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Archival description
King’s College London Archives Series
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Working Men's College, education and social reform, 1854-1912

The Working Men's College was founded in 1854 by social reformers John Frederick Denison Maurice, John Malcolm Ludlow, Charles Kingsley, Frederick Furnivall and others to promote regular and organised education amongst working class men (women's classes began in 1856). The classes were not intended to be a series of miscellaneous lectures as taught at the Mechanics Institutes, but structured courses comparable to those run by larger established universities such as University College London and King's College London. The college is still extant, and is now situated in Crowndale Road, North London.

TITLE DEEDS: Queen Elizabeth College

  • QA/T
  • Series
  • 1911-1985

Queen Elizabeth College title deeds and other legal documents, 1911-1985 (QA/T), comprise endowment trust deeds, 1911-1960; licences for building work, building contracts and leases relating to College property, 1913-1946; official documents relating to the negotiations leading to the 1985 merger of Queen Elizabeth with King's College, 1983; register of the sealing of documents, 1953-1985

Queen Elizabeth College, 1953-1985

TITLE DEEDS: King's College London legal records

  • KA/T
  • Series
  • 1678-1969

This series contains title deeds relating to College property, mainly the original building in the Strand and extensions in Strand Lane and Surrey Street, Drury Lane, King's College School in Wimbledon, and other College property including the Hospital, laboratories in Hampstead and sports grounds, comprising assignments of lease, schedules of deeds and conveyances, 1678-1969.

King's College London, 1829-

Special Hospitals Service Authority (SHSA) study

The Schedule was developed in the early 1990s by a project at the Department of Forensic Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, London. It was funded by the John D and Catherine T, MacArthur Foundation. The project is sometimes known as the MacArthur-Maudsley Delusions Assessment Schedule.

Scientific correspondence with academic colleagues, 1956-1972

Principal correspondents have their own file(s). Shorter correspondence, with more than one individual, is grouped in folders bearing only the names of the first and last correspondents in that file. All correspondents are listed in the general index on pp.24-25.. When Hanson or her principal colleagues were abroad on conferences, or visiting fellow-scientists and their laboratories, they exchanged frequent and extensive letters. A detailed picture can thus be formed of her own research and general progress in the field, and also of the scientists involved both in her department and elsewhere. Some scientific correspondence is also included in Sections D and G.

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