Sub-fonds
Labour Party Distressed Areas Commision
Catalogue reference: LP/DAC/1-13
What’s it about?
This record is about the Labour Party Distressed Areas Commision dating from 1936-1937.
Is it available online?
Maybe, but not on The National Archives website. This record is held at Labour History Archive and Study Centre (People's History Museum/University of Central Lancashire).
Can I see it in person?
Not at The National Archives, but you may be able to view it in person at Labour History Archive and Study Centre (People's History Museum/University of Central Lancashire).
Full description and record details
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Reference (The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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LP/DAC/1-13
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Title (The name of the record)
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Labour Party Distressed Areas Commision
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Date (When the record was created)
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1936-1937
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Description (What the record is about)
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Includes correspondence, pres cuttings, and reports and statistics.
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Held by (Who holds the record)
- Labour History Archive and Study Centre (People's History Museum/University of Central Lancashire)
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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)
- <corpname>Labour Party Distressed Areas Commission</corpname>
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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 Distressed Areas Commission was very much the work of future Chancellor of the Exchequer Hugh Dalton. It came about as a result of decisions taken at the 1936 Labour Party conference, where Dalton was charged with leading an investigation into conditions in which people lived and worked, or did not, in the Special Areas. These were areas that found themselves hit hardest by the depression from 1929 onwards, Central Scotland, North East England, South Wales, and in this instance East Lancashire.
Concentrating on the social and economic conditions in the East Lancashire area its evidence is in one sense familiar to anybody who understands the impact of the 1930s on British industrial power. Yet the DAC was simply more than an organisation which accumulated evidence for the sake of it, for what is clearly in evidence from its conclusions is that it was able to deliver quite solid answers to serious and seemingly intractable problems.
Unemployment being the most serious of these problems, largely because so much else flowed from it, questions of health, housing and education being amongst those of greatest importance.
The Commission left Manchester in January 1937 and travelled through Rossendale, Burnley, Padiham, Blackburn, Bury, Bootle, Liverpool, Oldham and Manchester.
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Record URL
- https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/cc5522d0-7332-4b4e-af9d-5c6ce87af778/
Catalogue hierarchy
Within the fonds: LP
Labour Party
You are currently looking at the sub-fonds: LP/DAC/1-13
Labour Party Distressed Areas Commision