- GB 249 RCSLT/9/1/78
- Item
- 2022
Parte de Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists records
Numbers 831 and 832, Bulletin: The Official Magazine of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists.
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Parte de Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists records
Numbers 831 and 832, Bulletin: The Official Magazine of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists.
Parte de Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists records
Number 825 (January 2021), Bulletin: The Official Magazine of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists.
Parte de Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists records
Number 824 (December 2020), Bulletin: The Official Magazine of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists.
News Bulletins, College of Speech Therapists
Parte de Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists records
Series of original News Bulletins of the College of Speech and Language Therapists, 1945-1956 and 1962.
Diagram depicting aspects of society, social and individual life, and their interrelations
Parte de Patrick Geddes papers
Material relating to [ ] v. Cape plc
Parte de Occupational and Environmental Diseases Association (William Ashton Tait) Archives
Legal action relating to the former site of Cape Asbestos factory, Barking
Parte de Occupational and Environmental Diseases Association (William Ashton Tait) Archives
Chemical workers oral history project
Eight interviews conducted by David Walker in pursuit of his doctoral research on ‘Occupational health and safety in the British chemical industry, 1914-1974’ (PhD thesis, University of Strathclyde, 2007: http://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/6429).
The oral history project was designed to capture the human experience of working within the British chemical industry. The desired outcome was to find respondents with a range of job descriptions that had worked in different types of plant. Although comparatively small, the cohort interviewed represents a good coverage of the industry in that the plastic, chromate, explosive and fertiliser sectors are all represented.
In total, nine respondents were interviewed with one, Richard Fitzpatrick, being interviewed twice (Mr Fitzpatrick was 87 years old at the time and grew visibly tired during the first interview). Three respondents from Cheshire (who were related to one another) were interviewed as a group. Normally interviews were conducted on a one-to-one basis in the homes of the respondents although wives and other family members were also present in all cases, with the exception of one of the anonymous respondents from Dumfries who was alone.
The average age of those interviewed was 71, with birth dates ranging from 1917 to 1945. The employment histories of the respondents ranged from the late 1930s to the late 1970s.
All those interviewed were asked standard questions at the outset such as the respondent’s name, date of birth, where they were born, if they had brothers or sisters, if they had children, at what age did they leave school and what was their first job. Thereafter, in a relatively unstructured manner questions were asked of the respondents about the experiences they had in connection with the chemical industry.
With the exception of one former manager of a chemical plant all the respondents had worked as process workers or were related to family members who also worked as process workers. Why no former directors or technologists came forward to participate in this study cannot be explained by reference to the design of the recruitment material. One reason that may explain the general problem in recruiting respondents was made by two former process workers from Dumfries who admitted that their former colleagues had seen the recruitment article published in the local press but had refused to make contact because they were fearful that Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) would stop their pension if they talked to an outsider. Although ICI would not take such a step it is nonetheless interesting that former employees of the firm offered this as the reason for not sharing their memories.
Walker, David, b. 1956, historian
Parte de Spain: Unidentified
Anon.
'Map of the Island of Bombay constructed on reduction from Colonel Laughton's Map of 1872. With alterations principally as regards new roads up to 1897'.
'Constructed and Photozincographed. Gov[ernmen]t. Photozinco: Office, Poona, 1904'.
Anon.
Scale: 1 inch to 1200 feet
'Professor Geddes, Town Hall' endorsed on the reverse, no longer visible due to new backing.
'Malabar District Palghat Town Ward No 4 Topographical Map'
'Phot-Print Survey Office, Madras.'
Anon.
Scale: 20 inches to 1 mile
'Palghat Town' in manuscript in crayon in top margin.
'Palighat' in manuscript in pencil in bottom margin.
Map III, showing division of city of Madras into areas according to occupations
Anon. [Henry Vaughan Lanchester]
Scale: 2 inches to 3 furlongs