Catalogue description Department of Trade and Industry and Successors: Laboratory of the Government Chemist: Registered Files (LGC, TA, LAD Series)
Reference: | PJ 10 |
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Title: | Department of Trade and Industry and Successors: Laboratory of the Government Chemist: Registered Files (LGC, TA, LAD Series) |
Description: |
This series contains records of the Laboratory of the Government Chemist, an executive agency within the DTI, relating to its terms of reference, strategy and future. |
Date: | 1964-1996 |
Related material: |
See also DSIR 26 |
Held by: | The National Archives, Kew |
Former reference in its original department: | LGC, TA, LAD series |
Legal status: | Public Record(s) |
Language: | English |
Creator: |
Department for Scientific and Industrial Research, Laboratory of the Government Chemist, 1959-1965 Department for Trade and Industry, Laboratory of the Government Chemist, 1970-1974 Department of Industry, Laboratory of the Government Chemist, 1974-1983 Department of Trade and Industry, Laboratory of the Government Chemist, 1983-1996 Ministry of Technology, Laboratory of the Government Chemist, 1965-1970 |
Physical description: | 17 file(s) |
Access conditions: | Open unless otherwise stated |
Immediate source of acquisition: |
From 2013 Department for Business, Innovation and Skills |
Selection and destruction information: | 3.1.4 Regulation and support of economic activity by government, including industry, services, agriculture, transport, energy, trade, and employment and productivity. |
Accruals: | This series is not accruing. |
Administrative / biographical background: |
The post of government chemist was created, responsible to the chancellor of the Exchequer as minister, and the laboratory was constituted as a separate Government Chemist's Department under the Treasury, though it was still frequently referred to as the Government Laboratory. The government chemist acquired statutory functions as an analyst or as a referee in cases of disputed analysis under such legislation as the Food and Drugs Acts and acts concerned with the use of chemically dangerous materials at work. Its headquarters were in central London, but it also maintained either a branch laboratory or a chemical station in a number of major ports. The laboratory ceased to be a separate department in July 1959 when, following the recommendations of a committee under Sir Patrick Linstead, it was transferred to the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research as the Laboratory of the Government Chemist. It later passed under the control of the Ministry of Technology in 1965, of the Department of Trade and Industry in 1970, of the Department of Industry in 1974 and the second Department of Trade and Industry in 1983, becoming an executive agency in 1989. The modern laboratory of the Government Chemist provided analytical, investigatory, and advisory services and policy support to government departments, public institutions, local authorities and other organisations. These services were concerned with revenue protection environmental protection, public health and consumer protection. The Laboratory also carried out research and development programmes for government and industry. The Government Chemist continued to hold statutory functions as official referee analyst under various acts of Parliament, and co-ordinated government activity in analytical science. |
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