Showing posts with label Nottinghamshire Archives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nottinghamshire Archives. Show all posts

Monday, 8 October 2012

Event - Packed programme of attractions with archivist, writer and artists (Hucknall)

HUCKNALL Library has a packed programme of events for the season ahead.


A free drop in archivist session takes place on Friday October 19 from 10am-12 noon.

An archivist from Nottinghamshire Archives will be available to talk about the documents libraries look after, answer questions about family or local history or explain how we can help with your research and finding out more.

On the same day from 11-2pm, author Bernard Jefford will be signing copies of his book entitled, Once A Busman.

And don’t miss the chance during half-term to take part in The Big Draw.

From Saturday October 20 to 27 from 10-4pm at The Gallery, there will be a chance to get creative in lots of free activities for the young and young at heart.

From: http://www.hucknalldispatch.co.uk/community/packed-programme-of-attractions-with-archivist-writer-and-artists-1-5002421

Friday, 20 July 2012

News - Top prize goes to museum of county's mechanical history

A MUSEUM dedicated to showcasing the mechanical history of Nottingham landed the top prize at an awards ceremony.


The county's best historical museums were among the award winners at the Nottinghamshire Heritage Awards, at the Lakeside Arts Centre.

The top prize, for Heritage Site of the Year, went to the Nottingham Industrial Museum at Wollaton Park, with their collection including restored Raleigh bicycles and lace making machinery.


Councillor David Trimble, Nottingham City Council's portfolio holder for leisure, culture and tourism, said: "This is fantastic news and a great accolade for our 75 volunteers who have made it possible for the Industrial Museum site to re-open this year.

"The museum offers an insight into Nottingham's rich industrial heritage and the collections include transport, steam engines, agricultural machinery and technology from the city's past, plus some of the most important lace making machinery which put Nottingham on the textile map.

"We're delighted that over the past year we have been able to work with such a hugely enthusiastic group of volunteers who have committed thousands of hours to develop their skills and make improvements to the museum and revitalise the museum's collections."

Other winners on Wednesday included the Nottinghamshire Archives, which took the prize for Inspiration Award for Best Special Project and Outstanding Achievement Award.

Team manager Mark Dorrington said: "We are obviously very pleased with the awards – we don't just keep records here, we are keen to share the county's history with as many people as possible."

Other winners included the Mansfield Museum, the Bilsthorpe Heritage Society, and The Queen's Royal Lancers and Nottinghamshire Yeomanry Museum.



Doctor Kevin Gould, principal lecturer in late medieval and early modern history at Nottingham Trent University, was on the judging panel and paid tribute to the winners.



He said: "Choosing the winners from such a strong field has been an extremely difficult task."

From: http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/prize-goes-museum-county-s-mechanical-history/story-16567764-detail/story.html

Monday, 9 April 2012

Event - Titanic archive on display in Notts (Nottingham)

THREE Notts men who lost their lives in the Titanic disaster – and one remarkable story of survival – are the subject of an archive display.

Notts County Council archive assistant Sue Norwebb has spent hundreds of hours going through records, newspaper reports and censuses to trace local connections to the liner disaster.

To coincide with the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic on April 14 and 15 there is a display case devoted to the disaster in the reception area at Notts County Council's archives service in Castle Meadow Road.

Visitors can read accounts of Notts people and view records of survivors and those who died.
Ms Norwebb said: 'It brings the relevance of the Titanic tragedy closer to the county as there were local people involved. We hope the display case we have set up for the public will be of great interest – particularly with the anniversary coming up."

Three Notts men were missing presumed dead following the sinking of the Titanic.

All were working on board at the time – William Moss and Albert Edward Lane who were both saloon stewards, and William Ewatt Caunt, a cook.

Boarding records show they were from the county, and state that "if they were discovered, they were never identified" following the sinking.

But one remarkable tale of survival centres on Mary Kezziah Roberts, a stewardess in first class.

Ship boarding records list her as living in West Bridgford and the 1911 Census states she was married to David Roberts, proprietor of West Bridgford Motor Company.

Mary not only survived the Titanic – she was rescued in lifeboat 16 – but two years later she cheated death again in another shipping disaster. She was on board the HMHS Rohilla, which claimed 85 lives when it struck Whitby Rock.

She passed away in 1933, and is buried in Epsom, Surrey.

The Titanic display is on for the next few weeks. Visit the Notts Archives, Castle Meadow Road, Nottingham, on Tuesdays from 9am to 8pm, and Wednesdays to Fridays from 9am to 4.45pm and on Saturdays from 9am to 12.45pm.

From: http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/Titanic-archive-display-Notts/story-15762200-detail/story.html

News - Nottinghamshire weather records available to view

Nottinghamshire basked in sun last month - but the region was actually warmer during March 1990, the year Pavarotti shot to fame during the football World Cup, says a weather expert.

Southwell-based Jim Rothwell (FRMetS), a Fellow of the Royal Meteorlogical Society, and former MET office forecaster, hit the headlines last year for compiling Central England’s most comprehensive record of weather data – stretching back to Roman times.

His record, the Central England Weather Series, is kept in the Nottinghamshire County Council archives service and details hundreds of interesting weather events and facts and figures sourced from history books, the MET office, weather journals and other historic sources such as the writings of Samuel Pepys.

And while hundreds of people enjoyed the unseasonally warm afternoons during March here in the region, Jim says the monthly mean temperature was 8 degrees C. Yet, in 1990 the mean temperature for March was warmer in the region at 8.5 degrees C.

Jim’s comprehensive records show that the highest temperature recorded in March this year was 20.5 degrees C, but this was eclipsed by a recording of 23 degrees C on March 9, 1948. Jim said: “People’s interest in the weather never wanes, especially when we appear to have unseasonal weather. It was a warmer month than normal last month but the mean temperature was compromised because while we had a lot of hot afternoons there were also a number of ground frosts in the mornings.

“It is quite interesting to note that the average temperature in the region was actually higher in 1990 than this year in March.

“The weather never ceases to amaze with the advent of snow in Scotland this week after a week of warm weather. But again, rapidly changing conditions have been witnessed before. For example, just two weeks before the highest weather for the region was recorded in March 1948 there had been snow on the ground.”
Jim (80) is on the editorial board for the journal Weather and worked for the Met Office for 38 years as a weather forecaster.

On his retirement in 1989, he turned detective to begin to piece together the most comprehensive weather study there is for central England.

In his time at the Met Office he spent ten years as a weather observer at College of Aeronautics at Cranfield in Bedfordshire, and also spent some years at the research unit at Cardington, near Bedford, for climate research. It was his job to advise the RAF on when to fly by forecasting the weather. He was also the expert weather forecaster for filming of the 1965 James Bond classic Thunderball, where the Vulcan bomber was filmed at RAF Waddington Airfield.

Mark Dorrington, Team Manager Archives and Local Studies, at Nottinghamshire County Council, said: “This is a fantastic and comprehensive record of weather in Central England and we are privileged to have it in our archives.

“The weather is always a fascination for people and this collection of records is a hidden gem, so we are delighted to let people know it is available.”

The records (Ref: DD1963) can be consulted at Nottinghamshire Archives, Castle Meadow Road, Nottingham, NG2 1AG on Tuesday 9am-8pm, Wednesday, Friday 9am–4.45pm and Saturday 9am–12.45pm.

They are freely accessible to anyone with a valid Archives reader’s ticket which can be obtained by providing proof of identity and address.

From: http://www.chad.co.uk/news/local/nottinghamshire-weather-records-available-to-view-1-4413414

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Book - A grisly history of Nottinghamshire

A new book for children reveals the gory details of the bloody and gruesome history of Nottinghamshire. The book is the Council's first local history book for children, and is entitled ‘A Grisly History of Nottinghamshire in 10 Spine-chilling Chapters’.

The book has been written by local children’s author Michael Cox, and is illustrated by Clive Goddard. It has been published by the council’s Libraries, Archives and Information Publications Group.

The book covers the history of Nottinghamshire in ten grisly and humorous chapters and wonderful illustrations. It reveals:
  • Which horrid king dangled screaming children from the walls of Nottingham Castle until they were dead
  • Why the River Trent ran red with blood on one sunny summer afternoon in 1487
  • How a posse of blood-thirsty Nottinghamshire ‘hard-cases’ massacred woolly mammoths
  • Which Nottinghamshire town was blasted to bits in three bloody sieges then devastated by a gruesome plague!
The book will be launched at Arnold Library in Front Street on Wednesday (Nov 16) by Nottinghamshire County Council Vice-Chairman Coun Carol Pepper. She and the author Michael Cox will then be joined by Year 6 pupils from Robert Mellors School.

Pins and needles 

One absorbing tale in the book centres on an unusual case of pins and needles involving Kitty Hudson, a six-year-old from Arnold who lived with her grandfather at St Mary’s Church in Nottingham in 1765.


Her job was to sweep the church floor and pick up pins which had fallen off women’s dresses. Kitty kept the pins in her mouth to keep her hands free for sweeping, but the habit eventually made her toothless. Then at the age of 18, she began to suffer with numbness in her legs and arms. So, in 1783, she went to Nottingham General Hospital and doctors discovered she had been swallowing the pins and her stomach, feet, legs, chest, and all the rest of her, was full of them! The doctors set about removing the pins and in 1785 she was discharged, completely pin-free, and went on to have 17 children.

Other features of the book include a grisly Nottinghamshire timeline, how the county was affected by the two world wars and letters from the past retold with a fun twist, which paint a vivid picture of yesteryear.

Ideal Christmas present

Nottinghamshire County Council Vice-Chairman, Coun Carol Pepper, said: "This book presents the history of Nottinghamshire in a most humorous and fun way and would make an ideal Christmas present for children aged 10-14.”

‘A Grisly History of Nottinghamshire’ can be bought for £5.95 from Nottinghamshire Archives and major libraries. It can also be purchased by post by sending a cheque for £8.95 (including £3.00 for postage and packaging) payable to Nottinghamshire County Council to: Libraries, Archives and Information, 4th Floor, County Hall, West Bridgford, Nottingham, NG2 7QP.

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

News - Researchers hope to pick up where Victorians left off (Notts)

After more than a century a venerable history of Notts is finally being modernised and completed with the help of a group of passionate volunteer writers and researchers. Mark Patterson reports...

A PRESTIGIOUS history of Notts is finally being updated and expanded more than a century after it was first published.

New local history research to modernise and complete the two-volume Victoria County History of Nottinghamshire, published in 1906 and 1910, is now being done on a parish-by-parish basis with the first new material, a history of Plumtree, already online.

More parish histories are in the pipeline which may be published in book-form next year, updating the old history for the first time since before the First World War – and effectively giving Notts a new county history. The Victoria History of the County of Nottingham, to give it its full title, was part of a grand late Victorian project to provide definitive histories of every county in England.

Founded in 1899, the aim of the project, described as "the greatest publishing project in local English history", was to produce volumes to a standard format which traced a county's history back to earliest times.

Work on 34 counties began immediately.

Two thick general Notts volumes appeared just a few years later and contained a rich store of knowledge covering natural and ecclesiastical history, Roman and Anglo-Saxon remains, political and social history, agriculture, sport and industry.

Despite their age, the books are still regarded as key sources of knowledge for researchers, writers, planners, or indeed anybody who has an interest in local history.

Yet the great national Victoria County History project was to be unfinished.

Funding first ran out in 1908 and the First World War then brought research on all county histories in the series to a halt.

Work resumed on a fragmented basis after the war but the project today still remains incomplete, with one county – Northumberland – having no such books to its name at all while coverage in other counties has come and gone depending on funding.

The Notts history was meant to cover four volumes – the two general histories and then another two books covering manorial and parish histories.

It is these last two books, which never appeared, which are now being researched and written by a group of local retired history enthusiasts, guided by a professional historian, Philip Riden, of the University of Nottingham.

A first 18,000-word history, of Plumtree with Clipston and Normanton-on-the-Wolds, is now online and other parish histories in preparation include those of Arnold, Bramcote, Cossall, Gonalston, Greasley, Stapleford and Tollerton.

Initial work has also begun on parishes near Mansfield such as Skegby and Mansfield Woodhouse. It is hoped the first new printed volume in the Notts Victoria County History to appear in over 100 years, a book containing ten to 15 parish histories, can be published next year, or in 2013.

Progress depends on funding – and gaining more volunteer researchers.

"I would hope that within the next five years we can work towards a full-length record of Notts," said Mr Riden, who is also editor of the Derbyshire Victoria County History.

In all, books in the series are currently being written in 14 counties.

The Notts volunteers meet regularly at the Nottinghamshire Archives, in Wilford Street, Nottingham, which funded the project with £22,000 over two years.

Most of the researchers have tended to gravitate toward parts of the county they know best or have a connection with. For retired primary school teacher Sheila Leeds, who has written the history of Plumtree, the connection with the village dates back to when she was a little girl.

"When I was six years old I went on a school trip to the smithy in Plumtree and I've always had a memory of it," she said. "The smithy has long gone but you can still see the horseshoes around the arch where it used to be. "

The research and writing took a year to complete and Mrs Leeds, of West Bridgford, is now starting on the parish history of Tollerton.

A longer history of Arnold is being finished by Eric Dove, who hopes to have his 30,000-word project completed by Christmas.

It's a big research job: the last history of Arnold was published in 1912 and a great deal has happened in and around the northern suburb since then including the loss of Arnold's true independence when a tram link to Nottingham began running in 1915.

Breweries and factories appeared in Daybrook – and more recently closed down.

All of this, and much more, has been researched and written by Arnold-born-and-bred Mr Dove, who worked in the textile industry until retirement.

"Nostalgia is flavour of the month, isn't it? It's very popular," he said. "And I'm also getting 'free' academic guidance from Philip Riden."

A notable aspect of the Victoria parish histories is that they are all written to a standard format, with research steered towards several clear subject headings such as social history, economic history, religion and local government.

Monday, 20 June 2011

News - Snapshots of medieval life to go online

MEDIEVAL records of life in Notts will be made available with the launch of an online register full of historical gems.


The Manorial Documents Register contains details of court records, surveys, maps and documents about land boundaries from medieval times.

It includes Notts historical information from as far back as the 14th century – such as the hanging of a thief and men accused of sheep rustling being put in shackles.

People will be able to access information about more than 200 manors in Nottinghamshire through the register.

Councillor John Cottee, Cabinet Member for Culture and Community, said: "These records contain a rich and interesting history about life in Nottinghamshire in the middle ages.

"The database will signpost people to relevant sources and help to bring mediaeval history to everyone's fingertips."

Mark Dorrington, of Nottinghamshire Archives, said the electronic project only took five months to complete but the written register has been compiled since 1926.

He said: "Previously the only place historical records like this could be consulted was at the National Archives at Kew.

"The project's aim was to computerize and revise the records, which have existed for decades, so there is a wealth of fascinating information available at the click of a button."

The online record has been compiled by Nottinghamshire County Council's Archives team in conjunction with the University of Nottingham's Manuscripts and Special Collections department.

Councillor John Cottee will officially announce the introduction of the online register at Nottinghamshire Archives at 10am tomorrow.

This will be followed by a series of talks from 10.15am about the register, which are open to the public.

Find out more at www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/mdr

From: http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/Snapshots-medieval-life-online/story-12802077-detail/story.html