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Greenville Business Magazine

USC To Open Dick Riley Political Collection

Jul 12, 2018 03:20PM ● By Kathleen Maris

The South Carolina Political Collections—one of the largest political collections in the nation—will expand Monday, Aug. 6 when the University of South Carolina opens the Richard W. Riley Collection.

The collection, the culmination of five years of curation, details the life and public career of Richard Wilson “Dick” Riley, a former South Carolina state representative, senator, governor, and U.S. Secretary of Education.

“As a former South Carolina governor and state legislator, I am so proud to have my collection housed at one of the state’s premier public institutions of higher learning, the University of South Carolina, where I also graduated from the School of Law,” Riley says. “USC is a prestigious university, and its Hollings Special Collections Library is a jewel. The library’s political collections are an outstanding repository of documents that provide valuable, historical information about South Carolina’s leaders, government and political activities at the local, state, and national levels.”

To celebrate the collection’s opening, Riley has invited former-President Bill Clinton, for whom he served as a cabinet officer, to deliver special remarks at a private opening event Aug. 6, which will feature invited university and government officials and special guests.

The Richard W. Riley Collection is among the most comprehensive archives in the university’s S.C. Political Collections, with documents and memorabilia that chronicle Riley’s local, state, and federal public service and work as a private citizen.

University Libraries staff have received materials from Riley since the 1990s. The vast archive contains more than 3,000 photographs; thousands of speeches with Riley’s handwritten edits; extensive research notes on policy development; considerable correspondence and news clippings; interviews with Riley and his wife Tunky Riley, their son, Ted, and the Sec. Riley’s father, Edward P. “Ted” Riley; and printed campaign materials from Riley’s candidacies and his efforts for others, including Clinton, Jimmy Carter, and Al Gore.

Reflecting on his archive, Riley says he has had an exciting life that includes a wonderful family and meaningful professional and political experiences.   

“I believe that my speeches are especially informative, in that it was in the process of preparing them that I developed, refined, and advanced the various policies and programs that were on my reform agenda. Certainly, the most significant would be the documents surrounding the more-than-year-long process to develop, advocate for, gain passage and then implement the Education Improvement Act of 1984,” Riley says. “I think that initiative demonstrates clearly my total commitment to high-quality education for all children and other students at all levels. And I will be grateful forever to President Bill Clinton for giving me the opportunity to continue to pursue that passion at the national level, where I believe we made extraordinary strides.”

Riley worked closely with former S.C. Political Collections director Herb Hartsook and current director Dorothy Walker to ready the archive for its opening.

It’s his hope visitors to the collection will develop an appreciation for and interest in getting involved in public service.

“I believe the collection demonstrates clearly that public service can be gratifying work, but that it absolutely requires a passion and commitment to serve the public good,” Riley says. “I hope they will learn that a good public servant will be positive and respectful, willing to listen, hear both sides of an issue, collaborate, make fair and principled decisions, have high integrity and a strong work ethic, and care deeply about all people, even those who might be different or with whom one might disagree.”

That message, along with his advocacy for education, resonates deeply with university President Harris Pastides.

“As governor and later as U.S. Secretary of Education, Dick Riley earned a reputation as a great champion of the idea that education is the fundamental ingredient to improving individual lives and transforming entire communities. We are honored that he has chosen the University of South Carolina to permanently house his collection. We hope the collection serves to inspire future generations of scholars and educators,” Pastides says.

University Libraries Dean Tom McNally ensures the collection will do just that. It will be studied by researchers and students in concert with the myriad collections of congressional, gubernatorial, judicial, and political party and organization archives it joins in the S.C. Political Collections. Riley’s archive joins the recent acquisition of papers from Rep. James Clyburn, Rep. Liz Patterson, Gov. Henry McMaster, Rep. John Spratt and S.C. Chief Justice Jean Toal.

“Dick Riley is one of the greatest statesmen in modern South Carolina history, and we’re honored he chose USC Libraries to permanently house and steward his collection. It’s one of the most extensive and in-depth political collections we hold, and it will serve as a great resource for students and researchers from various disciplines for generations to come,” McNally says. “The collection is unique because it gives us insight as to how one man made a difference at so many different levels throughout his career, from Greenville, S.C. to Washington, D.C. and beyond. Secretary Riley has focused on improving education throughout his entire life—it’s his true passion—and that certainly complements our mission at USC.”

Highlights of the Richard W. Riley Collection will be on display in the gallery of the South Carolina Political Collections in the Ernest F. Hollings Special Collections Library. The exhibit “Richard W. Riley: Statesman of Education” opens Aug. 6 for public view and remains open through Dec. 23, 2018. The Hollings Library is accessible through the university’s Thomas Cooper Library, and operates 8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. weekdays.

“It is my wish that anyone who visits or reviews the collection will understand and appreciate my deep love and respect for the State of South Carolina and our great nation,” Riley says.