Nominating to a register
Significance underpins nominations to many types of registers.The nomination process fosters research into the history, provenance and context of an item or collection, and requires use of the significance criteria in formulating a statement of significance. Using a standard set of criteria facilitates consistent judgements about which items are important enough to be on a register, for example, the Australian Register of Historic Vessels or the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Register for documentary heritage. Nomination forms ask nominators to set out the reasons why their item or collection is significant under the significance criteria outlined in this guide; and to sum this up in a statement of significance.
Significance assessment in nominations to registers lays particular stress on how the item or collection compares with similar examples. Applicants need to demonstrate the high significance of their item in relation to other items or collections. With increasing online access to library catalogues, archival records and museum and gallery catalogues, it is easier now than ever before to make these comparisons.
Australian Register of Historic Vessels
The online Australian Register of Historic Vessels[1] aims to build a national picture of historic vessels, their history, provenance, design, condition, and changing uses. Initiated by the Australian National Maritime Museum and the Sydney Heritage Fleet, the register covers vessels in private and public ownership. With the high cost of keeping vessels in museums, private owners play a vital role in caring for historic vessels and preserving maritime heritage. The register is an important way of fostering research and sharing skills and knowledge.
Riawe, a motor launch built in 1912, private owner, Tasmania
Photo courtesy of private owner and Australian National Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour, Sydney
There are now some 250 vessels on the register, ranging from a humble corrugated iron dinghy used in floods and for duck shooting to luxury yachts. The significance criteria are used as a framework for considering nominations and assessing significance. The nomination process is encouraging owners to research and document their historic vessels. As the listings grow, the register is starting to give a better picture of the scope and character of historic vessels found throughout Australia’s vast coastline and inland waterways.
Click HERE to see an excerpt from the statement of significance.
[1] Australian National Maritime Museum, Australian Register of Historic Vessels, Australian National Maritime Museum (n.d.), viewed 15 March 2009, <http://www.anmm.gov.au/arhv>.



