Catalogue description Home Office: Charters: Drafts and Related Papers

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Details of HO 72
Reference: HO 72
Title: Home Office: Charters: Drafts and Related Papers
Description:

The documents in this series relate to petitions addressed to the Home Secretary, for royal charters of incorporation unless otherwise mentioned. The petitions came from societies, companies, boroughs, hospitals, charities and educational establishments.

The series appears to be the product of a nineteenth century sorting exercise, as does HO 80. Documents in both series bear coloured or graphite pencil dates (some erroneous) in a later hand than that of the documents. These series may have been formed as part of the general sorting of papers when the Home Office central registry system was set up in 1848.

The arrangement of papers within each case reflects the administrative process. Petitions sent to the Secretary of State were referred by him for the law officers' opinion. Successful applications were then taken to the Privy Council for formal approval by Order in Council, occasionally with royal sign manual. These documents each have a standard form.

Petitions give names of petitioners, and state the reasons for the benefits sought. Those of boroughs are often on parchment, some bearing seals. Petitioners often enclosed draft charters, couched in their preferred form of words. Petitions and draft charters were rarely dated by their senders; in these cases the date given in the class list is that of annotation by the Secretary of State on forwarding to the law officers.

English and Welsh petitions were sent to the Attorney General and Solicitor General, while Scottish petitions went to the Lord Advocate of Scotland. Their reports begin 'In obedience to the Commands … signified to us by the Right Honourable [Home Secretary] …'. They recite the petition in full, and end with a recommendation as to whether the charter should be granted. Reports are signed and dated, as are annotations made on the draft charter. Where the law officers recommended a petition be granted, as they did in the majority of cases in this class, they often drew up draft warrants for Orders in Council, giving their preferred text for the charter. Where they objected to a petition being granted, there is no draft warrant and usually no further papers, unless a new petition was made.

Orders in Council record the decision to grant a charter, and provide what is usually the final text for the charter. They sometimes give background information on the case, such as reasons for objections to the charter being over-ruled. In two cases the Orders bear the sovereign's sign manual.

In some cases there is correspondence, generally where there was objection to the petition. There are also some lists of borough officials among the papers for town charters, where elections were held while the charter was being processed, since the names were to be included in the charter.

Few cases contain all of these types of document: in nearly half of cases there is only one type. It is still possible to elicit a great deal of information, because of the way that successive papers repeat the details of earlier ones.

Date: 1816-1838
Arrangement:

The documents were re-sorted and listed in 1997, having been listed in brief on reaching the Public Record Office in 1914. The arrangement into three pieces by date range has been retained, but whereas the papers had been in no apparent order within each piece, those relating to each petition are now placed together into cases. The cases are arranged chronologically, by date of earliest paper. Where the dating is not certain, the case is put at the end of those for the year to which it is tentatively ascribed. The overall dates for the series remain the same, but the covering dates for the pieces have altered slightly. The dates for the first piece have been extended by two years, and that for the second piece by one year. The dates of the third piece remain the same.

Readers who used the series in its previous arrangement will find that papers largely remain in the same pieces, except for a few papers from pieces two and three, which have been placed with related papers in the preceding piece.

Related material:

Earlier papers can be found in: HO 42

Later papers can be found in: HO 45

Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Physical description: 3 bundle(s)
Access conditions: Subject to 30 year closure

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