|

|
|

|
|
During the late 1990’s and the early
2000’s the County stored records in the vacant Broad Acres
nursing Home in
Deerfield |
|
Storage at Broad Acres. |
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
Storage at Broad Acres |
|
Vandals had gotten into Broad Acres |
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
More records in the HSBC building. The books,
from the early 1800’s, on the counter had gotten wet at Broad
Acres and were stuck in the basement of the HSBC building. |
|
Records were stored all over the building.
The building was falling apart and something had to be done to
protect Oneida
County’s heritage. |
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
Every room was used for records storage. |
|
More of the mess. |
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
Staff spent a
great deal of time saving documents that were strewn all over the
former nursing home. |
|
A room almost cleared out. |
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
Grant money from the State Archives to clean
up the records mess. Working on getting the records to the
regional records center in proper order with summer time help. Kim
Aubrey, Liz Condrey and Ashley Carper. |
|
These had been stored in the basement of the Courthouse for over
thirty years. They were so difficult to get to that many times
even, if they were needed, court employees did not bother to pull
them out. |
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
Storage in the basement of the Courthouse |
|
These records were in the 9th
floor of the
County
Office Building. They were properly indexed and moved
out of the prime office space to the records center in
Westmoreland.
|
|
|
|
|

|
|

|
|
The basement was filled with records from the
turn of the century. There were also number of records from
the depression era. |
|
These were stored
in the HSBC building in downtown Utica. Better shape than Broad Acres, but still not acceptable. |