The Borthwick Institute for Archives is the specialist archive service of the University of York, York, England. It is one of the biggest archive repositories outside London. The Borthwick was founded in 1953 as The Borthwick Institute of Historical Research. It was originally based at St Anthony's Hall, a fifteenth-century guild hall on Peasholme Green, in central York. Since 2005 it has been based in a purpose-built building, situated adjacent to the JB Morrell Library on the University of York's Heslington West campus. This new building was made possible due to a grant of £4.4 million by the Heritage Lottery Fund and designed by Leach Rhodes Walker and Buro Happold.

Archivists and directors

Five archivists have headed the Borthwick Institute, all serving under their predecessors. The title was changed from "Director" to "Keeper of Archives" in 2005 and was further expanded to "Keeper of Archives & Special Collections" in 2019.

  • Canon John Stanley Purvis – 1953–1963
  • Norah Gurney – Archivist-in-Charge 1963–1971; Director, 1971–1974
  • David Smith – 1974–2000
  • Chris Webb – Acting Director, 2000–2005; Keeper of Archives, 2005–2019
  • Gary Brannan – 2019–present

Archives and rare books

Archives

Rare books

The University of York Library holds a range of collections of valuable books which can be viewed at the Borthwick Institute.

See also

External links

  • – the Borthwick Institute's online catalogue
  • – news and research from the archives
  • – a searchable catalogue of more than 14,000 cause papers relating to cases heard between 1300 and 1858 in the Church Courts of the Diocese of York.
  • – over 20,000 images of Registers produced by the Archbishops of York, 1225–1650, with index
  • – a pioneering mental health archive digitised by the Wellcome Library
  • – selected images and descriptions of the West Indian plantation records of the Earls of Harewood

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