
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Everyday lives from the past are often hard to reconstruct. As we prepare for the Census 2021, what stories can we tell from past censuses and the records held at Kew at the National Archives? John Gallagher is joined by four researchers whose work sheds light on women entrepreneurs, the health of residents in Brighton and Hastings, and the story of a house in a suburb of York - Tang Hall.
Dr Carrie Van Lieshout from the Open University is working on a project called A Century of Migrant Businesswomen comparing census figures from 1911 to 2011.
Audrey Collins is Records Specialist in Family History at the National Archives and the author of guides to tracing family history.
Professor Krista Cowman at the University of Lincoln is researching women’s lives in a number of different contexts: as ‘war brides’ in France during World War One, as campaigners for post-war reconstruction in and out of Parliament in Britain, and in a number of community campaigns for safe play areas in the inter-and post-war period. She has worked on the history of a house in York's Tang Hall.
This episode was made in partnership with the AHRC, part of UKRI.
You can find more conversations about New Research in a playlist on the Free Thinking website https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03zws90
Producer: Emma Wallace
By BBC Radio 44.3
286286 ratings
Everyday lives from the past are often hard to reconstruct. As we prepare for the Census 2021, what stories can we tell from past censuses and the records held at Kew at the National Archives? John Gallagher is joined by four researchers whose work sheds light on women entrepreneurs, the health of residents in Brighton and Hastings, and the story of a house in a suburb of York - Tang Hall.
Dr Carrie Van Lieshout from the Open University is working on a project called A Century of Migrant Businesswomen comparing census figures from 1911 to 2011.
Audrey Collins is Records Specialist in Family History at the National Archives and the author of guides to tracing family history.
Professor Krista Cowman at the University of Lincoln is researching women’s lives in a number of different contexts: as ‘war brides’ in France during World War One, as campaigners for post-war reconstruction in and out of Parliament in Britain, and in a number of community campaigns for safe play areas in the inter-and post-war period. She has worked on the history of a house in York's Tang Hall.
This episode was made in partnership with the AHRC, part of UKRI.
You can find more conversations about New Research in a playlist on the Free Thinking website https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03zws90
Producer: Emma Wallace

7,695 Listeners

307 Listeners

1,080 Listeners

1,050 Listeners

5,548 Listeners

1,796 Listeners

608 Listeners

1,767 Listeners

1,034 Listeners

1,926 Listeners

496 Listeners

582 Listeners

134 Listeners

130 Listeners

164 Listeners

243 Listeners

182 Listeners

213 Listeners

3,176 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

145 Listeners

119 Listeners

89 Listeners

327 Listeners