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Series

Board of Trade: Merchandise Marks Standing Committee: Papers

Catalogue reference: BT 215

What's it about?

BT 215

This series contains papers of the Merchandise Marks Committee of the Board of Trade, papers on the Merchandise Marks Act 1887 and 1926 and evidence submitted to and minutes of reports of enquiries held under the 1926 Act.

Full description and record details

Reference

BT 215

Title
Board of Trade: Merchandise Marks Standing Committee: Papers
Date

1886-1953

Description

This series contains papers of the Merchandise Marks Committee of the Board of Trade, papers on the Merchandise Marks Act 1887 and 1926 and evidence submitted to and minutes of reports of enquiries held under the 1926 Act.

Related material

For records relating to Merchandise Marks Acts see: MAF 210

Held by
The National Archives, Kew
Legal status

Public Record(s)

Language

English

Creator(s)
Board of Trade, Merchandise Marks Standing Committee, 1919-1953
Physical description

1454 file(s)

Subjects
Topics
Trade and commerce
Administrative / biographical background

The Merchandise Marks Act 1887 required, for the first time, that the country of origin should be marked on any imported goods bearing the name or trade mark of a United Kingdom manufacturer. The Merchandise Marks Committee, appointed in 1919 by Sir Auckland Geddes, President of the Board of Trade, to examine merchandise marks law recommended, in its report published in 1920 as Cmd. No. 760, certain amendments to the procedures laid down in the 1887 Act. These were embodied in the Merchandise Marks Act 1926.

Under the Act, the addition of the country of origin to imported goods of any series or description could be enforced by Order in Council. Applications for Orders from manufacturers, producers or wage earners, were first referred for consideration to a standing committee, appointed by the department of government primarily concerned. At least two such committees were to be in existence, one at least of which was charged with matters concerning agriculture, horticulture and the fishing industry. The committees sat in public, except when confidential matters were under discussion, and reported to the department concerned. An Order made as the result of a committee's report could subsequently be varied by the department and thereafter referred back to the committee to consider whether formal amendment of the Order was required. The Merchandise Marks Acts 1887 and 1926 were repealed by the Trade Descriptions Act 1968.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C3252/

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This record is held at The National Archives, Kew

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Within the department: BT

Records of the Board of Trade and of successor and related bodies

You are currently looking at the series: BT 215

Board of Trade: Merchandise Marks Standing Committee: Papers

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