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Remembered Today:

New British Army (ASC/RASC) Archive Material Available on line


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I volunteer at The Royal Logistic Corps Museum in Deepcut in Great Britain and the museum archive here is publishing on line the Journals of the RLC's Forming Corps for the period 1914-1964. I believe that this would be of interest to many of the Forum's members. Do you mind if the museum were to create a post on your forum providing details on this new on-line archive? Below are details of the archive material available:

The RLC Museum Archive holds a complete set of RLC and Forming Corps Journals dating from the Nineteenth Century to the present day. The website www.rlcarchive.org has placed on-line all of those which the Forming Corps published between 1914 and 1964, covering the period from the start of the First World War to the end of National Service. The Journals can be browsed from page to page or searched by a word or phrase of choice.

The Journals are a valuable source of information on the activities of the Forming Corps and the lives of those who served with them. The Journals provide details of operations, exercises, unit news and Corps sport.

For those wishing to learn more of individual soldiers and officers who served in the Forming Corps the Journals can be a very useful source of research. The Journals published details of individuals' promotions, postings, marriages and obituaries. Casualty lists, seniority lists and medal awards were also published in the Journals. At the very least the Journals can provide general background information to an officer's or soldier's time in the Forming Corps.

Also available on this website are the Quarterlies/Reviews of the Army Service Corps/Royal Army Service Corps (ASC/RASC) that were published between 1905 and 1964. These more scholarly publications provide a more detailed understanding of the work of the ASC/RASC. Articles in the Quarterlies were usually written by serving Officers on subjects that include doctrinal and technological developments within the Corps. The Quarterlies also published narratives of campaigns and operations, written with an emphasis on supply and transport in the British Army.

Over time, the format of the Journals did occasionally change. Consequently the content emphasis does vary. Please also note although this website offers access to all the Journals published between 1914 and 1964, within these years there were periods when some of the Forming Corps did not produce a Journal. However, activities and operations that did occur in years which Journals were not published are usually written up retrospectively when publication of the Journals resumed. Details for when the Forming Corps did not publish Journals are as follows:

  • The Army Ordnance Corps did not publish a Journal between 1915 and 1919.
  • The Royal Pioneer Corps did not publish an official journal until 1946.
  • This website does include the Journal produced by 30 Group RPC between 1943 and 1945.
  • The Army Catering Corps' first Journal was not published until 1947.

ASC/RASC Quarterlies were not published over the years 1915-1921 and 1940-1948.

For Further details please see www.rlcarchive.org

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I gather that there's new material online from Sandhurst too. Termly reports on cadets by company commanders have now been digitised in addition to the cadet and staff registers which have been available for a while http://archive.sandhurstcollection.org.uk/. Press release by the company which carried out the digitisation at http://www.townswebarchiving.com/2012/01/sandhurst-new-content-available-for-download/

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I'm moving this over to the Documents sub forum, websites section which I think is the best place for the thread.

Keith

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I gather that there's new material online from Sandhurst too. Termly reports on cadets by company commanders have now been digitised in addition to the cadet and staff registers which have been available for a while http://archive.sandhurstcollection.org.uk/. Press release by the company which carried out the digitisation at http://www.townswebarchiving.com/2012/01/sandhurst-new-content-available-for-download/

I was intrigued by the apparent lack of a Bernard Montgomery in their RMC catalogue ...

Simon

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