Catalogue description Records of the Public Morality Council

This record is held by The London Archives: City of London

Details of A/PMC
Reference: A/PMC
Title: Records of the Public Morality Council
Description:

Summary of Contents

 

Constitution

 

Minutes - Council

 

Executive Committee

 

Finance and General Purposes Sub-Committee

 

Parliamentary, Patrol and Propaganda Sub-Committee

 

Stage Plays, Radio and T.V. Sub-Committee

 

Cinema Sub-Committee

 

Papers - Council

 

Executive Committee

 

Finance and General Purposes Sub-Committee

 

Parliamentary, Patrol and Propaganda Sub-Committee

 

Patrolling Officer's Reports

 

Stage Plays, Radio and T.V. Sub-Committee

 

Cinema Sub-Committee

 

Hygiene Sub-Committee

 

Wartime Committee

 

Related Files

 

Membership of Council and Committees

 

Annual Reports

 

Annual Public Meetings

 

Hyde Park Meetings

 

Conferences and Talks

 

Administration and General Correspondence

 

Accounts

 

Links with Other Societies

 

P.M.C. Publications

 

Magazines, Films and Other Publications

Date: 1899 - 1967
Arrangement:

Records

 

Scarcely any of the early records survive, the earliest useful series being the annual reports, 1901-1913, 1932-1954. Minutes of the Council and its Sub-committees cover 1940-1965.

 

The files have been placed in categories according to administrative use and subject but the majority of them contain a certain amount of miscellaneous material.

Held by: The London Archives: City of London, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Public Morality Council

London Council for the Promotion of Public Morality

Physical description: 216 files
Immediate source of acquisition:

Deposited in the Greater London Record Office, 17 and 23 April 1970 (Ac. 70.31 & 70.36)

Administrative / biographical background:

Introductory note

 

The London Council for the Promotion of Public Morality, later the Public Morality Council, was formed in 1899 to combat vice and indecency in London and to assist in their repression by legal means, already existing but neglected. Its members included representatives of the Church of England, Roman Catholic and Non-conformist churches and of the Jewish faith, leaders in education, medicine and charitable associations and others supporting reform. It continued until 1969, concentrating latterly on opposition to sexual immorality and pornography in general and in the theatre, cinema, radio and television. Its functions were taken over by the Social Morality Council, constituted in 1969.

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