A Guide to the Gubernatorial Appointment Registers of the Virginia Secretary of Commonwealth,1998-2002
A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Accession Number 51138
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Library of Virginia
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Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
The folders must be reviewed before being served. Privacy protected information is considered closed for 75 years after date of record creation per Code of Virginia 42.1-78. Types of records restricted include, but are not limited to: forms with social security numbers.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Preferred Citation
Gubernatorial Appointment Registers of the Virginia Secretary of Commonwealth, 1998-2002. Accession 51138, State government records collection, The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.
Acquisition Information
Transferred on 9 January 2014 by the Office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1111 East Broad Street, 4th Floor, Richmond, Virginia, 23219.
Historical Information
The Office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth has evolved from early colonial times when there existed a Secretary of the Colony. Thomas Nelson held the position of the first Secretary of Virginia in 1776. Early Secretaries were elected by the public. An Act of the General Assembly in 1920 changed the election to a joint vote of the General Assembly. In a 1930 Act the duties of the Secretary were redefined with the Secretary of the Commonwealth serving as the ex officio secretary of the Governor, as custodian of many official State records, and as keeper of the Greater and Lesser Seals of the Commonwealth. The office of the Secretary has gradually acquired other functions, such as: service of out-of-state civil process; appointment and regulation of notaries public; and registration and oversight of lobbyists. The Office became a gubernatorial appointment subsequent to a 1958 Act of the Assembly. The Secretary of the Commonwealth is under the jurisdiction of the Governor's Office. The Secretary is appointed by the Governor for a term of four years. Currently the Secretary of the Commonwealth is responsible for gubernatorial appointments, clemency and restoration of civil rights requests and extraditions. Additional activities include: serving as ex officio Secretary to the Governor; serving as keeper of the seals of the Commonwealth; compiling and publishing the annual Blue Book; commissioning and regulating notary publics, including the publication of a Notary Handbook and conduct of disciplinary hearings; promulgating the lobbying disclosure requirements, registration of lobbyists, and recording of lobbying reports; servicing the civil process of out-of-state defendants and other parties; and authenticating and certifying the records of the courts and of any state agency.
Anne P. Petera was appointed by Governor James S. Gilmore (1998-2002) to serve as Secretary of the Commonwealth, effective January 23, 1998. Petera served until the end of Gilmore's administration in January 2002.
Scope and Content
Gubernatorial appointment registers, 1998-2002, concerning gubernatorial appointments to state boards and commissions during the administration of Governor James S. Gilmore (1998-2002). Includes correspondence, appointment tracking sheets, curriculum vitae and resumes, and appointment worksheets.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically.