Wayne describes a sensible approach for QSL collections - digitizing them. That 
will preserve some sense of them in their entirety.

A few thoughts:

Keep in mind the sentimental value of QSLs, to us, versus their subjective 
historic value. Largely, they're somewhere between travel photographs and a 
stamp collection. There's a little more value, financially and collector-wise 
than the photos, but they're nowhere near the collectibility, mass 
interest-wise, of stamps. Probably because their financial value is almost 
nothing.

Digitizing makes it possible to store an enormous volume of them, taking little 
space. They can always be updated to meet successive digital formats as time 
moves along so long as someone overseeing their keep does that. That way 
they're preserved digitally for as long as someone cares to do this.

I think a very select few will have some true lasting value from a museum 
standpoint. An interesting museum display or show could be pieced together 
around various relics from radio, and a small piece would be a few key QSLs. 
Keep in mind a lot of what museums hold isn't on permanent display. Most 
holdings are archived and in storage. So it's a matter of determining what in a 
particular collection might have some kind of historic value and what might 
interest a particular museum. Think along the lines of famous early pirates 
such as Caroline, or clandestines such as Argentine Annie, or the earliest 
years of radio pioneers such as CFCF and KDKA etc. And consider the different 
kinds of museums out there - county museums, national museums, radio or 
communications museums, radio hobby museums like the one in Bloomfield NY, 
university collections, and so on. There might be a home for DX artefacts in 
all of these, to some degree.

Keep in mind, too, that over-the-air radio will soon be a wholly historic 
phenomenon, once some form of online takes over. So there could be some growing 
historic merit there. Why wait until the medium is gone, and stuff is harder to 
come by, to put in place permanent memorials and collections.

Ultimately our various QSLs would likely end up scattered among multiple 
museums and such. That may be better than centralizing them in one place 
because it stands to reason more people would get to see them.

Think of a museum display or show as telling a story. And consider that QSLs 
don't tell the full story of our hobby, just as DXing doesn't tell the whole 
story of radio, or radio of broadcasting, or broadcasting of mass 
communications or media.

At this point, perhaps we should keep whatever QSLs we have, and at the very 
least will them to some interested DXer colleague if family members are 
unlikely to want them. Don't saddle your spouse, children, grandchildren, 
nieces or nephews with stuff they may or may not want. I wouldn't want 
everything my grandparents owned. In fact, I'm quite happy with memories, and 
perhaps an object or two - but it means more to me when that object reflects 
some aspect of the relationship that was cherished. If your spouse was a DX 
widow many evenings, your QSLs may very well end up in the fireplace. have that 
discussion up front with them - let them know how you feel and what you want 
done. Put it in writing or even in your living will or will (wills sometimes 
get read after some housecleaning has been done).

I'm going to speak with a radio exec I know who is passionate about the medium, 
to see what he thinks.

Saul Chernos

 [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Sat, 15 Mar 2014 16:48:59 -0600
> Subject: Re: [NRC-AM] QSL Archival
> 
> Hi all
> 
> The National Radio Club has begun scanning verifications and, after they
> have been scanned, placing them for public view at nrcdxas.org. We are
> currently organizing the collection of Kermit Geary.  Other collections have
> arrived.  After they are scanned they then go on to the people at the
> Committee and hence to UofM. These have mostly come to me and I have been
> able to get a few helpers with the project.  My main scanning task now is to
> get the remainder of DX News scanned and up at e-DXN.com.   Those interested
> in this either to have them archived or to assist in scanning to pdf are
> encouraged to contact me off the list...
> 
> Remember if you reply to this is goes on the list, so please make sure the
> email is directed to
> 
> [email protected]
> 
> 73
> 
> Wayne
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
> Ben Dangerfield
> Sent: Saturday, March 15, 2014 14:57
> To: AM DX
> Subject: [NRC-AM] QSL Archival
> 
> Bob Foxworth has raised the subject of sending our QS L cards and lletters
> somewhere for preservation.  I would rather keep them in our family
> archives.  I have 2 sons, 2 great-grandsons, a daughter, and especially a
> wife who enjoys preserving and writing about our family history and family
> "treasures".  Someday someone might be interested'
> They have been in the past.
> 
> And Bob, I too have a nice letter verie form Tarawa-844 and a verie from
> Radio Swan-1160.  Radio Swan was on an island off the Central Ameican coast
> and broadcast to Cuba in the 1960s. I also have a detailed verie letter fom
> Radio Caroline North, from their chief engineer.  They transmitted from a
> ship off the coast of the isle of  Man.
> 
> Ben Dangerfield,  Wallinford, a. 

                                          
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