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Reference
(The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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DSIR 5
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Title
(The name of the record)
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Department of Scientific and Industrial Research: Chemistry Research Board
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Date
(When the record was created)
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1920-1968
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Description
(What the record is about)
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Meetings files of the Chemistry Co-ordinating Research Board, the Chemistry Research Board, and the National Chemical Laboratory Steering Committee and files on the administration and research programme of the Chemical Research Laboratory.
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Related material
(A cross-reference to other related records)
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Records of the laboratory are in
AY 5
Some of its reports are in
AB 15
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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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- Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Chemical Research Laboratory, 1925-1958
- Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Chemistry Research Board, 1927-1958
- Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, National Chemical Laboratory, 1958-1965
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Physical description
(The amount and form of the record)
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116 file(s)
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Access conditions
(Information on conditions that restrict or affect access to the record)
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Subject to 30 year closure unless otherwise stated
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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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Research
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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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In the early years of the department's existence, those chemical research problems which did not fall within the scope of any existing research station were mainly undertaken under the auspices of the Chemistry Co-ordinating Research Board. It initiated investigations that were carried out by a number of different institutions, such as the synthesis of formaldehyde at Oxford University, work on synthetic resins at Birmingham University and on the corrosion of metals at Imperial College. In 1923 the department decided to create a laboratory for chemical research, which was established at Teddington in 1925. It was called the Chemical Research Laboratory and was in close geographical proximity to the National Physical Laboratory. It did not cover the whole range of chemical research, being intended to fill a gap in the available laboratory resources of the department and to undertake from time to time such chemical investigations as the department thought desirable in the public interest. It was organised in a varying number of research groups, described by the titles of their most important projects, not by the branches of chemistry with which their work was principally concerned. Its work was supervised by a Chemistry Research Board, which replaced the co-ordinating board in 1927. The board also supervised any other research referred to it on the recommendation of the Advisory Council, and submitted annually a programme of work for the ensuing year and a report on the work of the laboratory. In 1943 the work of the laboratory on road tar, which since 1931 had been carried out in co-operation with the British Road Tar Association under the supervision of the Road Tar Research Committee, was transferred to the Road Research Laboratory.
Following the report of a committee set up by the department's Research Council to review the work and functions of the Chemical Research Laboratory, its title was changed in 1958 to the National Chemical Laboratory; at the same time the research board was replaced by a National Chemical Laboratory Steering Committee with similar terms of reference. The following year the National Collection of Industrial Bacteria, which the laboratary had taken over in 1950, was transferred to the Torry Research Station, and the laboratory's Chemical Engineering Group, formed in 1957, passed to the Warren Spring Laboratory. In 1964 the Extraction of Metals Group was also transferred to the Warren Spring Laboratory and the steering committee was dissolved. In 1965 the National Chemical Laboratory was absorbed by the National Physical Laboratory, on the transfer of the latter to the control of the Ministry of Technology.
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Record URL
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https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C6337/