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Records created or inherited by the Post Office Corporation (Telecommunications Division)
Description and record details
Reference | TCC |
---|---|
Title | Records created or inherited by the Post Office Corporation (Telecommunications Division) |
Date | 1969-1981 |
Description | Records (held by BT) of the Telecommunications division of the Post Office Corporation which was responsible for all United Kingdom telephone and telegraph services, both inland and overseas, with the exeption of the City of Kingston-upon-Hull, which operated its own service. Also included are general records of the Corporation where they are relevant to telecommunications, such as Post Office annual reports. |
Related material |
Some files of the Post Office External Telecommunications Executive, inherited by the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, are in FV 4 There are records relating to telecommunications held either by the Post Office Archives or by BT Archives in POST TCB Files relating to postal and telegraphic matters passed to the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications following the Post Office Act 1969 are in BT 229 Telecommunications records are also in: |
Held by | BT Archives |
Legal status | Public Record(s) |
Language |
English |
Creator |
Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, Communications Division, 1969-1974 |
Physical description | 4 series |
Access conditions | No records held at The National Archives in this departmental code |
Custodial history | Records of the Telecommunications division of the Post Office Corporation have been transferred where feasible (ie where the records relate exclusively to telecommunications) from the Post Office Archives to BT Archives. Records of the Post Office which do not relate exclusively to telecommunications are preserved at the Post Office Archives. |
Administrative/ biographical background | The Post Office ceased to be a Government Department on 1 October 1969 and was established as a public corporation under the Post Office Act of this year. The idea of converting the Post Office into a nationalised industry had first been raised as early as 1932 when a publication by Lord Wolmer entitled ""Post Office Reform"" made reference to the subject. A committee under the chairmanship of Lord Bridgeman was set up in 1932 to investigate criticisms that the Post Office, as a large scale commercial undertaking should be run along the lines of a business concern rather than an ordinary government department. In the event it was not until 1965 that the process was put in motion whereby the Post Office was changed to a public corporation. The Post Office Act, 1969, laid down the structure of the new organisation, the Corporation being split into two divisions - Posts and Telecommunications - which thus became distinct businesses for the first time. Under the Act, the Post Office had the exclusive privilege of running telecommunications systems with limited powers to authorise others to run such systems. In 1977, the Carter Committee, in one of a series of reports commissioned by the Government on public corporations, recommended a further separation of the postal and telecommunications services of the Post Office, and for their relocation under two individual corporations. The findings in this report led to the creation of the British Telecommunications Act, 1981, and the creation of British Telecom as a public corporation in its own right. Although it remained part of the Post Office until 1981, in 1980 the telecommunications business of the Post Office was given the distinguishing name of British Telecom. |
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