The British Women's Suffrage Movement in 100 Objects: a material history - FORTHCOMING IN JULY
womanandhersphere.com/2026/02/09/t...
The British Women's Suffrage Movement in 100 Objects: a material history - FORTHCOMING IN JULY
womanandhersphere.com/2026/02/09/t...
Students looking at a display of scrapbooks in the Churchill Archives Centre reading room
Part of a display of scrapbooks set up on book rests in Churchill Archives Centre reading room
Conservation tools
It was a delight to share this fabulous display of scrapbooks, curated by our former colleague @cherishwatton.bsky.social, with students from @camhistory.bsky.social studying women in Cambridge. Students spent time turning the pages of the scrapbooks and discussing their contents
#archives #history
Newspaper cartoon showing four women on pavement in various forms of trousered uniform or outfit. Caption reads: βMany war workers have discarded skirts when on duty: now they want to discard them in their hours of ease. Here are some suggested trouser costumes for the unfrocked brigade.β (Weekly Despatch, 3/9/1916, p. 2.)
Newscutting: The only really happy people I have seen are the women in uniform. For the first time in their lives they have been able to face rain without the horror of bedraggled skirts and soppy furbelows. The new experience has obviously been thrilling. I saw eleven land girls in Regent-street. They were booted, breeched, cloaked, and merrily in-different to the rain. Their skirted sisters, huddling in shop doors waiting for the taxi that would not come, gazed at them with undisguised envy. (Daily Express, Beachcomber, 2/8/1917, p. 2.)
I've been reading in the papers about Land Girls during the First World War enjoying the practicality of their uniforms in the British weather (Beachcomber in the Daily Express agreed with them), but there were fears that they would want to wear such clothes all the time.
Cherish in academic dress holding a copy of her PhD certificate and thesis.
Officially Dr Cherish! π
Thank you to everyone who has supported me on my PhD journeyβ¦whether during my first forays into History at Northgate High School & Dereham Sixth Form College, as an undergraduate at @lucycavendish.bsky.social, or as a postgraduate most recently at Churchill College.
Wonderful to present on a panel on scrapbooking between the generations alongside @janehamlett.bsky.social & Lucy Brownson, chaired by @zoethomas.bsky.social. Fascinating discussions in the Q and A after.
Thanks to everyone who joined us and to the @socialhistsoc.bsky.social for a fab conference.
A member of the Archives Centre team sat behind a table hosting research guides and other Archives Centre goodies, including a lightbox spelling @chuarchives.
A @chuarchives lightbox surrounded by Archives Centre pin badges, postcards, pens, leaflets, bookmarks, and research guides.
Archives Centre research guides and games.
πIt's Open Day time here in Cambridge!π
πIf you're around in Cambridge, then do visit our Archives Centre stall in the buttery at Churchill College.
πYou can explore highlights from our scientific collections with our rummage box and help yourself to our Archives Centre goodies too.
Clementine Churchill sorting letters, c.1940s CSCT 5/4/99
Mary Churchill holding her poodle Sukie, 1941, CSCT 5/4/20
IVF pioneer Robert Edwards, sitting at a microscope, in Bourn Hall, c.1980s, EDWS 18/5/18
π¦Happy #InternationalArchivesDay!
π The theme of this year's #InternationalArchivesWeek is #ArchivesAreAccessible.
πΈTo celebrate, weβre sharing a few photos available on our Access Portal from the papers of Clementine Churchill & Robert Edwards.
A photo of some members of the Archives Centre team celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Churchill Archives Centre.
Hi BlueSky!
We're Churchill Archives Centre & we provide a home to the papers of politicians, civil servants, social scientists, campaigners, journalists, military leaders, & scientists from the Churchill era & beyond.
Follow us to find out about our collections, events, projects, & more.
A tin blue and yellow bird resting on white cotton wool with βVotes for Womenβ written on it
A sepia photograph of 6 women, all with big hats, high collars and smart jacket coats. Emmeline Pankhurst in the middle.
Today was my last day researching at the Schlesinger Library @rad-institute.bsky.social - sad to leave but what a joy to find a Votes for Women bluebird and a photo of Emmeline Pankhurst in Boston in 1909! From the papers of Mary H Page ποΈ
Amongst the bleak news from every which way, I'm celebrating my book coming out digitally today π
Living with the Dead interrogates family histories and the way they shape our present.
It's totally free to read/download academic.oup.com/book/59440?s...
#skystorians #familyhistorians #genealogy
To find out more about Liberating Histories, tune into our podcast series ποΈ
It explores the last 50 years of feminism through the campaigns, communities & controversies sparked by some of its most cherished magazines β¨
Listen wherever you get your podcasts: liberatinghistories.org/podcast-seri...
Cherish, standing in front of a slide titled βOur Village Today: the WIβs 1965 Jubilee scrapbook competitionβ by Dr Cherish Watton-Colbrook. The slide shows the front covers of several scrapbooks.
A large brown book, with the words βGreat and Little CHESTERFORD 1965β embossed in bold on the cover.
Cherish standing with an open scrapbook.
It was lovely to spend Wednesday evening with Great Chesterford WI exploring the history of the WIβs 1965 scrapbook
competition.
I also had the chance to look through the branchβs own competition entry, filled with beautiful illustrations & vivid accounts of rural life in mid-1960s Cambridgeshire.
Canβt wait! Especially love your WLA scrapbooks!
Thanks so much for sharing! Really interesting.
Love it when people reflect on the process of scrapbooking in the scrapbook itself. ππ
The front cover of Walter Keep's scrapbook, showing a man pasting up the word 'scraps' over a fence.
Recently we received a new donation of a scrapbook once belonging to Mr Walter Keep. This is a fantastic record of his experiences in the First World War, and we'll be sharing some highlights on our pages! He kept a great record of his service and has filled the scrapbook with lots of annotations.
A copy of βCartomania: Photography & Celebrity in the Nineteenth Centuryβ by Paul Frecker
Looking forward to reading this, about the carte de visite craze of the 1860s, which I got for Christmas.
Thames Rowing Club has an 1869 album full of cartes de visite, which provide the only images of the earliest members.
Will be good to better understand this phenomenon.
A photograph of a Christmas tree topped a star, with the background of a bar.
Finished for Christmas β¨
Page from one of the very large travel journals / scrapbooks of Arthur Clive Bell, recording his journey from Calais to Monte Carlo in 1895. This particular page includes pasted in photographs of shipping at Boulogne and Calais, two telegrams and a bill from the Brighton & Marine Hotel at Boulogne. Some notes about his journey from Calais to Boulogne and then on to Abbeville are written around the pasted in items.
Page from one of the very large travel journals / scrapbooks of Arthur Clive Bell, recording his journey from Dieppe to Monte Carlo in 1898. This particular page includes photographs of Arles, a bill from the Hotel du Forum at Arles, and photos of Bell's bicycle being mended after the chain snapped (with accompanying notes).
A pair of #Bells for today's #ArchiveAdventCalendar
In the 1890s Arthur Clive Bell compiled two huge scrapbooks, recording his travels by bicycle across France. His travel diaries include photos, notes, bills & other ephemera collected on his journeys.
cdm21047.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/coll...
Looking forward to sharing some of my PhD research on Royal scrapbooking and family archiving tonight at the @ihr.bsky.social's Life-Cycles seminar at 5:30.
Do register and join if you're around :)
www.history.ac.uk/events/scrap...