Family & Community Historical Research Society

Return to Home Join FACHRS What's New? Request a Link
Last Updated 24 January 2008

FACHRS Link Pages - Community History Research    

This page divided into two parts. Part 1 (this page) deals with mainly with the Academic and Community History Research. Part 2, the second link will take you to the Family Genealogy side of research. In many cases these topics are intertwined so it is worth looking at all subject headings.

All the links or "hyperlinks" will in many cases move you automatically to another web site on the internet, where the author has placed the information.

British Agricultural History Society British Newsreels Charles Booth's Descriptive Map of Poverty DA301 students
EnrichUK.net Genealogy reference for the UK General Register Office Scotland Internet databases
Ireland National Register of Archives Institute of Historical Research John Rylands Library Kelsall, Cheshire The Living Archive
London College of Fashion Archive OSFACH Public Record Office Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts The St Albans & Hertfordshire
Architectural &
Archaeological Society
SHEiNTON Heritage Group Victorian Research Web Victorian Turkish Bath Victorian Web World War II Prisoners of War

You can either search this page using the "Find" or "Search" tool on your browser tool bar at the top of the page, alternatively you can simply scroll down the page to "browse" the hyperlinks.

Community Historical Research
http://socsci.open.ac.uk/SocSci/osfach/intro.html This web is sponsored by the Open University to provide an Inter-Faculty Open University Research Group. It has close links with the Open University's honours course Studying family and community history: 19th and 20th centuries. The central aim of OSFACH is to facilitate the conduct, co-ordination and communication of small scale research studies in family & community history, with the context of scholarly work in these fields, with special reference (in the first instance) to work on the British isles in the 19th & 20th centuries.
Top
http://socsci.open.ac.uk/SocSci/da301/sesame.html For all DA301 students past & present. Your gateway to many more academic links for social history.
Top
http://www.hmc.gov.uk/archon/archon.htm Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts "gateway". The "access to Archives" project is intended to provide an opportunity for archivists in English repositories to convert the finding aids of their priority collections from paper into database form, which will then be accessible from the world wide web. Users will then be able to access the lists using a search engine and read them on screen. It is also possible to search archives in Ireland
Top
http://ihr.sas.ac.uk The Institute of Historical Research has a searchable database of PhD thesis.
Top
http://www.hmc.gov.uk/nra/nra.htm Index to the Ireland National Register of Archives
Top
http://www.pro.gov.uk/ Access to Public Record Office "finding aids"
Top
http://www.livingarchive.org.uk The Living Archive is a community development agency that uses people's lives as the inspiration for creative projects. It has a vast local history archive of Milton Keynes and the villages & towns that were there before the new city of Milton Keynes was created. The Living Archive offer support and training to groups wishing to learn more about their own communities and involve local people in celebrations of their place. The Living Archive is the Oral History Society's local contact for Buckinghamshire.
Top
http://rylibweb.man.ac.uk The John Rylands Library in Manchester has a large collection of Methodist material.
Top
 

http://www.the-dicksons.org

Author Don Dickson

This web has a focus on Kelsall, a small community about 6 miles east of Chester in Cheshire. The domain contains the complete transcriptions of the 1841 - 1891 Census Enumerator Books, plus some other interesting lists such as the the Tithe List of 1837. Some early data on the Methodist church is included.There is an academic paper relating to the changes that Kelsall experienced in the 19th century
Top
http://ww.genuki.org.uk/ This web is maintained as a genealogy reference for the UK and contains links to multiple on-line references, databases and links maintained by Family History Societies.
Top
http://www.umich.edu/~risotto/  

Maintained by the University of Michigan.

Key persons are Karl Longstreth, Timothy Utter, Sharmila Bandekar, Constance Colthorp, Suzanne Gray, Patty Hendricks, Susan Hollar plus from Bath Spa University College Mark Annand.

A clickable digitised version of Charles Booth's 1889 Descriptive Map of Poverty. If the work of Charles Booth in Victorian London is a topic of your research ... then make sure that you visit this site.
Top
Victoria Reseach Web Graphic Link

http://www.indiana.edu/~victoria/

History Department
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA

 

Scholarly Resources for Victorian Research , a collection of resources assembled by the founder of the VICTORIA discussion list. Like VICTORIA, the VRW is dedicated to the scholarly study of nineteenth-century Britain, and to aiding researchers, teachers, and students in their investigations of any and all aspects of this fascinating period.

VRW is intended to supply a handy set of tips and links to help Victorianists find the practical information they need, whether it's an archive catalogue, a bibliography, a listserv address, a sample syllabus, a place to stay in London, or a journal's submission guidelines.

Top
Link to Victoria Web

http://landow.stg.brown.edu/victorian/victov.html

A Victorian Web with background information on a wide range of subjects from gender, philosophy, science & technology.

Created by George P Landow, Professor of English and Art History, Brown University the Victorian Web derives from materials originally developed to assist students at Brown for use in a series of other hypertext environments. Even in days before its appearance on the World Wide Web, independent scholars, students, and faculties of other institutions contributed to it, and since it translation to the Web, the number of contributions from readers in Asia, Australia, and Europe have risen dramatically.

Top
http://wood.ccta.gov.uk/grosweb.nsf/pages/home General Register Office Scotland : The General Register Office for Scotland is the UK Government department responsible for the registration of births, marriages & deaths, divorces and adoptions in Scotland. It is also responsible for carrying out periodic censuses of Scotland's population. From GRO there are links to projected population for Scotland, the 1998 Mid-year population estimates, and a link to the Scottish GRO Data Library.
Top
http://www.internets.com Accessing unindexed Internet databases.

There are (some say) approximately 100 million pages on the Internet, and some experts speculate that 10 times that many documents reside in unindexed databases.

Internets.com is an extensive catalogue of databases on the Web, including archives, libraries, statistical data & research databases. You can search by keyword or by browsing the collection.

Top
http://www.victorianturkishbath.org The history of the Victorian Turkish Bath is captured on this site hosted by Malcolm Shifrin. The Victorian Turkish Bath adds knowledge to many aspects of Victorian life and on this site FACHRS members will no doubt discover much to learn about the introduction of the Turkish Bath into 19th Century life style.
Top
http://vads.ahds.ac.uk/search_lcf.html THE LONDON COLLEGE OF FASHION ARCHIVE is presented on-line by the VISUAL ARTS DATA SERVICE
London College of Fashion Collection is accessible and searchable via the VADS website.   The collection, which was digitised as part of the JISC Image Digitisation Initiative (JIDI) consists of over 1000 black & white and sepia photographs chronicling
the history of the College from its origins in two of the early needletrade schools: Barrett Street Trade School and Shoreditch Institute Girls TradeSchool. The photographs depict a wide range of subjects taught in the schools over the years, as well as images which provide an insight into events and activities related to the colleges, for example, the education of women and men,  World War II evacuations, etc...
Top
www.bufvc.ac.uk/newsreels THE BRITISH UNIVERSITIES NEWSREEL PROJECT DATABASE

The British Universities Film & Video Council (BUFVC) has published its unique database of British newsreels as a CD-ROM and online. Between 1910 and 1979 the newsreels, released twice a week in British cinemas, gave millions their picture of national and world events. Such fondly remembered names as Pathe News, Gaumont British News and British Movietone News were seen in every cinema, and have now preserved an
invaluable record of life and news in the twentieth century. They are already regularly used by television companies making historical programmes, and are increasingly used by academics working in a variety of fields, as appreciation grows of their special value as a historical resource.

The BUFVC has maintained and encouraged an interest in newsreel history since the 1970s, and in 1995 initiated the British Universities Newsreel Project, which has resulted in a database of information on 160,000 individual newsreel stories taken from 21 British newsreels and cinemagazines. This has now been published as a website at www.bufvc.ac.uk/newsreels, with free access to all ac.uk addresses and BUFVC
members. The website also includes the history, general information on the newsreels, articles, and a biographical index of cameramen.

The British Universities Newsreel Project website is the first centralised record of British newsreel releases. It will become a major historical resource for students, historians and film researchers, and will help secure the newsreelsą place as a treasure trove of the twentieth century.
Logo of the BAHS (reproduced with permission)

British Agricultural History Society

British Agricultural History Society
The Society was founded in 1952, to promote the study of agricultural history and the history of the rural economy and society.    
bullet

THE SOCIETY
bullet

publishes the Agricultural History Review

bullet

publishes bibliographies, lists of dissertations and work in progress

bullet

hold conferences

bullet

promotes the conservation of historically significant landscapes

BAHS members have also written the Cambridge University Press' prestigious 8-volume Agrarian History of England and Wales which is now nearing completion and covers the period from earliest times to 1939.

"Pub History" Pub History

Pages created by Simon Fowler to report the July 2000 seminar for the South East branch of the Society on the history of pubs. A very useful summary and worth a visit because there are numerous links to resources of a similar nature.

German Prisoners of War in Britain WWll German POW

Just one of the subjects covered in this web site "A description of the journey endured by German POWs   by infantryman Kurt Bock who was captured in Holland in 1944"

This web site focuses on the activity of German POW held by the British during WWll. There are also links from this site to Pamela Taylor's website who is the author of the book "Enemies Become Friends" which details the everyday lives of German POWs in Northern England after WWII

EnrichUK

EnrichUK Fuelling the online learning revolution

EnrichUK, the gateway to a lottery-funded collection of 150 sites supported by the New Opportunities Fund.

The collection ranges across culture, history, social and economic development, science and art as well as offering regional and national 'sense of place' websites from England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales.

Try Browse-Topics-Historical Periods from their home page.

 

The St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural &
Archaeological Society
This Society has a rich series of lectures on diverse topics that include how communities were, and continue to be, affected by their surroundings. Published objectives of this Society are:
bulletto promote interest in the architecture, archaeology and history of St. Albans and Hertfordshire,
bulletto secure the protection of monuments and other features of architectural or archaeological interest in the area,
bulletto encourage the preservation of documents and graphic records of historical interest,
bulletto promote and participate in archaeological work, and research into local history,
bulletto arrange meetings, lectures, exhibitions and visits,
bulletto promote the publication of papers, reports and other literature

 

Top

Copyright FACHRS 1999- 2008

This page was last updated 24 January 2008