Conference: The Beating Heart of London’s Business
Wednesday, 23 January 2013

To find out more please download the flyer with a booking form. Proceedings of last year’s event are also available to download. Read more...
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Jaguar Heritage organised an event in cooperation with BAE Systems this month to celebrate the 90th anniversary of the foundation of the Swallow Sidecar Company - Sir William Lyons' first business and the forerunner of today's Jaguar Cars Limited.
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This week, the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS) and its sister organisation in Wales (RCAHMW) and English Heritage launched the Britain From Above website. It is a treasure trove of aerial photography from across Britain, with 5,000 images online already.
It features some of the oldest and most valuable images of the Aerofilms Collection, a unique and important archive of over 1 million aerial photographs taken between 1919 and 2006.It is particularly good for seeing some great images of industry such as shipbuilding, steel, locomotives and engineering. Such as this great one of the Harland and Wolff yard in Govan, 1947.
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If you're in the Kew area tomorrow (22 March) Alex Ritchie, the Business Archives Advice Manager at The National Archives, is giving a talk on Business Archives: New Initiatives and Developments at 2pm.
The talk will look at the background to company archives and the recent development of national strategies to promote business archives more widely. There will be an update on the current ABC survey, which seeks to identify the records of the architecture, building and construction sectors. The talk will also focus on individual projects under way to improve storage and access to the records of companies such as Marks & Spencer and Clarks Shoes.Find out more here Read more...
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An Archives Accreditation standard is currently being developed by The National Archives in partnership with other archive organisations.
Accreditation will provide a framework for benchmarking performance and support development planning. It will drive improvement by externally validating and accrediting achievement. The proposed core modules that the accreditation process will be based on are the same as those for the UK museums accreditation scheme and group requirements into three categories:
The Business Archives Council has just published a Managing Business Archives leaflet.
The leaflet has taken some of the content of the Managing Business Archives website to create a document that can be downloaded and distributed to businesses.
It is designed to be useful to companies of any size looking to establish their own archives, whether in-house or externally. It will also be useful to local record offices who frequently receive requests for assistance from such companies.You can download it here or request a hard copy by getting in touch with them. Read more...
A Crisis Management Team was created in 2009 as part of the English and Welsh strategy. The team was created to represent all parts of the archive sector to organise agreed responses to business archives under threat and it exists to monitor and assist in steering records at risk into suitable homes.
Details of the team members are now available on the Managing Business Archives website. The Scottish Representative is Kiara King, Ballast Trust Archivist.
If you are aware of business records at risk in Scotland then please contact Kiara by email at Kiara.King@glasgow.ac.uk or on 01505 328488.
Some business archive news for the start of the new year. A million pound project to digitise the BT Heritage Archive was launched this week in London on 11th January. The project is called New Connections: BT e-Archive and is:
A collaboration between Coventry University (CU), BT Heritage and The National Archives (TNA). It aims to catalogue, digitise and develop a searchable online archive of almost half a million photographs, images, documents and correspondence assembled by BT over 165 years. This large and remarkable collection details the history of Britain’s leading role in the development of telecommunications and the impact of this technology on society. The BT Archive is held, with limited public access, in central London and is by any standard a collection of national and international importance, recognised by UNESCO.You can find out more on the project blog. Read more...
The National Archives has a very helpful resource on researching their business collections available on their website here.
One of the best things about it is that it explains what the National Register of Archives (NRA) is and how to use it. This online register is one of the first places I start with when looking for business archive collections.
It is possible to search The National Archives (NRA) for the records of businesses using the corporate name index. Information about prominent industrialists can be found on the personal name index, while details of the records of families involved in business can be located in the family name index.Read more...
The Business Archives Council is holding an archive workshop for new researchers in London on Thursday 8th December.
The workshop aims to explore ways in which new research students can identify and use business records in a surprising variety of different research fields. Participants will be able to explore the vast and varied materials available at many of the UKs major and minor business archives. Now in its fourth year, this event will be hosted by The Rothschild Archive. Following a successful formula from previous years, the day will commence with an archives skills workshop run by eminent academic historians, followed by a buffet lunch, where participants will be able to meet the archivists.Find out more here including the full timetable featuring archives and archivists from The Baring Archive, HSBC, Lloyds Banking Group, London Metropolitan Archives, The National Archives and the Rothschild Archive. Read more...
Another Welsh initiative is the Wales Powering the World blog which is a project looking at Welsh Industry through Archives.
This Archives and Record Council Wales collobarative project was funded by the Pilgrim Trust under the National Cataloguing Grants Scheme. Ten of the most valuable un-catalogued business collections from north and south Wales were catalogued and are now available through their holding repositories. The collections were:
The Dorset History Centre (which is the archives service and local studies library for Bournemouth, Dorset and Poole) has created an online educational pack using its manorial records.
The pack has been designed for school pupils and is pitched at key stage 3 students and contains assorted resources for teachers.
Manorial records are the records of manors which were "areas of land and property belonging to a single landowner - the lord of the manor. They were estates which included land for growing crops and grazing animals, and a manor house. Manors had their own courts which dealt with local disputes and property transactions."
So its a great example of early business records being used to teach children.
The Institute for Family Business has published research which reveals the 10 oldest family businesses in the UK. Nine of these had been trading for over 200 years and the Financial Times highlights the oldest which is a butchers called R.J. Balson & Son that started trading in in 1535. Another article about it is available here.
The ten companies are:
The University of Worcester Research Collections is holding a conference relating to its Kays Archive collection on Tuesday 15 November.