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Reference
(The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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BT 22
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Title
(The name of the record)
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Board of Trade: Railway Department: Correspondence and Papers
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Date
(When the record was created)
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1867-1900
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Description
(What the record is about)
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Correspondence and papers of the Board of Trade's Railway Department.
The records in this series deal mainly with merchandise marks as those records concerning the department's main functions were transferred with the functions themselves to other departments.
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Related material
(A cross-reference to other related records)
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For records of the Electricity Branch of the Ministry of Transport see
POWE 13
For registers of the papers transferred to the Ministry of Transport in 1919, including full railway department registers, see
MT 7
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Separated material
(A cross-reference between records that are related by provenance but now kept separately)
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Papers on miscellaneous functions dating from before 1867 will be found registered in the departments which dealt with those functions at the time.
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Held by
(Who holds the record)
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The National Archives, Kew
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Legal status
(A note as to whether the record being described is a Public Record or not)
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Public Record(s)
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Language
(The language of the record)
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English
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Creator(s)
(The creator of the record)
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Board of Trade, Railway Department, 1851-1919
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Physical description
(The amount and form of the record)
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59 box(es)
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Subjects
(Categories and themes found in our collection (our subject list is under development, and some records may have no subjects or fewer than expected))
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- Topics
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Railways
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Trade and commerce
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Unpublished finding aids
(A note of unpublished indexes, lists or guides to the record)
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Subject indexes to the papers preserved in this series will be found in BT 19
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Administrative / biographical background
(Historical or biographical information about the creator of the record and the context of its creation)
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The Railway Department was set up in 1840 following the Railway Regulation Act of that year. Originally attached to the statistical department it soon became a distinct unit. Reorganised in 1844 as a Railway Board it was administered separately from the Board of Trade. Between 1846 and 1851 the Board's railway functions were given to an independent Board of Railway Commissioners, but in the latter year this was dissolved and a new Railway Department re-assumed its old functions together with those relating to telegraphs and canals.
In 1867 it took over from the Commercial Department functions duties relating to charters, gas, water and joint stock companies and in 1872 from the same department those relating to art unions, copyright, patents designs and trademarks, the alkali acts, industrial exhibitions and merchandise marks. In 1870 it had assumed responsibilities under an act of that year concerning life insurance companies. In 1881 it assumed duties under the Newspaper Libel and Registration Act, and in 1882 duties concerning electric light. In 1896 it took over from the Harbour Department general superintendence of the Standard Weights and Measures Office.
Of these miscellaneous functions, alkali works passed to the Local Government Board in 1874, and life insurance companies to the Finance Department in the same year; electric light to the Harbour Department in 1896, and gas and water to the same department in 1901. Also in 1901 charters, joint stock companies, art unions, patents designs and trademarks, newspaper libels, industrial exhibitions and merchandise marks passed to the Finance Department. Copyright functions passed to the Patent Office in 1914. The new Ministry of Transport assumed all the department's main functions, relating to railways, canals, tramways and telegraphs in 1919.
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Record URL
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https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C3065/