NATIONAL EPISCOPAL HISTORIANS AND ARCHIVISTS
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NEHA Releases

NEHA Covid-19 Episcopal Church Records Project

3/31/2020

 
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As we move through this COVID-19 pandemic, begun during Lent 2020, our churches face unprecedented challenges. Our worship-in-community has been suspended as clergy and lay leaders struggle to develop new technologies to share adapted liturgies. Our bishops, priests and deacons are stretched to nearly unimaginable limits in their pastoral responsibilities. Nothing is as it was before, and when this pandemic is “over,” we will move into something new; we won’t ever go back to exactly the way it used to be.

All our dioceses and churches and organizations are coping with the difficult situation with energy, creativity and determination. Innovations and adaptations of all sorts are being used to preserve spiritual traditions that are centuries old, to ensure that communities living at long distances from each other can feel unified and to provide spiritual succor, stability and inspiration.

What exactly is each diocese doing? Each church? Who is keeping track of this significant moment in national and church history? Who is ensuring that diocesan and congregational records of responses to the pandemic are collected and organized so that historians a century from now will understand our church’s daily life in this time of crisis? Who? NEHA’s current and future members. NEHA’s historians and archivists.

NEHA is initiating the NEHA COVID-19 Episcopal Church Records Project. We are asking members to
  • share their churches’ COVID-19 responses and adaptations
  • describe how they’re tracking and preserving them
  • how they are using their COVID-19 stay-at-home time. Transcribing documents? Developing a filing system? Writing histories?

Please send your responses, descriptions and questions to [email protected]. We’ll post some responses . We’ll gather responses and the Project Team will analyze the patterns that emerge with an eye to publication in The Historiographer in a year. Together, NEHA members can assemble an accurate and detailed picture of daily life in the Episcopal Church during the Covid-19 pandemic. We will provide an invaluable service to historians of the future.
​
Welcome to the NEHA COVID-19 Episcopal Church Records Project.

Episcopal Women’s History Project Joins The Historiographer

5/2/2018

 
​The National Episcopal Historians and Archivists (NEHA) and the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church (HSEC) welcome the Episcopal Women's History Project (EWHP) as a joint publisher of The Historiographer.  EWHP joins NEHA and the HSEC in working together to distribute a quarterly publication to promote preserving of church records and writing of parochial and diocesan history in the Episcopal Church.
 
The Historiographer provides feature-focused content including biographical sketches on important church figures, historical sketches of churches, reports of church or diocesan archival committee activities, helpful "how-to" articles, and now promotion and reports of EWHP / NEHA / HSEC projects, activities and meetings. This joint publication will now reach a circulation of over 1,100. It is provided to members of all three organizations, bishops and diocesan offices across the globe.
 
Members and non-members are encouraged to submit material for publication in the form of brief "snippets" of a few paragraphs or feature-length articles for publication. Learn more about submission guidelines at episcopalhistorians.org/historiographer.

Call for Papers for 2018 Released

10/29/2017

 
The Call for Papers for the 2018 Conference of the National Episcopal Historians and Archivists has been released. The conference theme is "In Remembrance of Thee: The History of Reconciliation ​in the Episcopal Church" which will examine how the Episcopal Church historically has addressed the need of reconciliation in the world. Activities include speakers, tours, exhibitions, worship, and workshops with an archival focus woven together with food and fellowship.

Papers and presentations based on the conference theme may be given by historians and archivists. NEHA seeks proposals that will be reviewed by a committee looking for a diverse mixture of topics. Each presenter selected is allocated 20 minutes with an expectation of a 15 minute presentation and 5 minutes for questions. Those who believe their proposal warrants additional time may include a request with explanation. Presentations are made on a voluntary basis. As a volunteer organization, NEHA is unable to provide an honorarium or assist with conference expenses.
​
Proposals must include a title, 150-200 word abstract, brief resumé of the speaker, and expected media/audio-visual requirements. Presentations may be requested for publication.  Determination of papers accepted for the conference will be made no later than February 28, 2018. If accepted, the presenter will commit to attending the conference. For the complete information, visit episcopalhistorians.org/cfp.
James Wilkinson
James Wilkinson presenting a paper during the 2015 NEHA Conference in Louisville.
Wayne Kempton
Wayne Kempton, Archivist of the Diocese of New York, gives an archival workshop during the 2017 NEHA Conference in New York City.
Gardiner H. Shattuck
Gardiner "Tuck" Shattuck presenting a paper during the 2015 NEHA Conference in Louisville.
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NEHA board seeks more visibility and members

10/14/2017

 
​by David Skidmore, Editor, The Historiographer

Higher visibility and membership, and the 2018 annual conference were the focal points of the National Episcopal Historians and Archivists (NEHA) board retreat at New Haven, Conn. Sept. 21 and 22, 2017.

The history of reconciliation in the Episcopal Church is the theme for the 2018 NEHA conference taking place August 7 through 10 at Trinity on the Green Episcopal Church, New Haven, also the site for the NEHA board retreat. The Rev. Canon C.K. Robertson, canon to the presiding bishop, will give a luncheon address August 8 at Trinity, and the Rev. Barbara Lau, director of The Pauli Murray Project at Duke University, will give the keynote dinner address August 9 at the nearby Graduate Club. Workshops, tours of historic churches and cemeteries, and access to a dozen collections of the Yale University Library system are among the offerings. Online registration will be available in January at www.episcopalhistorians.org/2018.

Much of the board's time was spent discussing ways to raise awareness of NEHA in the wider church, and to expand the organization's membership from 204 currently to 500 by 2021, NEHA's 60th year.

Several factors were cited by membership chair Jeannie Terepka as contributing to the static membership, including an institutional focus suggested by the organization's name, limited distribution of the quarterly magazine The Historiographer, and a need to better recognize the role of volunteers in congregations.

Terepeka suggested a number of ways to turn things around, including more connections with other organizations in the church and with local history groups, assembling a first-time membership package that includes NEHA publications in both English and Spanish, earlier and more detailed notices on annual conferences, blanketing the church with publicity on NEHA, and rewriting the NEHA purpose statement to make it more welcoming to volunteers.

Along with a redesign of the organization's brochure and expanding its distribution to state historical societies, the board agreed to reach out to dioceses not currently connected to NEHA or without members in NEHA and gather information on people involved in collecting and preserving diocesan and congregational history. Of the 100 dioceses in the church, over 20 have no connection with NEHA.
In other business, the board agreed to participate with the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church (HSEC) in sharing the cost of an exhibit booth at the 2018 General Convention in Austin, Texas; received an update on the publication of Writing a Congregational History, due to be printed by the end of the year; and reviewed plans for the 2019 Tri-History Conference in Toronto, jointly sponsored by NEHA, HSEC, and the Episcopal Women's History Project.

NEHA provides a forum for exchanging ideas, gives mutual support, and serves as an archival and historical network for any who preserve, explore and share the historical dimensions of the Episcopal Church. Begun as an outgrowth of the Church Historical Society in 1961, NEHA seeks to answer the needs of church officials and leaders who know attention should be given to nurturing congregational, diocesan, and institutional historians, registrars and archivists. More information at www.episcopalhistorians.org.
NEHA Board
NEHA Board Members discuss membership promotion at their 2017 meeting in New Haven, Connecticut. Photo by Susan Stonesifer.
NEHA Board
NEHA Board Members discuss membership promotion at their 2017 meeting in New Haven, Connecticut. Photo by David Skidmore.
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The National Episcopal Historians & Archivists (NEHA) encourage every diocese, congregation, and organization in the Episcopal Church to collect, preserve, and organize its records and to share its history.​ A 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporation registered in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
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  • About
    • Awards >
      • Bishops Award
      • Davis Award
      • Fish Award
    • Board Information
    • History >
      • History Summary
      • NEHA 40 year history
    • King-Talbot Fund
    • Pictures
  • Membership
  • Conferences
    • Past Conferences List
    • Past Conference Detail >
      • 2020 Conference
      • 2018 Conference >
        • Information
        • Presentations 2018
  • Publications
    • Archives for Congregations
    • The Historiographer >
      • Historiographer
      • Historiographer Back Issues
      • Editor
    • Releases
  • Resources
    • Links
    • Pictures
    • Videos
  • Contact