Category: News

  • Records at Risk Fund Launched

    The BRA has worked in partnership with The National Archives (TNA) and the Archives and Records Association to launch the Records at Risk Fund, a new collaborative pilot fund to support urgent interventions to save physical and digital records facing immediate peril across the UK.

    The fund has been created in response to the increased risk of vulnerable collections being lost or dispersed in the wake of the pandemic. In 2020, TNA awarded grants from the government’s ‘COVID-19 Archives Fund’ and this new partnership programme builds on that experience. The Records at Risk Fund will continue to focus on records unprotected by legislation, such as the archives of businesses, charities and individuals, and will help organisations that do not have the resources to respond to collections at immediate risk for any reason.

    Limited funding is available but applicants will be able to apply for funds of up to £5000, which will help cover the costs of a range of urgent activities needed to transfer vulnerable material to safe custody. These activities could include transporting and temporarily storing the records, purchasing conservation and packaging materials, or emergency conservation work such as decontamination. Successful applicants could also use their grants to carry out an on site appraisal of the records at risk or to gain expertise from a freelance consultant.

    Find out more on TNA’s Records at Risk Fund webpages.

  • Shock of the Record: Latest webinar can now be viewed online

    The latest Shock of the Record  partnership seminar with the Institute of Historical Research is now available online to view in a fully captioned film. The topics discussed in this webinar series cover conspiracy theories, the idea of ‘truth’ and the impact of this on both everyday life and our understanding of history.

    Thanks to speakers Iyra Buenrostro-Cabbab from the University of the Philippines, Stanley Griffin from the University of the West Indies, Philosopher Susan Stuart and chairs Sarah Tyacke and David Thomas.

     

  • Winner of the 2021 Janette Harley Prize announced

    The British Records Association is delighted to announce that the winner of the 2021 Janette Harley Prize is Dr Amy L Erickson, Robinson College, Cambridge, for City Women in the 18th Century, a free open-air exhibition in autumn 2019 about women who ran luxury businesses in the City of London in the 18th century; and a supporting article, ‘Esther Sleepe, fanmaker, and her family’, Eighteenth-Century Life, 42 (2) (2018), pp.15-37.

    “The exhibition was based upon trade cards in the British Museum, and described over fifty women in business in the heart of the City as jewellers, silversmiths, milliners, fan-makers, lace dealers, upholsterers, printers, whalebone merchants and shoemakers. Each display panel explained an individual business, using an enlarged version of its business card, and the 44 display panels were located along a 700-metre trail from St Paul’s in the west, along Cheapside and Poultry to the Royal Exchange in the east, the most expensive shopping area of the Georgian City. Each set of panels was positioned as near as possible to the locations of the original businesses, and included an introductory panel, street plans and views of the area in the 18th century, and a schematic map to enable viewers to follow the exhibition to other stands in either direction.

    The judges were impressed by the display, its accessibility to people in the street, and the research which underpinned it. The display substantially revises our understanding of women in Georgian business. Yes, they were excluded from the government of the City and the livery companies, but they could and did operate as businesswomen on an equal basis to their male counterparts. This is largely unrecognised. They could either join a livery company and take up the City freedom in their own right, which allowed them to trade in the City; or if married, they could manage a business which legally was owned by their husband and not by them. When the husband died, the widow could carry on the business and continue to do so upon remarriage.

    Much of this has hitherto been hidden from view. If the husband belonged to a livery company and held the City freedom, his name appears in the records, not his wife’s. Even when an unmarried woman was a company member in her own right and held the freedom of the City, she can be omitted from livery company lists of members because she was not eligible for office.” (The judges of the Janette Harley Prize).

    Three further entries for the prize were highly commended:

    The prize was established in memory of Janette Harley, a member of the British Records Association, who died in 2015. It is intended to raise awareness of research and achievements in the world of archives, and is awarded for the best, or most original piece of published work which reflects the aims of the Association: to promote the preservation, understanding, accessibility and study of our recorded heritage for the public benefit.

    A call for entries to next year’s Janette Harley Prize will be made in April 2022.