Catalogue description British Museum (Natural History): Unofficial Archives: Papers of Lord Macmillan (1873-1952), Trustee

This record is held by Natural History Museum Library and Archives

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Details of DF 5008
Reference: DF 5008
Title: British Museum (Natural History): Unofficial Archives: Papers of Lord Macmillan (1873-1952), Trustee
Description:

The papers that make up this series consist of correspondence, memoranda and reports relating to the Trustees and their work. DF 5008/1 and DF 5008/2 are concerned with the committee on accommodation that Macmillan chaired in 1935 and which reported to the Trustees in 1936, while later files relate to such matters as the Trustees response to the critical memorial by J Graham Kerr, MP, (1945-1946), C Forster Cooper's memorandum on the future development of the Museum (1943) and the crisis over the choice of his successor as Director (1946).

Series held at The Natural History Museum are catalogued more fully in its online catalogue (reference DF TRU/911/1). Online descriptions of some individual records can also be viewed on Discovery, see DF 5008.

Date: 1936-1947
Held by: Natural History Museum Library and Archives, not available at The National Archives
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator:

Hugh Pattison Macmillan, 1st Baron Macmillan, 1873-1952

Physical description: 8 file(s)
Access conditions: Subject to 30 year closure unless otherwise stated
Custodial history: The series was transferred to the Library from the Directorate in 1970.
Administrative / biographical background:

Hugh Pattison Macmillan (1873-1952), Baron Macmillan, trained in law, and practiced as an advocate in Edinburgh from 1897, taking silk in 1912. He was appointed Lord Advocate to the Labour Government in 1924, and was made a lord of appeal in ordinary with a life peerage in 1930. Lord Macmillan sat in the House of Lords as a lord of appeal until his resignation in 1947. He sat on numerous committees and commissions throughout his career, and was chairman of, for example, the Royal Commission on Lunacy (1924-1926), the Political Honours Committee (1935), the Pilgrim Trust (1935-1952), and the Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children (1928-1934). Lord Macmillan was an Elected Trustee of the British Museum and member of the Standing Committee of Trustees from 1933 until 1949.

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