A Wartime Christmas in the Petworth Countryside

By Victoria Evans, Searchroom Archivist In the 1940s two sisters, Amy and Nellie Scaddan, evacuated to the safety of the Petworth countryside from Portsmouth. Although it was more commonplace for children to be evacuated, these sisters were most likely in their 40s during this time and also wanted to take refuge somewhere that would not…

Giant red ribbons, AIDS quilt and a marathon dance-off: The history of World AIDS Day in West Sussex

By Chris Olver, Project Archivist The 1st of December is World AIDS Day, the international day dedicated to raising awareness of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. This year marks the 36th World AIDS Day since it was launched by the World Health Organisation in 1988. To commemorate this year’s World AIDS Day, our Project Archivist, Chris Olver,…

West Sussex Polymath: Edmond Martin Venables 1901-1990

By Catherine Tite, Volunteer Over the course of 2023, many volunteers devote their time to listing and cataloguing the collections of West Sussex Record Office (WSRO). Catherine, a regular volunteer, recently completed a project to do this with the papers, notes and photographs of former Bognor Regis and Barnham resident Edmond Martin Venables. An amateur…

Tuesday Talk: Chichester in Colour 1973

By Alan Green - Guest Speaker In this talk local historian and author Alan Green will, with the aid of Stella Palmer’s slides and some others, take you on a tour of the city as it was fifty years ago; a city preparing for pedestrianisation but still ruled by the motor car. You will see…

New ways of seeing: independent HIV and AIDS web-based archives

By Chris Olver, Project Archivist In this post, our project archivist documenting HIV and AIDS archives in the UK gives a short tour of some of the online HIV/AIDS archives in the UK. This is second blog in a series and the first part can be found here. In the course of my work so…

Murder, They Wrote…in the register of baptisms

Please note that this blog post contains some graphic descriptions of injury. By Victoria Evans, Searchroom Archivist Working in an archive allows you the opportunity to stumble upon unexpected pieces of history and how it was recorded. As we answer enquiries on all manner of subjects it is sometimes too easy to fall down a…

Tuesday Talk: The Women’s Land Army – a Sussex connection

Ian Everest - Guest Speaker Some forty years ago Ian Everest started out on the journey of researching his family history and just like many others who embark on the same path, his life has never been the same since! It brought about change of career into an occupation which was directly related to his…

Cataloguing Crawley New Town: An Industrial Haven

Manor Royal is a distinctive district of Crawley. It was earmarked early in the New Town's planning stage as the perfect area to contain the town's industrial pursuits. From its opening in the early 1950s, it has been home to factories, big and small, large warehouses, and offices. However, where once the district was a…

Tuesday Talk: The Victorian and Edwardian leisure estate in the Sussex Weald c.1850-1914

By Dr Sue Berry FSA, FRHistS - guest speaker Gravetye Manor, GM, the estate of William Robinson who made his money from writing about gardens, and shaped public taste. This talk is about the small country leisure house estates established in the Weald of Sussex between about 1840 - 1914 (during the reigns of Queen…

‘Who’s that girl?’ The anonymous diary of a 1920s flapper (part 2)

By Nichola Court, Archivist Extract from the anonymous Flapper's diary, noting her journey down to Chichester and various activities in the area (ref AM 75/1) Last week's blog explored the story behind an 'anonymous "flapper's" diary', bought by WSRO at auction in 2008 and later catalogued as AM 75/1. Thanks to the meticulous research carried…