The House Historian's "District Office"
Today's Roll Call has a troubling article on the struggles of the newly created House Historian's Office. As some Cliopatria readers might recall, last year Speaker Hastert selected a distinguished historian, Robert Remini, to become the new House historian. The Roll Call story suggests that the Remini appointment isn't working out. (In the interests of disclosure, neither I nor anyone I knew applied for the House Historian's job.)
The House has tough competition on the Historical Office front: the Senate Historical Office, headed by veterans Richard Baker and Don Ritchie, is a scholar's dream. I can't recall a single instance during the writing of the three books I've done on Congress where the Senate Historical Office hasn't been able to provide whatever (usually arcane) information I needed, and almost always on the spot. It simply would not be possible to work on the history of the Cold War Congress without the office's ambitious oral and photo history programs, as well as its compilations of dozens of volumes of executive sessions of the Foreign Relations Committee and the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. And, of course, any historian or political scientist working on Congress knows that whenever we're in Washington, we can always drop by and see Ritchie or Baker if there's anything on the ground that we need. Perhaps there's a better example of an office devoted to institutional or public history around, but if there is, I haven't encountered it.
The House has chosen a different model. Deputy House Historian Fred Beuttler told Roll Call that Remini, whose salary is $109,646, works out of what could be termed"a district office in some ways,” in his Illinois hometown. Remini commutes to Washington only a couple of days a month.
Remini is 84 years old; his wife is ill; and he has committed to write the official history of the University of Illinois at Chicago. So he obviously has personal reasons for wanting to stay in Illinois. But none of the 435 members of the House base their activities from their"district office," and a large part of the function of a House or Senate historian is visibility in the Capitol and personal accessibility to scholars and journalists. I recently gave a talk in the Russell Senate Office Building, sponsored by the Senate Library, on Congress and the Cold War. Several members from the Senate Historical Office attended; so too did a number of House staffers and even one House member (Washington congressman Rick Larsen). The absence of representatives from the House Historian's Office was notable (I assume Remini was in Illinois); and I doubt that I'm the only congressional scholar who has had this experience.
Deputy Historian Beuttler, meanwhile, lacks academic training in congressional history, or even political history or a relevant political science field, he told Roll Call that"when [Remini] retires, I’ll apply for the position." Beuttler seems to have some good ideas on where he wants to take the office--conducting members' oral histories, for instance--but it seems to me very hard to imagine a House historian, in effect, learning the subject on the job.
Raymond Smock, the former House historian who was fired by Newt Gingrich in 1995, told Roll Call that “the idea to have a House Historian who lives in Illinois and flies into the Capitol a couple of days a month is just not going to work." I agree. The House deserves--and needs--more than a historian whose own deputy describes him as working from a"district office." But if no one appropriate can be found, Hastert would be better off saving taxpayers the office's $450,000 expense.