Royal Agricultural Society of England

However, in 1838 the Royal Agricultural Society took its place as the central authority on agricultural practice, with a greater focus on science and modernisation. It received its Royal Charter in 1840, founded the Royal Agricultural College in 1845, and became increasingly prominent as it advised the government on agricultural legislation throughout the latter part of the 19th century. The Royal Agricultural Society still exists today as the foremost advocate of the use of science and technology in farming.
The records consist of the archive of the Old Board of Agriculture 1793 – 1822 (SR RASE OB), and the archive of the Royal Agricultural Society from 1838 – 1960. The Old Board material contains a valuable run of minutes, including those recorded by Arthur Young while Secretary of the Board, the original Letters Patent, financial records and agricultural surveys and essays. The Royal Agricultural Society’s records, include accounts, administration material, legal material, social and personal material, specimen farm account books, journals.
More information
- A full description is available on our online database
- A handlist of the whole collection is available here