The cost of doing history

Last month I contacted the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (M-NCPPC) archives with a query related to one of my projects. My query was in two parts. The first related to locating the source of photographs owned by the agency and which were reproduced in a book written by a longtime Montgomery County Parks Department historian based on his work for the agency and using agency materials. The photos published in the book contained no source citation beyond “MNCPPC Archives.”

Screen capture from Dwyer, Michael. Montgomery County (2006, Arcadia Publishing), page 45.

The second part of my query involved records related to the acquisition of properties to assemble a county park near Silver Spring. My request to the M-NPCPPC archives reads,

Records related to the acquisition of properties for the Northwest Branch Park. I am interested in records and correspondence related to complaints filed by property owner HYSON and his legal representative. The M-NCPPC acquired two parcels adjacent to Hyson’s in the 1950s (these are identified as “Parcel A” in Plat No. 4453 filed February 1956) and the M-NCPPC acquired Hyson’s property in 1972 (recorded in deed Liber 4325, folio 465, etc.). The tracts comprising “Parcel A” in the 1956 plat were partly recorded in the following deed, 1) Liber 2295, folio 302 (Wheeler to M-NCPPC, December 1956). The parcels were acquired forUnit 4 of the Northwest Branch Park.

Two weeks after submitting my query, I received an email from the Montgomery County Parks Department’s public information and customer service manager with a request that I immediately remit a $980 payment to cover half of the estimated staff services the agency calculated it would take to answer my query. The email included this letter:

Dumbstruck doesn’t come close to my reaction. I was flummoxed because of the price tag and, perhaps more importantly, how the agency’s response differed from a similar request that I had made two year earlier.

The difference I suspect has to do with the fact that over the past two years I have written articles critical of the agency. Back in 2016, I had not yet written about racially biased historic preservation practices and parks interpretation. I wonder if this arbitrary approach to responding to queries from the public is legal? I have some thoughts about whether it’s ethical. What do some of the journalists reading this think?

 

 

The Talbot Avenue Bridge Centennial

Several Silver Spring, Maryland, neighborhoods are planning a huge celebration to mark the Talbot Avenue Bridge’s centennial. Slated for demolition in 2019, the bridge is a significant civil rights landmark. The free September 22 event is open to the public and it will include musical performances by the Washington Revels Jubilee Voices and local Silver Spring musicians, drumming, artwork, the Talbot Avenue Bridge Pop-Up Museum, food and much more.

For more information about the bridge and the event and to volunteer or donate to help defray the costs for performers and equipment, please visit the Talbot Avenue Bridge Centennial website.