Conservation Lab at the National Archives
The Conservation Lab at the National Archives is one of the world's premier document preservation laboratories. In this Inside the Vaults video short, paper conservator Annie Wilker repairs an 18th-century illustrated family document, called a fraktur, while demonstrating various techniques used to preserve damaged documents and prepare them for exhibit at the National Archives. The document records the marriage of John Tomlin and Jane Chamblin of Virginia and the births of their five children — George, Elizabeth, William, Reuben and Mary. It is one of more than a hundred such documents in the collection at the National Archives. Inside the Vaults includes highlights from the National Archives in the Washington, DC, area and from the Presidential libraries and regional archives nationwide. These shorts present behind-the-scenes exclusives and offer surprising stories about the National Archives treasures. See more from Inside the Vaults at http://bit.ly/LzQNae.

Conservation Lab at the National Archives at College Park

Magna Carta Conservation Treatment

Eisenhower's "Military-Industrial Complex" Speech Origins and Significance

Preservation Lab at the National Archives-- Boxing our Treasures

Paper Conservation at the National Archives: A Brief Overview

The Knowledge Bank (1971)

Maj. Gen. John A. Samford's Statement on "Flying Saucers", Pentagon, Washington, DC, 07/31/1952

Face to Face with Communism, 1951

Life Beyond Earth and the Mind of Man - 1975

TFG Technology Solutions

Tennessee Valley

Digital Preservation of the Iraqi Jewish Archive

W. Glenn Dennis Interview, 11/19/1990

Magna Carta Encasement

Winning Your Wings, 1942

US Constitution -- The "Fifth Page" (Transmittal Page)

Manned Space Flight: A Congressional Presentation (1962)

Preservation Lab at the National Archives, St. Louis

FOIA Advisory Committee Meeting, 6/11/2026

