A
week ago, I wrote an article for Tweetspeak Poetry called “Poetry
at Work: The Loss of Institutional Memory.” Institutional memory, or what
might be better described as personal understanding of organizational history,
is not much prized these days. Organizations generally don’t concern themselves
with the past; instead, they focus on the future – the next new program, the
next quarterly earnings report, the next new product or service to launch.
In
some cases, this disregard for institutional memory can be dangerous. If you
don’t know why something failed in the past, you’re likely to make the same
mistakes all over again, with the same result. I noted in the article that my
own organization is experiencing the third iteration of a significant problem,
and for the exact same reasons it experienced the first two problems.
But
time passes, lessons are forgotten, people retire, and the same mistakes happen
all over again.
I
was reminded of all this in a powerfully personal way this week. On Monday, I
received an email from a friend who had retired, telling me that a former
colleague was in intensive care at a local hospital and not expected to survive
the week. She had retired several years ago, and I knew she had been ailing for
some time. But I hadn’t seen her in over a year, although we did keep in touch
by email.
This
lady had often helped me in my work. For several years, she reported to me,
because what she did wasn’t of much interest to the organization but it was
something you just didn’t stop doing. The organization assigned it a sort of begrudged
value – it took up space, it required resources, and surely both the space and
resources could be put to better value.
What
she did was the organization’s archives, which stretched back a century. It was
like an incredible attic in your grandmother’s house, filled with documents,
trunks and old furniture, paintings, old photographs and books. It was a treasure
chest of memory. And presiding over it all with cheerfulness and authority was
my friend and colleague.
No
one – no one – knew more about the organization’s history than she did.
Personal stories about the founder and his family; the foibles of CEOs; how one
CEO wrote the organization’s annual report for decades; the history of
businesses bought, sold, and created; the longtime friendship between one CEO
and Walt Disney (they both made movies); product successes and product failures
– she knew it all. And happily shared all of it with people like me.
The
darkest hour in the history of the corporate archives happened in July of 1997.
The company was splitting into two separate organizations, rather like an
unfriendly divorce. I landed in the part that was being cast off. One morning
that July, my archivist called me in near hysteria. The corporate archives were
being thrown out in the garbage.
What
had happened was straightforward: the archives had been placed under the
control of someone with a subsidiary in another city, who had no connection to
the company or its history. Someone else decided they wanted the space occupied
by the archives. The approval was rather casually given: take the space, but
what you do with the archives is your decision. So into the garbage they were
to go, starting with the photographs.
I
called the company’s vice chairman. I had written a lot of speeches for him
over the years, and I had never once asked for any favor. He was in a meeting,
his secretary said, and I asked her to interrupt it, telling her what was
happening. He was on the phone in about 15 seconds, and said he would stop the
destruction.
I
hurried over to the building where the archives were kept, a large structure in
the research center that also included the library, a small cafeteria, and research
labs. I didn’t go to the archives. Instead, I went to the large trash dumpster
behind the building, next to the loading dock. In my corporate business suit, I
climbed into the dumpster and began gathering up the photographs, scattered in
files along with everything else in the dumpster. If I remember correctly, the
dumpster was a 20-by-20-foot square. The individual responsible for the
near-destruction was on the loading dock, nearly hysterical himself; he had
been personally called by the angry vice chairman. I told him to go away before
he did any more damage.
I
handed batches of photos up to the archivist, who had calmed down but was still
visibly upset. As I handed each batch to her, she placed them in one of several
carts to transport back to the archives. We worked steadily for about an hour,
until we were confident we had everything.
Afterward,
the vice chairman directed that the company protect the archives from itself.
He knew this could happen again. A contract was arranged with a local university
to manage them at their location. The furniture, paintings and other physical
artifacts were assigned to the company being spun off (where I worked).
That
incident cemented my friendship with the archivist for life.
The
email about her physical state told me to see her on Wednesday, because they
would likely be removing her from life support on Wednesday night. I arrived
right at noon, and walked into the middle of family grief. She had died 15 minutes before
I arrived. Standing at the door of the hospital room, I totally lost my composure.
I handed her daughter the card I brought, and quickly walked back to the
elevator.
As
I stepped into the elevator, I heard my name called; it was my friend’s
husband, with my card in his hand. We talked; he said she often told the story
of me in the dumpster, and how it had meant more to her than just about
anything else she had experienced in her career. I lost it again, right in
front of the elevator.
She
was one of the last “keepers” of the company’s history. Lots of retirees have
personal histories; only a handful kept the corporate history: the guy who did
trade shows; the manager of the old photography studio; an elderly attorney; the
secretary for the company’s founder; my friend who ran the archives; and one
other. My friend was the second-to-last left; the others had all died some
years past. And now she’s gone, and so much knowledge of the history with her.
The
one left is me.
Photographs by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
Wow, Glynn.
ReplyDeleteWe recently bought an old farm house. The woman who lived here (and was born here) died last spring at 93. Her father built the house. The other week (when I was out) a man stopped by with old photographs and (I'm sure) an oral history of the place. He told the babysitter he'd be back as he was sure we'd want to know the history of the place. The couple who lived here had no children, so when they died, we bought the place and it seems now that we have the opportunity to become the caretakers of its "archives." I see this is a rare gift - we won't be tossing them (although, light fixtures and curtains from the seventies ARE finding their way to a dumpster). This piece, Glynn, puts heart and soul to the piece you wrote last week. Maybe I relate to it so much because I've often felt myself to be the "keeper" of my family's stories, a difficult and honored role.
This brought tears, because it is written with such grace and sensitivity and understanding of the importance of every individual and that person's work. (We are, too much, a throwaway society.) What your friend did to organize, maintain, and rescue (with your help) and restore that archive - the story of that corporation's life - is remarkable, and I can imagine what an honor it must have been to have your friend in your life.
ReplyDeleteYour concluding sentence . . . it says everything.
My deepest sympathies, Glynn, for the loss of your friend.
So sorry for your loss, Glynn.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful, honoring testimony you have written here.
Deeply touched by this and your heart.
ReplyDeleteI like your story.
ReplyDeleteAnd i like the way you tell it.
I'm so sorry, Glynn. This brought tears to my eyes too. What a very special story this is--one that says so much about the storyteller. I'm grateful for the way you see people. And the world.
ReplyDeleteThis is stunning, Glynn. Heartfelt, sad and beautiful. Thank you for honoring your friend by telling us this story so very well. My condolences on her loss - and on the hard truth that you are the one remaining. That's a tough reality, isn't it?
ReplyDelete