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Volunteering with Unlocking Our Sound Heritage
Unlocking Our Sound Heritage is a UK wide project chaired by the British Library to preserve the nation’s sound archives. Supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Unlocking Our Sound Heritage (UOSH) has ten project hubs around the country, working … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, Behind the Scenes, Young People
Tagged Unlocking Our Sound Heritage, UOSH
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'Conscientious and promising nurse' to 'Appeared to lack brain and interest': Comments found in the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital Nurses’ Registers (1900-1928)
Nurses’ Registers can be a useful historical source for those researching their family history or nursing training. They can also provide a fascinating insight into the lives and personalities of the people who worked there. Nurse Training In the early … Continue reading
Conserving the Richard Bright Collection
Dr Richard Bright is a key figure in the history of medicine and intellectual life, famous for his work in nephrology and discovery of Bright’s disease, but also active in other areas, including natural history, geology, anthropology and travel. Bright … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, Behind the Scenes
Tagged Bright's disease, conservation, Dr Bright, Guy's Hospital, medicine, Richard Bright, Science
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Royal Greenwich Observatory
The ‘Unlocking Our Sound Heritage’ Project has received many collections for digitisation since it began. One such collection is the sound archives of the Royal Greenwich Observatory (RGO), currently housed within the Cambridge University Archives. This collection has a vast … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, Snapshots from the Archive
Tagged astronomy, Greenwich, London, observatory, oral history, time keeping, Unlocking Our Sound Heritage, UOSH
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Much Ado About Nothing?
A Letter from Edward Harbord 3rd Baron Suffield, to his sixteen-year-old son starts ‘With an aching heart and a trembling hand, I take up my pen to reply to your note…’ The eleven-page letter written in 1829 and held at … Continue reading
Posted in All Posts, NRO Research Bloggers, Snapshots from the Archive
Tagged 19th century, Gunton, letters, Suffield, Victorians
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William Curtis: an 18th century farmer, debtor and habitual complainer
Corruption always tends to capture our interest- reading the tabloids indicates that- and it is very easy to identify what looks like corruption when we research documents from the past. We tend to forget that in previous centuries different rules … Continue reading
The Angel Inn of King’s Lynn
It sometimes seems strange- though on second thoughts it’s only to be expected- how researching one topic recalls previous ones, with one thread leading to another, then another, until they are all intertwined. While browsing the records at King’s Lynn … Continue reading



