The legacy of Charles Booth

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[Booth family archive].

BOOTH, Charles
London and Thringstone,
1886-1920.
1) BOOTH, Charles Life and Labour of the People in London. 18 volumes, 8vo (210 by 140mm), half titles, tables, and folding maps, 5 folding coloured lithographed maps contained in separate wallet, original vellum lettered and decorated in gilt. 2) BOOTH, Charles Life and Labour of the People in London: first results of an inquiry based on the 1891 census: opening address delivered before the Royal Statistical Society, November, 1893. Printed for Private Circulation, Harrison and Sons, 1893. 8vo (215 by 138 mm), 39 pages, with manuscript annotations throughout. 3) BOOTH, Charles Life and Labour of the People in London: first results of an inquiry based on the 1891 census: opening address delivered before the Royal Statistical Society, November, 1893. Printed for Private Circulation, Harrison and Sons, 1893. 8vo (215 by 138 mm), 39 pages. 4) BOOTH, Charles Occupations of the people: England, Scotland, Ireland, 1841-81; being a restatement of the figures given in the census returns, arranged to facilitate comparison. London: Edward Stanford, 1886. 8vo (215 by 140mm), 85 pages, 3 folded tables. With photograph of Charles Booth loosely inserted. 5) BOOTH, Charles The Aged Poor: A Proposal for Old Age Pensions. London: Macmillan and Co., Limited, 1899. 8vo (200 by 130mm), half title, 75 pages. 6) Framed letter from Prime Minister James Balfour to Charles Booth, 21st June 1904 informing him of his nomination to the Privy Council. Manuscript lettering on paper, with blindstamp of the First Lord of the Treasury. 7) BOOTH, Charles Industrial Unrest and Trade Union Policy. London: Macmillan and Co, Ltd., 1913. 8vo. (215 by 140mm), 32 pages, inscription "A.M.M. from C.B." on title page. 8) [MACNAUGHTON, Antonio Maria]. Four bound type-written pages of an autobiography by A.M.M. (254 by 210mm). 9) B[OOTH], M[ary] C[atherine]A list of Thringstone Families (56) begun by M.C.B. April 1887. Manuscript notebook. Quarto, (228 by 178 mm). 10) Dedication and Unveiling of Memorial to the Late Right Hot. Charles Booth, F.R.S., in St. Paul's Cathedral, Wednesday, December 15th, 1920. Co-Op Printers, Tudor Street, EC4. 8vo (218 by 136 mm), seven pages.
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A fascinating archive, from the descendants of Charles Booth, containing not only some of his most important works on social reform - most notably his seminal publication. 'Life and Labour of the People of London', with its famed map - but also manuscript material that sheds light on the work carried out by his wife Mary Catherine, the letter from Prime Minister Arthur Balfour confirming Booth's elevation to the Privy Council, a portrait published by the Stereographic Compa...

provenance:

provenance:

Provenance
1. The family of Charles Booth and by descent to the great great great grandson of Charles Booth.

Just one month after starting this enquiry, Mary established 'Mothers' Meetings' held every Monday at Gracedieu for women in the local community to knit and sew over cups of tea while she read aloud from books, often Dickens or Scott. Some of her entries are updated to note whether the residents had attended the Mothers' Meetings.

Booth's Legacy

Booth died on 23 November 1916 at home at Gracedieu Manor. A service was held in Booth's honour at St. Paul's Cathedral on 15 December 1920 to dedicate a memorial to him, and the program from this service survives in this archive (item 10). The Right Hon. Austen Chamberlain, M.P. led the service and his address is included in the program. Chamberlain lauds Booth's work as groundbreaking noting that his survey "marked a new stage in social enquiry, and gave a new basis upon which to build social theories and put forward practical reforms. It will remain a lasting monument of London and of the life of London as it has been in our time".

Booth was a voracious writer throughout his life, and his wife anticipated that his musings in private correspondence may one day be an important resource, commenting "Some day, perhaps a hundred years hence, they may yield a rich harvest to some student of the future, telling of the ways in which a Captain of Industry in the days of the great Queen did his work, before State Control, and possibly International State Management, revolutionize the conduct of Industry".

This legacy lives on in the rich archive of his life's work. The London School of Economics (LSE) retains the archive of Booth's original research and interview notebooks, numbering over 450 in total. The University of Liverpool Special Collections & Archives has additional archival material, including manuscript and typescript copy, proofs with corrections, maps and other material compiled by Booth and his associates. Senate House Library holds correspondence of the Booth family members, including descent to the great great great grandson of Charles Booth.