A black and white photograph of a farmhand working hard - INF13-140 (11) World War II poster - Lend A Hand On The Land

‘Lend a hand on the land’ poster (cropped) from the Ministry of Agriculture from the Second World War. Catalogue reference: INF13-140 (11)

The National Archives is delighted to announce that we will digitise the National Farm Survey (MAF 32 and MAF 73) in full, thanks to a generous grant of £2.13 million from Lund Trust.

The 1941 National Farm Survey is one of the most comprehensive records of land that we hold in our collection and is a window in time on the UK’s agriculture and land use in the middle of the Second World War. Containing extensive data on over 300,000 English and Welsh farms, the survey is among the most-requested record series at The National Archives.

Currently, the complex filing of the paper record makes it difficult for readers to order and use, with the records only available in physical copy. This project will digitise the series in full and create a new digital cataloguing arrangement to make each farm searchable online.

It will not only make the survey permanently and freely available, but will also improve its accessibility and searchability.

Genealogists, family and local historians will be able to consult the series for their own research, and the project will lay the ground for new analyses by historical economists, geographers and ecologists.

Jeff James, CEO & Keeper of The National Archives said:

“This is a unique opportunity to realise the potential of what was seen as a ‘Second Domesday Book’, a ‘permanent and comprehensive record of the conditions on the farms of England and Wales’. Thanks to this partnership, the National Farm Survey, an enormous database of land ownership and land usage in mid-20th century Britain, will be freely available online to researchers in the UK and globally.”

Andrew Wright, Director of Lund Trust said:

“The National Farm Survey was born out of a wartime need decades ago but still has much to teach us about the land. We are pleased to support making these recordsaccessible to help people in England and Wales to know their local areas better and aid scholars researching our rich agrarian history.”

The project began in October 2023 and will finish in March 2027, with teams from across The National Archives working on the conservation, digitisation, transcription, cataloguing, and publishing of the records. More information about the project’s progress and first image release will be published later this year.

Notes to editors

The National Archives is a non-ministerial government department and the official archive for the UK government, and for England and Wales. We look after and make available to the public our collection of historical records dating back more than 1,000 years, including records as diverse as the Domesday Book and MI5 files. We are also a cultural, heritage and academic organisation which promotes public accessibility to iconic documents while ensuring preservation for generations to come.

Lund Trust supports work that greens people’s lives in the UK and also gives to other causes its donors especially care about. Since 2002, it has given more than £107m.

For more information:

You can find out more about the National Farm Survey in Explore the Collection, or by reading our Research Guide.

Enquiries about the project can be directed to Jack Butterworth, Head of Grants and Funding, by emailing grants@nationalarchives.gov.uk.

For further media enquiries, please email press@nationalarchives.gov.uk or call 020 8392 5277.

The National Archives is delighted to announce that we will digitise the National Farm Survey (MAF 32 and MAF 73) in full, thanks to a generous grant of £2.13 million from Lund Trust.

 

The 1941 National Farm Survey is one of the most comprehensive records of land that we hold in our collection and is a window in time on the UK’s agriculture and land use in the middle of the Second World War. Containing extensive data on over 300,000 English and Welsh farms, the survey is among the most-requested record series at The National Archives.

 

Currently, the complex filing of the paper record makes it difficult for readers to order and use, with the records only available in physical copy. This project will digitise the series in full and create a new digital cataloguing arrangement to make each farm searchable online.

 

It will not only make the survey permanently and freely available, but will also improve its accessibility and searchability.

 

Genealogists, family and local historians will be able to consult the series for their own research, and the project will lay the ground for new analyses by historical economists, geographers and ecologists.

 

Jeff James, CEO & Keeper of The National Archives said:

“This is a unique opportunity to realise the potential of what was seen as a ‘Second Domesday Book’, a ‘permanent and comprehensive record of the conditions on the farms of England and Wales’. Thanks to this partnership, the National Farm Survey, an enormous database of land ownership and land usage in mid-20th century Britain, will be freely available online to researchers in the UK and globally.”

 

Andrew Wright, Director of Lund Trust said:

“The National Farm Survey was born out of a wartime need decades ago but still has much to teach us about the land. We are pleased to support making these recordsaccessible to help people in England and Wales to know their local areas better and aid scholars researching our rich agrarian history.”

 

The project began in October 2023 and will finish in March 2027, with teams from across The National Archives working on the conservation, digitisation, transcription, cataloguing, and publishing of the records. More information about the project’s progress and first image release will be published later this year.

 

 

Notes to editors

The National Archives is a non-ministerial government department and the official archive for the UK government, and for England and Wales. We look after and make available to the public our collection of historical records dating back more than 1,000 years, including records as diverse as the Domesday Book and MI5 files. We are also a cultural, heritage and academic organisation which promotes public accessibility to iconic documents while ensuring preservation for generations to come.

Lund Trust supports work that greens people’s lives in the UK and also gives to other causes its donors especially care about. Since 2002, it has given more than £107m.

 

For more information:

You can find out more about the National Farm Survey in Explore the Collection, or by reading our Research Guide.

 

Enquiries about the project can be directed to Jack Butterworth, Head of Grants and Funding, by emailing grants@nationalarchives.gov.uk.

 

For further media enquiries, please email press@nationalarchives.gov.uk or call 020 8392 5277.

 

MI9 bulletin TNA W0208/3268

MI9 bulletin TNA W0208/3268

We opened our new exhibition Great Escapes: Remarkable Second World War Captives with a launch event and positive coverage in the media.

At the opening, author and intelligence specialist Helen Fry spoke about researching the secret wartime intelligence organisation MI9 in our records while writing her books.

She recalled discovering that Allied servicemen were advised ‘not to walk in a British way’ if they found themselves in enemy territory – among many other tips they were given on escape and evasion.

The Daily Telegraph gave the exhibition a four-star review, Great Escapes: a revelatory examination of prisoner-of-war camps in the Second World War (telegraph.co.uk)

“I’m fascinated by the enduring passion that exists for this story, but also what you have here,“ was Samira Ahmed’s verdict on Radio 4’s Front Row Front Row – Killers of the Flower Moon star Lily Gladstone, author Leo Vardiashvili and the Great Escapes exhibition at Kew – BBC Sounds

Drawing on our extraordinary range of wartime records, Great Escapes explores the experiences of Prisoner of War (POW)s and civilian internees between 1939-45.

It was inspired by a marathon cataloguing effort by volunteers who worked their way through 200,000 POW records to make them accessible to the public. Their efforts turned up records relating to Ronald Searle, who survived working on the Thai-Burma railway and sketched his fellow prisoners (bringing home around 300 drawings at the end of the war).

They also catalogued wartime records for PG Wodehouse, who managed to write at least one novel while interned in Poland, which are also on display.

But the POW who has most captured the media’s imagination is Carry On actor Peter Butterworth. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-68209738 Interned in Stalag Luft III, he was one of the vaulters who helped distract attention from tunnelling under the Wooden Horse and helped organise The Great Escape the following year. A talented artist, he was involved in forging fake ID papers for escapers and sending coded messages to the authorities in Britain. His story was told in a film about the exhibition which ran on BBC Breakfast and other BBC News outlets.

Hurry down to Bessant Drive, Kew to check out the exhibition yourself. It’s open Tuesdays-Sundays until 21 July and is completely free. No tickets required.

Also available, our dedicated exhibition web pages to discover more and our programme of online events.

Image credit: Exhibition, Spatial, Graphic and AV Design Byfield and Peter L.Dixon

Great Escapes – Remarkable Second World War Captives – The National Archives

https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/about/visit-us/whats-on/online-events/

Account book belonging to William Calley the elder, draper of London, recording his trade in cloth with individual clients, 1600-1606. Image courtesy of Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre

Image: account book belonging to William Calley the elder, draper of London, recording his trade in cloth with individual clients, 1600-1606. Image courtesy of Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre

The following collections of papers have been accepted in lieu of tax by the government:

  1. Papers of the Tyrell-Kenyon family, Barons Kenyon of Gredington. Further details are set out in case 17 of Arts Council England’s latest Acceptance in Lieu report 
  2. Family and estate papers of the Calley family of Burderop Park, Wiltshire. Further details are also set out in case 41 of the latest Acceptance in Lieu report.

Any library, record office or institution in the United Kingdom interested in acquiring either of these collections should contact Liz Hart, Collections and Manorial Records Manager, at asl@nationalarchives.gov.uk for more information about the application process.

You can also contact us at the following address:
Liz Hart
Archives Sector Leadership
The National Archives
Kew, Richmond
TW9 4DU

Applications for allocation of this material must be received in writing by post or email by Friday 23 February 2024.

The National Archives building

Are you interested in helping to lead and shape the work of The National Archives? We are looking to appoint two non-executive members to our Board.

The National Archives is at a transformative moment in its history. Digital records are revolutionising the way that information is preserved and artificial intelligence will change how we interact with data day to day, bringing leadership across government on all aspects of information management.

Alongside this we continue to acquire and preserve new deposits of physical records. We are currently transferring millions of historical records of military service personnel into our care and, from 2024, will welcome the Parliamentary Archives to our site at Kew. The near future also sees changes to our leadership, with the appointment of a new Chief Executive and Keeper.

Our Non-Executive Board Members make a major contribution to shaping The National Archives’ direction and progress. As a member of the Board, your insights will be essential in helping us fulfil our role by providing scrutiny, advice, support and challenge.

We are looking for people who can drive us forward. If you have the experience, enthusiasm and skills to help us reach our goals, we are keen to hear from you.

More information about the role and details of how to apply can be found here

Today we have released Cabinet Office files from 20 years ago covering a range of subjects that crossed the desk of Tony Blair as prime minister.

Some of the issues in the files include:

  • Home affairs
  • Regional policy
  • Relations with other countries
  • Meetings with foreign leaders and governments

You can explore the newly released files via our catalogue Discovery. More digitised files will be available throughout the day.

In addition, we have released a collection of Cabinet Office files related to what became known as the ‘Spycatcher’ case. These files from the 1980s reveal government discussion on the planned publication of a memoir by an ex-MI5 officer.

Read more about the case via the links below:

PREM 19/591: This file is primarily concerned with the publication of Chapman Pincher’s book, Their Trade is Treachery, and the allegations made in that book against Sir Roger Hollis, who had served as Director General of MI5 between 1956 and 1965. It links to the controversy which later surrounded Peter Wright’s publication of his book Spycatcher. Peter Wright was believed to have been Chapman Pincher’s chief source.

PREM 19/1951: This is the first of several files concerned largely with proceedings brought by the UK government in Australian courts to prevent the publication of Peter Wright’s book, Spycatcher.

PREM 19/1952: This file contains much detailed information relating to the legal proceedings seeking to restrain publication of Spycatcher in Australia.

PREM 19/1953: This file contains continued consideration of the government’s court action seeking to prevent publication of Spycatcher in Australia, and to restrain publication of Joan Miller’s book, One Girl’s War, in Ireland.

PREM 19/1954: Michael Bettaney was an MI5 officer who attempted to spy for the Soviet Union. He was caught and in 1984 was sentenced to 23 years in prison. This file includes the unfolding decisions made within government in the wake of the case.

PREM 19/2504: This file is largely concerned with government litigation in Australia to prevent the publication of Spycatcher, and government action in Ireland to prevent the publication of One Girl’s War. The possible publication of Spychatcher in the USA is also referred to, and legal action against UK newspapers discussed.

PREM 19/2505: This file is largely devoted to detailed coverage of first instance proceedings in restraint of the publication of Spycatcher in Australia, and the related decision to appeal. The file outlines a determination to identify the source of leaks relating to the appeal.

PREM 19/2506, PREM 19/2507, and PREM 19/2508 continue with the same theme.

PREM 19/2509: The extensive and detailed coverage of various aspects of the government’s litigation in respect of Spycatcher continues in this file, including much discussion of the action taken in New Zealand and in the English and Scottish courts in respect of newspaper publications.

PREM 19/2510: The action brought in the English courts against UK newspapers is covered in depth and this file also includes, among other things, full copies of the government’s case upon appeal to the House of Lords.

PREM 19/2511: This file further details government discussions of a potential appeal in its Scottish legal action against publication of Spycatcher as well as providing extended consideration of the government’s response to, and handling of, the House of Lords’ judgment in respect of the case brought against UK newspapers.

Other digitised files

The café and coffee bar at The National Archives is provided by Maids of Honour, a historic tea room and bakery in the local Kew area. Here’s what you might find on the menu:

Food menu

The food we offer is made by hand in our historic bakery on Kew Road. Prices and menus are subject to change, and include seasonal and daily specials that vary.

A selection of croissants and cookies.

All day breakfast and pastries

  • Toast (white bloomer or wholemeal bread) and preserve £2.75
  • Ham and cheese croissant £4
  • ‘Maids’ sausage roll / Vegan sausage roll £2.80
  • Plain croissant / Pain au chocolat £2
  • Almond croissant £3
  • Danish pastries: Cinnamon / Apricot / Custard / Raisin / Pecan £3
  • Maids of Honour tart £2.80
Dishes of cooked meat and vegetables.

Lunch specials and fresh soups

  • Hot lunch special of the day £6.50
  • Oven-baked jacket potato and toppings: Grated cheese / Baked beans / Salad / Tuna mayo £6.50 / £6
  • Soup of the day and any sandwich £6
  • Soup of the day and any toastie / Panini £7
  • Soup of the day £3.50
  • Slice of any bread and butter 75p
  • Fresh side salad £1

Sandwiches, baguettes, toasties and panini

All our sandwiches are made here fresh each morning. See our counter for today’s selection.

  • Sandwich bread £3.75
  • Baguette £4.75
  • Toastie £4
  • Panini £4.75

Pies

See our counter for today’s selection (with a side salad £1 extra).

  • Steak / Chicken / Salmon and Spinach, 200g+ Slice £6

Quiches and tarts

See our counter for today’s selection (with a side salad £1 extra).

  • Bacon and tomato £4
  • Cheese and leek £4
  • Mushroom £4
  • Salmon and spinach £4.50

Savoury pastries

See our counter for today’s selection (with baked beans 80p extra).

  • ‘Maids’ sausage roll / Vegan Sausage Roll £2.80
  • ‘Kew’ (beef and vegetable) pasty / Minced steak patty / Vegetarian pasties £3.80

A range of colourful salads with tongs ready to dish them out.

Salad bar

See our counter for today’s selection (Tuesday to Friday).

  • Small bowl salad £5.50
  • Large plate salad £6.50
  • Special salad box of the day £5
  • Individual portions:
    • Mixed leaf / Cucumber and tomato £1 per item
    • Coleslaw / Pesto pasta salad / Roasted new potato / Roasted vegetable £1.75 per item
  • Vegetable quiche / Smoked mackerel £4
  • Roasted salmon fillet £4.50
  • Piece of fruit 70p

Several individual cakes covered in fruit and cream.

Cakes, biscuits and treats

See our counter for today’s selection (from £2.50).

  • Anzac biscuits (large) / Chocolate cookie (large) £2
  • Chocolate brownie £2.75
  • Branded chocolate bars £1.20
  • Tunnock’s Caramel Wafer / Tea cakes / KitKat / Crisps 80p

Ice creams

  • Purbeck Ice Cream 125ml: Vanilla Bean / Serious Chocolate / Strawberry / Salted Caramel / Mint Chocolate Chip / Raspberry Sorbet (Vegan) £2.50
  • Magnum Classic 110ml £2.50
  • Little Jude’s Fruit and Veg Rocket Lolly £2

Drinks menu

A coffee cup sat on a Maids of Honour napkin.

Hot drinks

In our ‘green’ bio cups or your own.

  • ‘Refill’ tea or filter coffee £1.75
  • Tea or Filter coffee (‘green’ bio cup) £2
  • Espresso £2
  • Latte / Cappuccino / Americano / Flat white £3
  • Mocha £3.75
  • Hot chocolate £3.50
  • Drink syrups shot: Caramel / Vanilla / Hazelnut 50p
  • Non-dairy milk in tea or coffee: Oat / Almond / Coconut / Soya 50p

Cold drinks

  • Fentimans: Lemonade / Elderflower / Ginger beer 330ml £2.50
  • Coca Cola / Diet Coca Cola / 7-Up can 330ml £1.50
  • Still or sparkling water 330ml £1.75
  • Fruit juice carton: Orange / Apple / Pineapple 200ml £1.50
  • Cold milk £1.50

Smoothies

  • Coco Loco – Mango, pineapple, coconut, lime and mint 350ml £4.75
  • Pash N Shoot – Mango, pineapple and seedless passionfruit 350ml £4.75
  • Strawberry Split – Strawberry and banana 350ml £4.75
  • Berry Go Round – Raspberry, blackberry and strawberry 350ml £4.75
  • Blueberry Thrill – Raspberry, blueberry, banana and flaxseeds 350ml £4.75
  • Big 5 – Pineapple, mango, kiwi and strawberry 350ml £4.75

Milkshakes

  • Strawberry / Banana / Chocolate / Vanilla 350ml £4.75

White wine

  • Sauvignon Blac Duc de Chapelle, France:
    Aromatic with a zesty lemon lime character. Exotic gooseberry and grapefruit flavours develop on a well-balanced palate ending with fresh rounded acidity.

    • 750ml bottle £16
    • 250ml glass £6
  • Pinot Grigio San Antonio Veneto, Italy:
    Clean, well balanced dry white with a delicate bouquet and fresh appley fruit.

    • 750ml bottle £19
    • 250ml glass £7
  • Chardonay La Vigneau, France:
    A lovely creamy texture with aromas of citrus peel, vanilla, tangerine and honey. The palate is fresh with melon, apple and honey flavours.

    • 750ml bottle £21
    • 250ml glass £8
  • Macon Blanc Villages Caves de Lugny, France:
    This un-oaked Burgundy, from the limestone slopes of southern Burgundy, is ripe and complex with nutty flavours and buttery palate.

    • 750ml bottle £27

Also available in 125ml on request.

Red wine

  • Merlot La Vigneau, France:
    It has a nose of ripe berry fruit and hints of leather and mineral. There is a complex, supple palate with herbs, violets and blackberry fruit.

    • 750ml bottle £20
    • 250ml glass £7.50
  • Rioja Tunante Tempranillo, De Azabache Bodegas Aldeanueva, Spain:
    A vibrant, unoaked and supple red. Plummy, soft and seductive exhibiting typical Tempranillo character of red fruits and liquorice and finishes soft and round.

    • 750ml bottle £26
    • 250ml glass £10
  • ES Vino Malbec, Finca Sophenia Mendoza, Argentina:
    Aromas cherries, blackberries blueberries and plums combined with spicy and floral hints.

    • 750ml bottle £21
    • 250ml glass £8
  • Cotes Du Rhone, Domaine de l ’Amandine, France:
    Spicy, smoky aromas of the Syrah dominate the bouquet, whilst red fruits and spice compete on the palate.

    • 750ml bottle £25

Also available in 125ml on request.

Prosecco

  • Tiamo Prosecco, D.O.C, Italy:
    Clean fruity aromatic bouquet contains hints of flowers, honey and apple leading to a well-balanced, light and fresh palate.

    • 200ml bottle £10

Beers

  • Fuller’s London Pride, Chiswick 500ml bottle £5
  • Beck’s Lager 275ml bottle £4

In the final week of November each year we hold Catalogue Week, a celebration of projects and initiatives currently taking place at The National Archives.

You can explore all of this year’s Catalogue Week content in the range of blogs and presentations below.

 

View of various small images of documents

The National Archives in collaboration with Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg has launched online thousands of papers from captured Spanish ships which were all taken by the British between 1739 – 1748.

The historic practice of capturing enemy ships during wartime has resulted in a unique collection at The National Archives. Between 1652 and 1815, British privateers and naval vessels captured roughly 35,000 ships, from which they seized hundreds of thousands of papers that survive to this day as the Prize Papers – a “prize” being a captured ship.

Prof. Dr. Dagmar Freist, director, prize papers project Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg / Germany said:

‘I am very happy that our collaborative Prize Papers Project between Oldenburg University in Germany, the German Historical Institute in London, and The National Archives UK is now launching its third case study, this time focusing on Spanish Ships. With these case studies we put online and contextualize amazing records which provide a so far unknown everyday live perspective on colonialism and globalization. The rich documents from Spanish ships displayed here are just the first to be presented with many more to follow as the project proceeds.’

Dr Amanda Bevan, Head of Legal Records at The National Archives said :

‘The papers taken from these 130 captured Spanish ships represent a small fraction of the Spanish prize papers still awaiting discovery at the National Archives. As we now work through the papers of the American Revolutionary War, we know we will find many more – ranging from many letters from Peru or Cuba to smaller numbers of papers on ships trading in Europe. It is a really exciting project which will have a profound impact on how Spanish people at home or overseas in the 18th century can be seen and heard anew.’

These records are all unknown to researchers and provide insights into everyday life in Spain as well as detailing the political and military conflicts of the period.

To find out more about the project please visit the Prize Papers Portal: https://portal.prizepapers.de

For more information about the Spanish papers, please visit htps://www.prizepapers.de/case-studies/case-study-spanish-ships

Following a recent Archive Service Accreditation Panel, we are pleased to announce that the following archive services have been awarded accreditation for the first time:

  • Archaeology Data Service
  • Britten Pears Arts
  • The Camping and Caravanning Club Archive
  • Oxford University: Lincoln College Archive
  • Oxford University: New College Archive
  • University of Exeter Special Collections

Archive Service Accreditation is the UK-wide standard for archive services. By attaining accreditation, archive services demonstrate that they meet the standard for collections management and access to collections, showing resilience and the ability to manage changing circumstances successfully.

All accredited archive services must apply again for accreditation six years after their initial award to retain their accredited status. By achieving accreditation for a second time these archive services have demonstrated a commitment to continuing development of their service and the effective management of change.

At the same panel the following archive services were awarded accreditation for the second time:

  • Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies
  • National Monuments Record of Wales
  • Orkney Archive
  • Royal College of Nursing Library and Archive Service
  • Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
  • The Keep
  • Thomas H Manning and Scott Polar Research Institute Picture Library
  • University of Reading Special Collections

Archive Service Accreditation is supported by a partnership of the Archives and Records Association (UK), Archives and Records Council Wales, National Records of Scotland, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, Scottish Council on Archives, The National Archives, and the Welsh Government through its Museums, Archives and Libraries Wales division.

View the full list of accredited archive services

Find out more about Archive Service Accreditation

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