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The Cheshire Record Office is the county record office and diocesan record office for Cheshire. It houses the Cheshire Archives and Local Studies Service (formerly Cheshire and Chester Archives and Local Studies Service). Since 1986 it has been based in Duke Street, Chester.
There are often overlaps between local studies and record office collections, particularly with respect to printed ephemera, maps, photographs, old newspapers and local reference books. A number of record offices now operate in a formal association with one or more of their county’s principal local studies libraries, although the two ...
The archives are held at County Buildings, on Regent Street, Wrexham, and run by Wrexham County Borough Council as part of its Wrexham Archives and Local Studies Service. [1] [2] The centre was initially named after local Wrexham historian Alfred Neobard Palmer. [3] The building is shared with Wrexham County Borough Museum and the archives ...
Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies; Historic England Archive, Swindon; Hull City Archives; Hull History Centre: Hull City Archives, Hull University Archives and Local Studies Library; Hyman Archive, London; Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust Archives; India Office Records at The British Library; Islington Local History Centre, London
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Cheshire and Chester Archives and Local Studies Service
Publication started with Lancashire and Cheshire Church Surveys 1649–1655, edited by Henry Fishwick (1879). [5] Earwaker soon gained permission to publish lists of wills that had been proved in Chester, which was "hailed as a coup"; G. E. Cokayne, Lancaster Herald, wrote to congratulate Earwaker, stating that "I do not think there is any work that has been at any time, or that could be now ...
The Bunbury Agreement was agreed locally, [41] but the strategic position of Cheshire and the port of Chester meant that national commanders could never accept the local neutrality and the forces ended up clashing in the First Battle of Middlewich in March 1643. The county saw many battles fought on its lands — notably, the sieges of Nantwich ...
The collection of his letters "1887–1908: letters to John Brownbill and other correspondence" is held by Manchester Archives and Local Studies. [1] His letter to Edward Arber is in the University of Birmingham: Cadbury Research Library: Special Collections. [2]