Title
Folder of correspondence relating to building schemes and plans for the Science Museum
Reference
CORP/SCM/Z/188/13
Production date
1909 - 1912
Creator
- Board of EducationBiographyBiography
The Board of Education was created by Act of 1899, taking on the education responsibilities of the Committee of the Privy Council on Education and the Education Department. The main responsibilities of the board, although extended by the Education Acts of 1902, 1918 and 1921, included inspection of poor law schools (1904), powers relating to public libraries (1919) and all duties relating to local authority youth employment services and juvenile employment committees (1927). The board was also given certain powers over private schools, most importantly the power of inspection for the granting of efficiency certificates. The board was replaced by the Ministry of Education under the 1944 Education Act.
Scope and Content
Board of Education, Whitehall case file - Name of case is handwritten "Office of Works". File contains correspondence to and from F. G. Ogilvie, dated 1910-1912. Letters relate primarily to the development of the building scheme and outline plans for the Science Museum. Also included are handwritten meeting notes. Documents are bound with a treasury tag. Loose at the back are several pages dating from 1909 and 1910.
Some of the correspondence relates to a proposal that the Science Museum consider providing temporary accommodation for a National Museum of Safety and Health Appliances. Visits were made to two German museums on the "Protection and Welfare of Workmen".
Extent
1 folder
Language
English
Level of description
FILE
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Science Museum, LondonBiographyBiography
The Science Museum, London has it has its origins in the Great Exhibition of 1851, held in Hyde Park in the huge glass building known as the Crystal Palace. In 1857, South Kensington Museum opened on the site of what is now Victoria and Albert Museum. In 1862 the Science collections move to separate buildings on Exhibition Road and in the 1880s a Science library is established, with a Science Collections director appointed in 1893.
In 1909, when the new buildings were opened, the title was confined to the Art Collections. The Science and Engineering Collections were finally separated administratively and the name 'Science Museum', in informal use since 1885, was officially adopted. It was on June 26th that year that the institutional reorganisation into two independent institutions was ratified and the title "Science Museum" was officially bestowed.
A change in the underlying philosophy of the Science Museum can be said to date from about 1960. The emphasis began to shift from technical education informed by historical exposition, to a more broadly-based policy of preservation of historical artefacts placed in their historical and social context.
The history of the Science Museum over the last 150 years has been one of continual change. The exhibition galleries are never static for long, as they have to reflect and comment on the increasing pace of change in science, technology,
industry and medicine. Even if this sometimes means the removal of some wellloved objects to store, we can be certain that some of their modern replacements will become cherished in turn.
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions