Catalogue description Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts: Evershed Papers
Reference: | HMC 3 |
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Title: | Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts: Evershed Papers |
Description: |
Papers of Francis Raymond, 1st Baron Evershed, as chairman of the Historical Manuscripts Commission, 1937 to 1960 (including some papers of his predecessor as chairman, Lord Greene); as chairman of the Central Price Regulation Committee, 1940 to 1942; as Ministry of Fuel and Power Regional Controller for the North Midland Region, 1943 to 1945; as chairman of the Committee of Inquiry of Textile Machinery, 1944 to 1947; as chairman of the Committee of Investigation into Wages in the Port Transport Industry, 1938 to 1945; as chairman of a Court of Inquiry into a Dispute in London Docks, 1954 to 1955; and papers relating to his report on the Internal Organisation of Naval Aviation, 1944 to 1945. |
Date: | 1937-1960 |
Related material: |
For papers of the Central Price Regulation Committee see BT 94 |
Held by: | The National Archives, Kew |
Legal status: | Public Record(s) |
Language: | English |
Physical description: | 30 file(s) |
Access conditions: | Subject to 30 year closure |
Custodial history: | These papers were removed from Lord Evershed's rooms at the Law Courts in 1962 and given to the Historical Manuscripts Commission by Lord Evershed's clerk. |
Administrative / biographical background: |
Francis Raymond Evershed, created 1st Baron Evershed of Stapenhill in 1956, was born 8th August 1899. He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1923, and was a Judge (Chancery Division) and High Court Justice from 1944-1947. He became a Privy Councillor in 1947. He was a Lord Justice of Appeal from 1947 until 1949, when he became Master of the Rolls and both a member and Chairman of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts. On his appointment as a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary in 1962, he ceased to be Master of the Rolls and Chairman of the Commission but continued as a member of the Commission until his death on 3rd October, 1966. He was a United Kingdom member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Hague from 1950 onwards. In 1953 he was made Freeman of the City of London. |
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