I have written two commemorative club histories, a 50 year and 20(25) year edition; they were both complicated, but in each case the club itself was only a documentary souce, the real "history" and "truth" of it was delivered from old members' personal files themselves. This has been the case for researching journalism pieces or gathering materials for a "pitch" to
My experience is that older members' club troves paint the more accurate character, which the hard documents contextualize; I know that sounds inverted but it somehow is true.
As we now cross into the era when clubs of the 70s celebrate 50 and the post 1995 clubs approach their 25th, individual clubs ought to gather their histories before they disappear.
Besides the 50 year opportunity, one motivating reason the first was commissioned, was the recognition on all our parts that some members were crossing into old ages, and sure enough within two years of the project completion, six massive contributors to the project were no longer with us. If it weren't for those six, there is no earthly way the project could have been done the way it was. I literally cleaned two old members attics ( I am still skeeved by the silverfish, cobwebs and rodent droppings) but the retrieval was indispensible
For the 20-25 year commemorative, though the club had much better starting "files," and professional photos, again, the indvidual members/founders had the real goods... from here on out, any history that is covered or written will have the benefit of their capture.
That is my highest recommendation for anyone wanting to knwo or wanting their fellow members to know, or the public to know...is to gather documents from the old guard and execute a history project as early as one can be supported; classic clubs who always recalled their history in annivesraies have the greatest trove of materials for evermore.
cheers vk