Preservation and Archives Professionals

Records Emergency Information

General Public

Preparing before an emergency strikes can help minimize damage whether from a minor plumbing leak or a catastrophic natural disaster. When an emergency does occur, effective response and recovery actions can help you preserve your personal papers, documents, photographs, objects, and family treasures.


Prepare

Prepare in advance so damage to records can be prevented. When records are damaged, response and recovery techniques will limit damage and allow more records to be saved.


Respond and Recover

Respond as soon as it is safe to enter the area after an emergency and Recover records or cultural property damaged by the emergency.

Immediate Response

Paper

Leather and Parchment

Photographs and Film

Magnetic Media, Audio and Video

Artifacts

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Safety First Safety First:  Never enter an area affected by an emergency until the appropriate authority declares that it is safe.

News

NHPRC Grant
Senator Richard Lugar and the National Archives announce grant to Indiana.

National Archives Releases Natural Disasters DVD
Historic footage of natural disasters included on first collection of the new Our Planet Earth series.

The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001
Telephone: 1-86-NARA-NARA or 1-866-272-6272