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Inside the Obama presidential archives

The National Archives and Records Administration is working to make the presidential archives available digitally and at the future Obama Presidential Center.

The Obama Foundation is committed to supporting the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) to lay the foundation for enhanced public access and engagement with the archives of the Obama presidency. Learn more about NARA’s work to make the archive available digitally and how artifacts and records will be made available at the future Obama Presidential Center.

Obama presidential records at-a-glance

All of the official presidential records of the Obama administration are owned and managed by NARA. This includes 1.5 billion pages of “born digital” records—emails, PDFs, digital photos, tweets—that have no paper equivalents—along with roughly 30 million pages of paper documents and 30,000 physical artifacts. Together, these “born-digital” and digitized records and artifacts will make up  NARA’s Obama Presidential Library. (Opens in a new tab)

An infographic of a blue square representing 1.5 billion pages, with 95% of it in dark blue with the words "95% born digital" and a smaller, lighter blue square with the words "5% and the words "All 30 million paper pages will be digitized." A disclaimer at the bottom notes that "figures are approximate."

NARA will maintain ownership and management of these records and make them available under the same standards and practices under which they have always administered records, in accordance with the  Presidential Records Act. (Opens in a new tab)

Just as with other Presidential Libraries, NARA will have a distinct staff dedicated to preserving, reviewing, and providing access to the Presidential Records of the Obama Administration. They will help the public, including historians and other researchers, find and access the born-digital and digitized records.

For the 30 million pages that will be digitized, the original paper documents will be preserved by NARA at a facility they administer, and made available to the public under the same policies and practices as other digitized NARA collections.

Barack Obama sits in a leather chair at a wood desk in the golden light of a table lamp holding a piece of paper in his hand. Behind him are a grandfather clock and large oil painting.

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Barack Obama tilts his head to the side and laughs and he looks over a table of students in a classroom with a laptop computer and building with straws.

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An arm and hand point to a framed black-and-white  image with text and a map. The words "March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, August 28, 1963, Lincoln Memorial Program" are written at the top.

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President Obama works at the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office

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Barack Obama sits at a table typing at a keyboard. Several other men do the same, while a man and a person with a camera look on.

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President Barack Obama participates in a Twitter live question and answer session in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Dec. 3, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

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President Obama speaks with Valerie Jarrett and Marty Nesbitt.

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President Barack Obama pauses at the George W. Bush library

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Two hands hold a wooden block with an American flag and the words "United States"on it. The hands appear to be writing the words "To" in black Sharpie marker.

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A man sits in a chair while dozens of bright lights surround him on a grid framework.

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Barack Obama sits on a wood desk in the Oval Office typing on his cell phone. Red curtains and flags representing the U.S. are behind him in front of large windows.

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Barack Obama wearing a baseball cap and suit gives a fist bump to a young woman with two braids. They sit at a table with a laptop computer and other students can be seen looking at computers in the background.

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Archives and artifacts at the Obama Presidential Center

The Obama Presidential Center Museum will tell the story of President Obama’s historic path to the presidency framed within the larger story of American history—including a spotlight on Chicago’s prominent role in the civil rights movement and its history of community engagement.

A rendering of the Museum Building is shown from the North.

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People explore the sky room of the future Obama Presidential Center

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A graphic rendering of sunset over the proposed Obama Presidential Center site, showing a large building, street and trees in fall foliage.

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While the Museum itself will be paid for and managed by the Foundation, a substantial number of the records and artifacts on display will be loaned to the Foundation by NARA, allowing visitors to engage with presidential items as they do at other NARA-run presidential museums.

Catching up with the curator: the Obama State China Service

This may include items such as manuscripts of President Obama’s major speeches or the many state gifts presented to President and Mrs. Obama by world leaders. These loaned records and artifacts will be subject to NARA’s standards for the display of any NARA record or artifact. Some examples from the NARA-controlled archives will appear physically in display cases or digitally.

The Museum’s collections and curatorial staff is determining plans to provide research access to any items collected by the Obama Presidential Center Museum. Museum exhibits will include a range of objects from our own collections, or from other institutions, alongside those on loan from NARA’s holdings.

Read our full fact sheet for more information about the Obama Presidential Archives.

An illustration of four people with a range of light to deep skin tones lifting one another up on top of a paper plane. The background is pink.

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