Edward C. Papenfuse

Dr. Edward C. Papenfuse (born 1943) is the retired Maryland State Archivist and Commissioner of Land Patents.

Papenfuse received his undergraduate degree from the American University, an M.A. from the University of Colorado, and his Ph.D. in history from The Johns Hopkins University. He holds an honorary doctorate of letters from Washington College.[1] He and his wife Sallie have two sons, a daughter-in-law, and three grandchildren.

Biography

Papenfuse held the positions of Maryland State Archivist and Commissioner of Land Patents from 1975 until 2013. As director of the Maryland State Archives in Annapolis, Papenfuse was responsible for the Archives' collection of government and private materials which are described and inventoried in detail at mdsa.net, Guide to Government Records and the Guide Special Collections. In 2003 he conceptualized and initiated the design of mdlandrec.net, which now contains over 200,000,000 indexed images of permanent archival records and is accessed daily by several hundred users. In addition he has created an interactive editorial website for archival documents which currently accesses over 500,000 pages of original source material on the experimental web sites, editonline.us, mdhistory.net, and virtual archive.us. From June 2010 until October 2013, he was also the acting City Archivist for the Baltimore City Archives, becoming a catalyst for change in an archives in disrepair.[2]

He played a major role in the design of the present Archives building which was completed in 1986 and bears his name, initiated the creation of the Maryland State Archives web site, writes extensively on Maryland history, and has taught history at the University of Maryland College Park, the University of Maryland Law School, and the Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of numerous articles and books, including In Pursuit of Profit: The Annapolis Merchants in the Era of the American Revolution (1975), with Joseph M. Coale, The Hammond-Harwood House Atlas of Historical Maps of Maryland, 1608-1908 (1982) and The Maryland State Archives Atlas of Historical Maps of Maryland 1608-1908 (2003). He has also developed an approach to providing reference services and teaching courses on the World Wide Web of the Internet (see http://www.mdhistory.net, http://marylandarchivist.blogspot.com/, http://poplargroveproject.blogspot.com/, and http://1814baltimore.blogspot.com/). A recent website for which he designed the organizational framework and wrote most of the introductory text is devoted to preserving and accessing the public records of the Baltimore City Archives (http://baltimorecityhistory.net). He has published numerous articles on archives and archival related matters including a report on access to government records in the OAH Newsletter.[3] In April 2011, he was designated a digital pioneer and interviewed by the Library of Congress about his career.

As Commissioner of Land Patents, he presided as an administrative judge over questions relating to original title in Maryland, and was responsible for overseeing the granting of a number of land grants based upon thorough research and documentation. He explains the process at length in a published opinion that was decided in his favor and which incorporated his research of the process into the opinion. See: Marquardt v. Papenfuse, 92 Md. App. 683 (1992), 610 A.2d 325 first decided as FRANK R. MARQUARDT, ET UX., v. EDWARD C. PAPENFUSE, ET AL., No. 1468, September Term, 1991. See also the most recent land grant [4]

Projects

He is currently developing a research and writing web site, http://virtualarchive.us, as a respository for sources and reflections on the history of Maryland and Baltimore derived from his collection of notes and work on the lost neighborhoods and neglected residents of Baltimore. For an example of his work on the lost neighborhoods of Baltimore, see: Recreating Lost Neighborhoods: The House on Ann Street, Fells Point, Baltimore City, Maryland, and for biography see his study of the Baltimore sojourn of Eliza and Maximilian Godefroy The Mystery of the Mahogany Box.

Wikipedia projects

His editorial interest with regard to Wikipedia centers on biography, Baltimore, George Washington's bow to civil authority in 1783,[5] Maryland place names (such as Accident, Maryland), Maryland related themes such as the articles on the Civil War era including Cipriano Ferrandini, and major national law cases that had their origins in Maryland such as Barron v. Baltimore.

Works

Awards

References

External links

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