Posts

Nominations for Local Studies book and e-publication Awards close on Saturday!

Just enough time to put your project forward for the Alan Ball Award for Local History publishing. Once again there are categories for the best printed and the best digital publications released, this time published between July 2018 and June 2019.

The award is open to all heritage and community organisations involved with some aspect of Local History and who receive or have received public funding for the publication. This also includes lottery funding, e.g. Heritage Lottery Fund and Awards for All. In addition to local authority libraries, archives, museum and archaeology services; it includes small local museums, heritage centres and community history projects.

For the hard print prize, we would like a hard copy of any printed item you submit together with a paper entry form to: Terry Bracher (Chairman of CILIP LSG) c/o Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Cocklebury Road, Chippenham. SN15 3QN. Don’t worry if the post won’t get it there in time, we’ll accept nominations posted by the end of the month.

For online resources, please complete this e-form, or send any CDs or DVDs together with a paper entry form to Terry Bracher (Chairman of CILIP LSG) c/o Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre, Cocklebury Road, Chippenham. SN15 3QN.

Welwyn Garden City 100: how local studies can help

Are you interested in the history and heritage of garden cities? Or are you planning for Welwyn Garden City’s centenary next year?

Come and find out about the archive and local studies collections for Hertfordshire and how they can help you.

Refreshments will be served at the start of the event.  This event is free, but book a place here.

When 

2 November 2019 at 10:00 – 12:00 

Venue 

Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies

Register Office Block

County Hall

Hertford

Hertfordshire

SG13 8EJ

Exhibition: Regional Radical Press in Britain 1968-88

This Saturday, as part of Bristol’s Radical History Festival, people will be able to view examples from the heyday of the radical press in Britain (c.1968-88) and explore an interactive map. The exhibition is part of the work of Recovering the Regional Radical Press in Britain 1968-88, a project based at the Regional History Centre, UWE Bristol.

The project is interested in hearing from anyone who can provide information on titles and their whereabouts. Come along to the exhibition, or contribute information via their website.

Date: Sat 12th Oct, 2019
Venue: M Shed, BS1 4RN
Price: Free
With: Steve Poole
Series: Bristol Radical History Festival 2019

Study Day: using manorial documents for local and family history research

The next Oxfordshire Local History Association study day will be on using manorial documents for local and family history. The day will include the launch of the Oxfordshire Manorial Documents Register. The National Archives and partners have been working on revising and computerising the Manorial Documents Register on a county by county basis. The Register provides listings and descriptions of manorial documents held publicly and privately. Manorial documents can be a rich source of information on places and often contain court rolls, surveys, maps and terriers. 

Title: Using manorial documents for local and family history research

Date: Saturday 16 November 2019 

Location: New College, Oxford

Further details and booking: here.

Spotlight on: the University of Leicester Library

The University of Leicester Library holds one of the largest local history collections in the country. But what’s actually in the collections and how can you use them?  

The first thing to emphasise is that we collect on all the historic counties of England (and London). We have more titles on Yorkshire, for example, than we do on Leicestershire.  This follows the comparative approach of the Centre for English Local History. We also hold many works relating to landscape history and topography, another strength of the Leicester tradition. 

The main collection is on floor 3 of the David Wilson Library. It contains around 37, 000 titles. We hold major reference works, printed primary sources, monographs, finding aids and bibliographies, maps and ephemera. And a lot of directories…

London Post Office Directories towering over Library staff

The collection begins with general works (like the Victoria County History and the Buildings of England), dictionaries and guides to sources. You will also find books on methods here and major works of interpretation e.g. W.G. Hoskins, Making of the English Landscape. 

The rest of the collection is organised by county, beginning with Bedfordshire and ending with Yorkshire. Within each county Record Society volumes come first, then items relating to the county as a whole, and then items relating to individual places within the county. 

For researchers, the printed primary sources are very useful. Some are original items, but others have been edited and published by record societies, large and small.  These sources can help you by: saving a trip to an archive; abstracting information to make it easier to find and re-use; providing historical context to aid interpretation. Having many similar sources in one collection is a great help to anyone working on a topic. 

Example source: poll books
We have over 100 poll books in our collections. Before the introduction of the secret ballot in 1872, English elections were run using open voting. The names of who voted in an election, and who they voted for, were recorded in either manuscript or printed form. These ‘poll books’ are of obvious interest to anyone studying political history. Indeed, they give historians information about voters that contemporary political analysts cannot access. They are also useful to someone researching local society, because of the class and status criteria that determined the franchise. Many poll books include further information such as where the voter lived and their occupation. Full names linked with a date and place are also useful for family historians and genealogists. Below are a few examples. 

General election 1852: poll book of the North Lincolnshire election, taken in July, 1852, with a history of the election …  (Boston: Morton, 1852). LOCAL HISTORY 942 LIN /LIN

This is a printed poll book from the 1852 General Election, recording the voters in the North Lincolnshire constituency. The title page and dedication (“Glorious Protection Triumph” & “To the tenant farmers and Yeomanry”) indicate it was printed by opponents of the repeal of the Corn Laws. This book is particularly detailed as it includes summary statistics of the voting, the candidates’ speeches and humour inspired by the campaign.

Poll of the burgesses of Monmouth, Newport, and Usk, at the election of Member of Parliament for the boroughs, 12th March, 1715 (Usk: 1906). H941.69 AAA /MON.

The title page tells us that it was transcribed from a manuscript in private hands. 

The Bath poll book, 1855: being a list of the names of persons with their residence and calling, who voted, or were entitled to vote, at the election of a member for the city and borough of Bath, June 4th, 1855 … (Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1974) LOCAL HISTORY F 942 SOM/BAT /POL.

The uses of ephemera. This is a a facsimile of the Bath Poll-Book for 1855, printed for an Open University course in 1974.

Other topics you can find sources on include population, parishes, local government, religion, land, and the cooperative movement. We have even more in Special Collections and Archives who hold associated rare book and archive collectionsSpecial Collections Online has several large digitised collections, including the Historical Directories of England and Wales and the East Midlands Oral History Archive. The PhD theses awarded to students of the Centre are freely available online. Soon we will add the occasional  papers series originally published by Leicester University Press. 

The Library welcomes visitors from outside the university: a reference card is available free of charge. Search our catalogue to see what we have: https://www2.le.ac.uk/library We are always interested to hear feedback from readers and ideas for collaboration. Email us: librarians@le.ac.uk  

William Farrell
Library Research Services, University of Leicester

Do you have a collection you would like to highlight to others? Then why not write about it on the LSG blog? We are here to help promote local studies libraries, large and small. Email ideas to William Farrell (LSG digital champion): wjbf1[at]le.ac.uk.

Mapping the Town: 50 Years of the British Historic Towns Atlas

Plan of Oxford from circa 1900, Harmsworth’s Encyclopædia (1904). Via Wikicommons.

It is 50 years since the publication of the first volume of the British Historic Towns Atlas project.

In celebration, the Historic Towns Trust (HTT) and the Oxford University Department for Continuing Education are holding a day-school in Oxford which will be of interest to many local studies librarians and archivists.

Title: Mapping the Town: 50 Years of the British Historic Towns Atlas

Date: Saturday October 12th

There will be talks on the town atlases of Oxford, York and Winchester, as well as the history of the project.

Further details and programme: https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/courses/mapping-the-town-50-years-of-the-british-historic-towns-atlas?code=O19P265LHJ







Nominate your local studies librarian of the year

Do you know a Local Studies Librarian that has gone the extra mile? Have they pioneered an amazing project or given a career of excellent service to their community? If you do, nominate them for the McCulla Prize, the annual Local Studies Librarian of the Year Award.

We welcome nominations from colleagues, local historians, family historians and anyone who knows a local studies professional who has made a difference.

To nominate, please complete the form on this page.

This year nominations close on 30th November 2019. Nominations received after that would be considered for the next award.