Winter 2016

Gloucestershire Heritage Hub

Gloucestershire Archives

Who are we?

Gloucestershire Archives is a Gloucestershire County Council service. We also provide an archive service for South Gloucestershire Council. The geographic areas of these councils were once a single county, now known as the historic county of Gloucestershire.

What do we do?

We gather, keep and share historic archive collections relating to Gloucestershire and South Gloucestershire, and local and family history resources relating to Gloucestershire.

The archives are kept at Gloucestershire County Council’s Alvin Street premises in Gloucester and you can use them in our public research room at the same location.

The local and family history resources are spread across Gloucestershire.  The core collection is kept at our main site and area-specific collections are kept at Local and Family History Centres based at libraries in Cheltenham, Cinderford, Cirencester, Stroud, Stow and Tewkesbury. You can use them in the relevant venue.

You can discover more about us at gloucestershire.gov.uk/archives

Part of Gloucestershire Heritage Hub

As the lead founder of the newly launched Gloucestershire Heritage Hub network, initially comprising ‘For the Record’ key stakeholders, Gloucestershire Archives is working hard to develop on-site Heritage Hub facilities.   These will be based at the County Council’s Alvin Street premises, which are already home to the Archives, Gloucestershire Family History Society and Gloucestershire Registration Service. The new on-site Hub will be a place where people with an interest in the documented heritage of Gloucestershire can support each other to gather, keep and share their personal and community archives.

From the architect’s drawing below we can start to imagine the modern and exciting future we are going to have.

The preparations for building works are well underway and most of the ground works exploration is now complete. Specialist site investigators have been making trial pits and bore holes around the main Archives building.  Thankfully, most of the work was outdoors.

But we could not avoid the one hole in the Archives’ visitor coffee lounge! 

These geological investigations are telling us about the engineering and environmental characteristics of the areas we plan to develop or build on.  The ‘For the Record’ project architects are using this information to fine tune decisions about building design, including the sorts of foundations we’re going to need for the Heritage Hub spaces and the three new Archives strong rooms that will be built at the same time. It is a complicated business because the strong rooms need to be built to a particular specification and there is archaeology and proximity to the railway line to consider too.

Whilst all this has been going on, Archives staff have moved hundreds of maps from the strong room that will eventually become part of the Archives’ new research room in the Heritage Hub. We’ve also emptied several other rooms that will be re-modelled during the building work. And we have started to kit out a temporary research room that we will occupy during building works. This will be in the Frith Centre, adjacent to the main Archives building and next to the Family History Centre.

All being well, we hope to begin building work early in the New Year. This is a bit later than expected but we are sure the end result will be worth the wait.

New Community Heritage Development Officer

There is a new face at Gloucestershire Archives: Sally Middleton, the newly appointed Community Heritage Development Officer for Gloucestershire Heritage Hub.

Sally has lived in Gloucestershire for over 20 years, and spent 12 of those years working with the county’s Libraries & Information service, most recently as a Group Manager based in Gloucester. She has also worked for Gloucester City Council as a Neighbourhood Manager, working in local communities.

Sally trained in social and community work, and has worked in community development projects at home and abroad. Last year she helped commission a street art project in Kingsholm to celebrate the Rugby World Cup 2015 and Gloucester’s role as a host city. She has also worked with older people in New York, with homeless people and with disabled people in a variety of settings.

Sally is passionate about: ABCD community development – looking at what is strong, not what is wrong with communities and building on those strengths; reading (especially social history from the Georgian to post-war periods); and contemporary figurative and impressionist art.

She says the most useful piece of advice she has ever been given is that everyone should “treat each day as if it’s an adventure” and intends to do this in her new role. She is very much looking forward to getting to grips with her new job and to working with partners and individuals to make Gloucestershire Heritage Hub a reality.

Sally’s post is being financed by Heritage Lottery Fund.

Sally Middleton, Community Heritage Development Officer

Archives Anniversaries

We’re celebrating two important anniversaries this year: the 80th birthday of record keeping in Gloucestershire; and the 90th anniversary of the Alvin Street building we occupy. The building was originally designed as Kingsholm Council School and formally opened by the mayor of Gloucester 90 years ago on 11 October 1926. You can discover more about it, and our plans for celebrating, in the next article of this newsletter.

 

You can view our Gloucestershire Archives blog here at https://gloucestershirearchives.wordpress.com/

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