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The University of Sheffield archive

 Fonds
Reference code: GB-3041-US

Scope and Contents

The holdings cover the constituent elements of the University (US) - the Medical School (SMS), Firth College (FC), the Techncial School (STS) and the University College (UCS), although records from these are relatively sparse. The constituent elements have been catalogued as sub-fonds to the overall fonds and therefore have separate entries rather than being subsumed into the University of Sheffield descriptions. From the creation of the University in 1905 the records cover both academic departments and professional services. In particular there are strong collections within the following areas:- University governance - including the minutes of Senate and Council and their various reporting committees Formal University publications - including Calendars, Annual Reports and newsletters Vice Chancellor's papers - including letter books and subject files.

Dates

  • Creation: 1886 - Present

Biographical / Historical

The University of Sheffield developed from three local institutions; the Sheffield School of Medicine, Firth College and the Sheffield Technical School. The School of Medicine, founded 1828, was by far the oldest. Its early history was very insecure and it was saved from collapse by the opening of Firth College, which took over the teaching of all basic science subjects to medical students. Firth College was one of a group of university colleges founded in the later 19th century. It developed out of the Cambridge University Extension Movement, a scheme designed to bring university teaching to the large towns and cities of England, most of which lacked any university provision. The success of these courses in Sheffield led Mark Firth, a local steel manufacturer, to establish the College in 1879 as a centre for teaching Arts and Science subjects. The Sheffield Technical School was the product of local concern about the need for better technical training of the men responsible for running the great industries of Sheffield, particularly steelmaking. A movement was started within Firth College to collect funds to create a technical department, which was established in 1884 as the Sheffield Technical School. In 1886 the School moved to new premises on the site of the old Grammar School at St George's Square. In 1897, the three institutions were amalgamated by Royal Charter to form the University College of Sheffield. This step was part of the plan to link up with the Victoria University, a federation of the University Colleges at Manchester, Liverpool and Leeds. By 1900, however, the Federal University was disintegrating and within a few years independent universities were formed from the three University Colleges. On 31 May 1905 the University of Sheffield was granted its Royal Charter, and in July the new Firth Court Building on Western Bank was opened by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. St George's Square remained the centre of Applied Science departments, with Arts, Medicine and Science being housed at Western Bank. The development of the history of the University of Sheffield has been well documented in two publications. To mark the 50th anniversary a history called 'The Story of a Modern University', by AW Chapman, and to mark its centenary, 'Steel City Scholars' by Helen Mathers.

Extent

1000 Linear metre(s)

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

The archive is arranged and catalogued, where possible, according to the principles of provenance and original order. Seven functional groupings have been developed to assist with navigation and browsing of the records and the archival sub-fonds and series. These are an artificial construction, and the reference is not included in the unique identifiers assigned to item, file or series level units of description. Where it has not been possible to catalogue by provenance and originl order, an order has been imposed that seems to best reflect the context of the creation of the records and the needs of users. Pre-cursor institutions to the University of Sheffield (The Medical School, Firth College, Sheffield Technical School, and University College, Sheffield) have had material arranged and catalogued as sub-fonds.

Description rules
International Standard for Archival Description - General
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the University Archive Repository

Contact:
The University of Sheffield
Western Bank
Sheffield South Yorkshire S10 2HB United Kingdom
0114 222 1128