Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T02:54:51.940Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Africa in the Public Records

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

Mandy Banton*
Affiliation:
Public Record Office, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU
Get access

Extract

To attempt a discussion of ‘sources for African history in the Public Record Office’ immediately raises the question, ‘are there such sources?’. Or are there only sources for the history of the British encounter with Africa, or, indeed, as some would claim, the English encounter with Africa?

The editor and compilers of the 1971 Guide to manuscripts and documents in the British Isles relating to Africa may have such questions in mind when they chose to use the title ‘documents relating to Africa’ rather than perhaps, ‘sources for the history of Africa’. In this volume you will find, in the section devoted to the Public Record Office, twenty-two closely printed pages listing in the region of one thousand record classes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Research & Documentation 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Matthews, and Wainwright, M.D., Guide to manuscripts and documents in the British Isles relating to Africa. Revised and updated by J D Pearson in 1993.Google Scholar
Basil, Davidson, Africa: history of a continent (1978).Google Scholar
Jenkinson, Hilary, ‘The Records of the English African Companies’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, Third Series, Vol. VI.Google Scholar
CO 323/1844/4,1941, Colonial Office Records: requests for access to.Google Scholar
R. Coupland, The exploitation of East Africa 1836-1890 (1939)Google Scholar
BW 90/1226, History: correspondence; recommendations and papers of the Conference on African History, July 1953.Google Scholar
In, Carolyn Keyes Adenaike and Jan, Vansina (eds.) In pursuit of history: fieldwork in Africa (1996).Google Scholar
CO 981/28, student file, K.O. Dike.Google Scholar
Roland, Oliver, The African experience (1991).Google Scholar
Anne, Thurston, Records of the Colonial Office …, p. 62.Google Scholar
For example, PRO handbooks No. 13, The records of the Foreign Office 1782-1939 (HMSO, 1969); PRO handbooks No.17, The Cabinet Office to 1945 (HMSO, 1975); Louise Atherton, Never Complain, never explain: records of the Foreign Office and State Paper Office 1500-C.1960 (PRO publications, 1994); Roper, Michael, The records of the War Office and related departments, 1660-1964 (PRO publications, 1998).Google Scholar
T 70/50, letter to Agent John Booker, somewhere on the West African coast, from the company in London, 20 October 1692.Google Scholar
UT 70/1467, Gregory, Edward to the president of the council of the company, at the time of a ‘Palaver’ at the Fortress of Dixcove, April 1750.Google Scholar
WO 1/856, pp. 481-93, Niger River expedition under John Peddie.Google Scholar
FO 97/433, Niger Expedition, William Balfour Baikie, 2 January 1861.Google Scholar
FO 97/433, ibid.Google Scholar
WO 32/7638, Wolseley to secretary of state for war, 4 November 1873.Google Scholar
WO 32/7639, Wolseley to secretary of state for war, 15 December 1873.Google Scholar
WO 32/7641, Wolseley to secretary of state for war, 13 February 1874.Google Scholar
CO 967/1, ‘Statement of Facts relative to the proposed Cession to France of the British Settlement on the River Gambia …’Google Scholar
WO 32/7647, Ashanti Expedition 1895-6.Google Scholar
WO 32/7623, Emir of Ilorin, 29 February 1897.Google Scholar
Extract from letter of African Christians, dated Lokoja, 28/2/97, and presented by a deputation on 1/3/1897.Google Scholar
FO 881/657, David Livingstone to the Earl of Clarendon, 19 March 1856.Google Scholar
FO 629/12, Casement: copy of entries in a memorandum book begun at Boma on 28 June 1902, no.13, 8 July.Google Scholar
FO 881/8692 Mr Basil S.Cave, Zanzibar, to Marquess of Lansdowne, 11 August 1905.Google Scholar
ADM 1/6242,1872, In-letters: Colonial Office.Google Scholar
ADM 127/39, Lt. Commdr Henry J. Keane to the Senior Naval Officer, Zanzibar, 22 December 1890.Google Scholar
ADM 123/121, Expedition against Pirates on River Congo 1875 subsequent to attack on British schooner Geraldine enclosure 11.Google Scholar
Ibid, enclosure 14.Google Scholar
Ibid, enclosure 36.Google Scholar
Ibid, Report of proceedings of landing party engaged against the Congo Pirates, under the command of Captain R. Bradshaw, HMS Encounter, 3 September 1875.Google Scholar
Penfold, P.A. (ed.) Maps and plans in the Public Record Office; vol. 3. Africa (HMSO, 1982).Google Scholar
ADM 123/25, Mr J.Thomas to Rear Admiral Sir J.W Grey, CinC, Cape of Good Hope.Google Scholar
See PRO Source Sheet 31, ‘South African Boer War 1899-1902.Google Scholar
WO 32/8008, Major George Alfred Goodwin, General Superintendent, to Major General Maxwell, Military Governor, Pretoria.Google Scholar
WO 106/1460, Diary of Dr Schnee, Governor of German East Africa.Google Scholar
See Atherton, Louise, Special Operations Executive: operations in Africa and the Middle East (PRO,1994).Google Scholar
HS 3/81,1942, Angola: use of political groups.Google Scholar
BW 90/1384, 1972 Aug.-Nov. Makerere University and the present Uganda situation.Google Scholar
BW 90/227 Dr W.D. Lamont, principal of Makerere College, to the Inter-University Council, 30 May 1947.Google Scholar
DO 35/9536, The Ghanaian Worker, Saturday 12 July 1958.Google Scholar
FO 371/174108, US Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Report on Latin America no. 250, December 24th 1964.Google Scholar