachusetts towns and of Massachusetts
soldiers and sailors in the Revolution, War
of 1812, and Civil War, The Essex Antiquarian,
and many volumes of the New England Historical
and Genealogical Register. Also of aid to
the genealogical researcher are the town manuscript
vital records dating up to about 1917 and federal
census records for Danvers from 1790 to 1910.
3. WITCHCRAFT. The Ellerton J. Brehaut Witchcraft
Collection is perhaps the most complete collection
of printed materials relating to the 1692 witchcraft
hysteria in Salem Village (present day Danvers).
Included in this collection are well over 1,000
items. The collection includes originals or
copies of all the early imprints relating to
Salem Village witchcraft, as well as a number
of seventeenth-century English volumes on the
subject. Early volumes include C. Mather's 1693
Wonders of the Invisible World, Calef's
1700 More Wonders, Hale's 1702 Modest
Inquiry, Lawson's Brief and True Narrative,
I. Mather's Cases of Conscience, Upham's
1834 Lectures and 1867 Salem Witchcraft,
Woodward's 1864 Records, and many of
the books that were owned and used by witchcraft
scholars. Documents include the only signature
mark of Giles Cory, and within the collection
is the three-volume typescript copy set Salem
Witchcraft, containing the verbatim transcription
of the witchcraft papers constituting the most
complete source in existence of the hysteria.
Also augmenting the collection are the manuscript
records of the First Church of Danvers, Congregational
dating from 1689.
4. MANUSCRIPT COLLECTIONS. Among the 500 volumes
and 75,000 manuscript Town Records are the Salem
Village Records of Transactions (1672-1715),
town meeting, tax, and valuation records from
1752, and the vital, fire, school, selectmen,
military, town clerk, town treasurer, overseer
of the poor, police, electric light, library,
assessors, and street records. Non-municipal
records include account books, daybooks, journals
and diaries, deeds, wills, and inventories,
from as early as the seventeenth century; records
of numerous organizations, including the First
Church, Maple Street Church, Baptist Church,
Universalist Church, Methodist Church, Episcopal
Church, and Danvers Historical Society; collections
of correspondence, and a great variety of other
manuscript materials.
HOURS: The Archival Center
is generally open to the public Monday 1:00-7:30
p.m.; Wednesday & Thursday 9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
and 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.; the 2nd & 4th Friday
1:00-5:00 p.m.; and the 1st Saturday 9:00 a.m.-12:00
p.m. and 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.. Due to scheduling
and limited staff, persons traveling any distance
to use the Archives should call ahead and speak
to the Archivist to assure that the Center will
be open for visitation. There is no visitation
charge for use of the Archival Center.
Richard B. Trask, Town Archivist
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