Catalogue description Ryder-Cheshire Foundation

This record is held by Leonard Cheshire Archive

Details of RCF
Reference: RCF
Title: Ryder-Cheshire Foundation
Description:

This collection contains material from various projects undertaken by the charity. It includes correspondence, project files, newsletters, information leaflets, reports and film scripts. It includes correspondence of the Ryder Cheshire Film Unit and copies of the newsletter of Ryder-Cheshire Australia.

Date: 1958-Ongoing
Related material:

GLC Group Captain Geoffrey Leonard Cheshire

LCF: AV/S Leonard Cheshire Sound

LCF: AV/F Leonard Cheshire Film

Some Ryder-Cheshire films are at the British Film Institute. Their catalogue can be searched by clicking this link http://www.bfi.org.uk/archive-collections/searching-access-collections

Held by: Leonard Cheshire Archive, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

The Ryder-Cheshire Foundation 1959-2010

Ryder-Cheshire Australia

Physical description: 32 boxes
Access conditions:

Reproduction is subject to copyright law and access is subject to the Data Protection Act and other relevant legislation. Access to records less than 30 years old is closed.

Accruals:

Between 1993 and 2004 there were 33 donations of material from the Director of the Ryder-Cheshire foundation. In 2014 there was 1 deposit from an ex employee of Ryder-Cheshire. Future accruals expected

Subjects:
  • Charities
  • Trusts and trustees
  • Humanitarian assistance
Unpublished finding aids:

A box list is available for consultation at the Leonard Cheshire Archive at the discretion of the Archivist.

Administrative / biographical background:

The Ryder Cheshire Foundation was set up in 1959 jointly by Leonard Cheshire and his wife Sue Ryder. It was known then as the Ryder Cheshire Mission for the Relief of Suffering, later as the Ryder Cheshire Mission, then as the Ryder Cheshire Foundation, and finally simply as Ryder Cheshire.
From the outset, the founders intended it as a vehicle for projects which they wished to take on but which fell outside the remit of their two larger Foundations. They intended that the organisation's remit should be wide and flexible, that the administrative structure should remain minimal, and that they should both be able to get as personally involved in projects as they wished. Over time, the organisation's work became concentrated in the developing world and covered a wide variety of areas including rehabilitation, Tuberculosis treatment and eradication, and refugee relief.
Their largest project was their first - Raphael, a settlement in India which offered shelter and opportunities to people with many kinds of support needs. They also developed a successful project in the UK called the Ryder Cheshire Volunteers.Historically, a good deal of the voluntary funding for Ryder Cheshire work came from Australia and New Zealand. Following the deaths of the two founders, the charity's trustees reviewed the organisation's work and decided that it was best concentrated in those areas where they had gained most expertise. By 2004, Ryder Cheshire had become an administrative and grant making vehicle for two successor projects, each registered as separate charities. These are Enrych (previously Ryder-Cheshire Volunteers) and Target Tuberculosis (2003-2015, now closed). The archive material for these two projects is held and catalogued separately at this repository.
This reduced role of Ryder Cheshire finally came to an end in its turn and on 29 April 2009 it ceased to exist.
Ryder-Cheshire Australia was registered as a separate charity in 2012 with the Australian Charities and Not for Profits Commission (ACNC).

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