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History Day

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Oxfordshire Record Society

Title
Oxfordshire Record Society
short title
Oxfordshire Record Society
Description
The Oxfordshire Record Society was founded in 1919. In 2019, it celebrated 100 years of publishing primary sources for the history of the county of Oxfordshire, and raising awareness and understanding of this vital evidence of the historic county.

The cover of the Oxfordshire Record Society’s very first volume, published in 1919, showed its intention to cover the whole county, taking it beyond the City of Oxford and the university emphases of other organisations. The central symbol is the emblem of Oxfordshire County Council, the first modern county government, established in 1889 and just 30 years old in 1919. At the four corners of the cover are the seals of Banbury, Henley, Chipping Norton, and Woodstock.

The Oxfordshire Record Society celebrates the history and heritage of the county of Oxfordshire through its visual, architectural and documentary heritage. It does so through the publication of an annual volume, as well as occasional ones, and the highlighting of historic collections throughout both the city and the county.

Having celebrated the records of Oxfordshire for over a century, the ORS continues to aim at countywide interests, and to make accessible a variety of records on different periods, places and themes. Special projects include a historical atlas that distils topics from every period of the county’s history; the celebration of our county’s “Hidden Archives”; and the digitisation of its entire back catalogue. Our volumes reach local and family historians, find their place in libraries and archives, and are also valued beyond the county.

Now moving into its second century, the ORS has a substantial record of publication. It continues to aim at countywide interests, and to make accessible a variety of records on different periods, places and themes. It still discovers fresh aspirations and subjects. Recent volumes have opened up 20th-century sources. Up-to-date publishing arrangements have been adopted. Special projects, including an Oxfordshire historical atlas that distils themes from every period of the county’s history, are undertaken. ORS volumes reach local and family historians, find their place in libraries and archives, and are also valued beyond the county, as seen in a recent review of the centenary volume, The Parish in Wartime.