Centre For Kentish Studies
The centre was recognised by the Lord Chancellor for holding official public records. It had also been designated a diocesan record office, serving the two dioceses of Rochester and Canterbury (archdeaconry of Maidstone). Over the ensuing years it acquired further administrative links with the Canterbury Cathedral Library and with branch record offices in Dover, Folkestone, Ramsgate, Rochester and Sevenoaks.
The centre closed in November 2011 prior to relocation in a new purpose-built headquarters at James Whatman Way, Maidstone, opening in Spring 2012 and thereafter to operate under another new title – the Kent History and Library Centre (additionally accommodating the county's Central Library). The new arrangements also involved the closure and absorption of the former East Kent Archives Centre in Dover.
Besides holding the usual local authority archives and ecclesiastical parish registers, the numerous other major collections include political and estate papers of the Earls of Guildford, the Stanhope of Chevening papers, and papers of the Talbot and Stuart-Wortley families.
References
- ^ Janet Foster & Julia Sheppard, British Archives, 3rd edition, 1995, ISBN 0-333-53255-4
- ^ "Kent library and history centre opens in Maidstone". bbc.co.uk. 23 April 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
External links
- http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/archon/searches/locresult_details.asp?LR=51 National Archives: Archon directory entry for Centre of Kentish Studies] (with contact details)
- Kent Archives Service online catalogue