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Sub-sub-fonds

Post Office: Private Office Papers: Papers of William Ryland

Catalogue reference: POST 123

What’s it about?

This record is about the Post Office: Private Office Papers: Papers of William Ryland dating from 1969-1977.

Is it available online?

Maybe, but not on The National Archives website. This record is held at The Postal Museum.

Can I see it in person?

Not at The National Archives, but you may be able to view it in person at The Postal Museum.

Full description and record details

Reference
POST 123
Title
Post Office: Private Office Papers: Papers of William Ryland
Date
1969-1977
Description

This series includes Board minutes and reports concerned with industrial relations with the Union of Postal Workers in general and the national postal workers' strike of January to March 1971 in particular. Other papers include an account of a fact-finding visit to the United States of America undertaken with colleagues in March 1971, transcripts of interviews, some photographs and copies of speeches.

Please see The Postal Museum's online catalogue for descriptions of individual records within this series.

Note
This series number was initially erroneously allocated to a website series and released as that series; corrected in March 2013 (please see POST 181).
Arrangement

The papers have been broken down as follows:

  • Personal papers and photographs
  • Speeches and lectures
  • Industrial relations (Committees and correspondence)
  • Post Office Board: minutes, memoranda and papers
  • Overseas relations
  • Public engagements

Held by
The Postal Museum
Legal status
Public Record(s)
Language
English
Creator(s)
Post Office, 1635-1635
Physical description
36 file(s)
Access conditions
No records held at The National Archives for this series
Subjects
Topics
Labour
Americas
Communications
Personal and family papers
Selection and destruction information
Duplicate material relating to the UPW pay dispute and duplicate publications and minutes have been disposed of. In addition, material considered to have little relevance to Ryland's career at the Post Office has been disposed of, along with his office diaries, as they were judged to contain nothing of long term historical significance.
Administrative / biographical background

William Ryland was appointed Chief Executive and one of two Deputy Chairmen of the new Post Office Corporation on its creation on 1 October 1969, the other Deputy Chairman being Whitney Willard Straight who remained as Deputy Chairman until 1974. Prior to this, from 1967 to 1969, Ryland had been the Managing Director of Telecommunications. The first Chairman of the Corporation was William Hall, 2nd Viscount Hall, who retained the position from 10 October 1969 until standing down in 1970. At this point, Ryland assumed the role of Acting Chairman before being confirmed as Chairman in 1971. He remained Chairman of the Post Office Corporation until 1977, at which point he was succeeded by Sir William Barlow. During his time as Chairman, Ryland also held the role of Chief Executive in addition to other titles.

Ryland assumed these posts at a particularly crucial and difficult time for the new Corporation. His period in office saw several major initiatives designed to reinvigorate the Post Office, such as attempts to introduce greater levels of mechanisation into the postal service. In 1974, the then government requested the production of a wide-ranging report into the possibilities of rationalising postal services and this led to a Select Committee on Nationalised Industries enquiry into the letter post in 1975. Ryland also oversaw the introduction of several new ancillary services, such as Expresspost, and an attempt to achieve a measure of industrial democracy.

Perhaps the most significant event of his Chairmanship, though, was the national postal strike of 1971 when, for several weeks, virtually the entire postal service in Great Britain was closed down. Although the strike ended in a partial victory for the Post Office Corporation, Ryland realised that the Corporation would have to modernise to compete in the late twentieth Century. He thus oversaw moves to improve and increase mechanisation within the Post Office and the beginnings of a restructuring programme which would eventually see the privatisation of the telecommunications business.

During his tenure as Chief Executive and Chairman, Ryland made several appearances on television and radio. He was frequently interviewed on news and current affairs programmes, giving In 1970, for instance, an hour long interview in the form of a question and answer session with members of the public on the BBC Radio Four programme It's Your Line. Other media appearances included an interview on BBC Radio Two's Jimmy Young Show in December 1976 and various interviews on news magazine programmes such as Nationwide. Ryland also undertook numerous speaking engagements to organisations as diverse as the Cambridge University Management Group and the Mail Users' Association. William Ryland was knighted for his services to the Post Office in January 1973.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C17751/

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270 records

This record is held at The Postal Museum

111 records

Within the fonds: POST

Records created or inherited by the Royal Mail Group plc and predecessors

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Post Office: Private Office Papers: Papers of William Ryland

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