This index to the Records of the Department of State Relating to Political Relations Between Chile and Other States, 1910-1929, collection provides the dates each reel covers. Government Information MAY NOT hold all of these reels. The record in the library catalog describes the extent of our holdings. For help, or to make an appointment to view a reel, email rad@colorado.edu
On the 2 rolls of this microfilm publication are reproduced records from the decimal file of the Department of State, 1910-29, that concern political relations between Chile and nations other than the United States. They are mostly instructions to and despatches from our diplomatic and consular officials in Chile and in other states. Also included in the records are notes between the Department of State and foreign diplomatic representatives in the United States, memoranda prepared by officials of the Department, and correspondence with officials of other Government departments, with Members of the U.S. Congress, and with private firms and individuals. The Lists of Documents or "purport sheets" reproduced on Roll 1 give brief abstracts of the documents reproduced in the microcopy and serve as a finding aid to the documents themselves. The arrangement of the entries on the lists corresponds to the arrangement of the documents in the file.
Since 1910 the central files of the Department of State have been grouped and arranged by a decimal system of subject classification. The decimal file initially consisted of nine primary classes numbered 0 through 8, each covering a broad subject area. Under Class 7, Political Relations of States, the documents are arranged according to the countries concerned. Each country has been assigned a 2-digit number and the numbers for Chile and Venezuela, for example, are 25 and 31, respectively. Thus the documents reproduced in this microcopy bearing the file number 725. 31 concern political relations between Chile and Venezuela. The digits that follow the second country number represent a specific subject. The number, in turn, may be followed by a slant mark ('). The numbers that follow the slant mark are assigned to individual documents as they are accumulated on a specific subject. For example, a decimal file number taken from a document reproduced in this microcopy is 725. 3112/1. The digit 12 following the country number for Venezuela (31) signifies that the subject is the negotiation of a treaty of arbitration between Chile and Venezuela, and the number following the slant mark indicates that this is the first paper received on this subject.
The documents under one subject classification are generally in chronological order, coinciding with the document number assigned (which follows the slant mark). There are instances, however, when a document file number was not assigned until a date considerably later than the one on which the document was received.
Cross-reference sheets that refer to related records under other subject classifications in the decimal file have been reproduced as they occur and appropriate cross-reference notations appear in the Lists of Documents. Other cross-reference notations are to documents in the "numerical file," a system used for the central files of the Department of State for the period 1906-10. The numerical system of assigning consecutive numbers to subject case files was replaced by the decimal system of subject classification in 1910.
Before the records were filmed a search was made by the National Archives and the Department of State for missing documents. The checkmarks that appear by most entries in the left-hand column of the Lists of Documents indicate that the papers are in the file. The absence of checkmarks denotes that the documents were not found; it is believed that they were not among the records when they were received from the Department.
This file contains communications received from and classified by foreign governments and Federal agencies other than the Department of State. The documents that have not been declassified are not available as part of this microcopy. The National Archives and Records Service does not have authority to make reproductions of such documents available to searchers.
Most of the records reproduced in this microcopy concern efforts by the Chilean Government to negotiate treaties of peace, alliance, amity, commerce, and navigation.
There is correspondence relating to the treaty of alliance between Argentina, Brazil, and Chile (the A. B.C. Alliance); boundary questions between Chile and Argentina; other international matters; and political relations between Chile and other states.
A table of contents, indicating the document number range and the subjects covered by the documents on the two rolls of this microfilm publication, is filmed after the information on related record groups given below.
The spreadsheet attached below contains a reel-by-reel description of the complete collection.