Executive Records
Executive
Records: Official Acts of the
Governor of
West Virginia
and Other Records
Many of the responsibilities of the
Secretary of State today have come from new duties assigned by the West Virginia
Legislature over the years. The role of keeper of the Governor's
official papers is one of the oldest duties dating from the beginning of the
State, and a traditional role of the office in most states.
The provision of West Virginia Code, Chapter
5, relating to the general powers and duties of the Governor, Secretary of State
and other officials comes from Virginia, where it was adopted in 1860, and
carried over into the Code of West Virginia on the formation of the state in
1863.
Article 2. Secretary of State
§5-2-1. General Duties
The secretary of state shall be the keeper of
the seals of the state, keep a journal of executive proceedings,
arrange and preserve all records and papers belonging to the
executive department, be charged with the clerical duties of
that department, and render to the governor, in the dispatch of
the executive business, such service as he may require.
Original signed
copies of specific types of formal documents executed by the Governor and
countersigned by the Secretary of State are filed here. In addition, the
Executive Records section has taken on the role of repository of certain other
legal documents, often as a result of specific legislation.
As "keeper of the seal," the Secretary
of State controls the use of the seal for any purpose other than
official state business. To see an image of the face of
the official seal of the State of West Virginia, go to West
Virginia Seal.
What Official Records Are
Maintained?
Two categories of records are
maintained in the division, Executive Journal records and Miscellaneous
Records. All are public information and available for inspection and
copying.
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Executive Journal
Documents representing official
acts of the Governor are entered into bound volumes known as the Executive
Journal. These volumes have been maintained since 1863, and are housed
in a vault in the Secretary of State's Office, as specified in the
Constitution. The original entries in the old volumes are written in the
careful, flowing script of the time. The modern volumes retain the bound
book format, but the entries are printed from a computer. All of the
entries, however, bear the signature of the Governor and the Secretary of
State. Details about the types of documents which are recorded in the
Executive Journal are found at these links:
Executive Orders
Proclamations
Appointments
of State Officials
Commissions
Pardons,
Reprieves, Commutations and Respites
Requisitions,
Waivers and Extraditions
Special
Railroad Police
Miscellaneous Records
The Secretary of State has been
assigned as the keeper of various other records, either by a constitutional
provision or by statute. Although these are not the Governor's papers,
they are maintained in the Executive Records section.
Board of Public Works
Oaths
of State Officials
Enrolled
Bills and Joint Resolutions
Surety
Bonds: Textbooks and Instructional Materials
Facsimile
Signatures
Public
Service Districts
Other Services
The Executive Records Section also handles authentications
of documents executed or certified in the United States for filing in other
countries.
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