Archive Collections
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Papers of Leonard Knight Elmhirst 1890-1973 |
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LKE Political and Economic Planning
DATE: 1925-1980
LEVEL: Series
Archive of Leonard Elmhirst documenting work with the independent research organisation Political and Economic Planning.
The collection is arranged into subseries including alphabetical correspondence; personal and organisational correspondence with Max Nicholson; correspondence with PEP directors R J Goodman and Richard Bailey; correspondence with Kenneth Lindsay (1925-1976); personal and PEP correspondence with Israel Sieff (1932-1972); notes for histories of PEP by Kenneth Lindsay, and an oral history transcript about PEP completed by Elmhirst in 1961. There are two boxes of PEP Directorate and Executive Committee papers including reports, agendas, minutes, and records of PEP social functions. The final 10 boxes contain a range of PEP bound printed reports including a set of the broadsheet publication PLANNING, dating from 1933 to 1967.
General member correspondence includes letters from Gerald Barry; Basil Blackett; Henry Bunbury; John Dower; Maxwell Fry; Arthur Goldschmidt; Fred Gwatkin; Noel Hall; William Holford; Julian Huxley; David Mitrany; Lawrence Neal; Geoffrey Whiskard; and Michael Zvegintzov. Records include agendas, and meeting notes kept by Leonard Elmhirst. Correspondence in 1972 is with Eric Roll and John Pinder among others and mentions a PEP Executive meeting held at Dartington Hall in 1972. Other major correspondents include Israel Sieff, Richard Bailey, R J Goodman, and Kenneth Lindsay. Lindsay as first secretary of PEP, sends letters relating to its founding history in 1931. Letters of Max Nicholson are also significant. Letters of David Owen in 1940 describe PEP activities and life in London during the sustained bombing of the Blitz.
Political and Economic Planning was founded in 1931. It grew out of the work of Max Nicholson, who wrote 'A National Plan for Britain' as a supplement to The Week-End Review in February, 1931. PEP members included businessmen, economists, and academic experts attracted by the promise of economic planning as both a means out of economic depression and as a means of avoiding it. During and after World War II, PEP extended its interests into the arts, television, and film in Britain. It also carried out investigations of social problems including racism, publishing the Street Report in 1967.
In 1978 PEP merged with the Centre for the Study of Social Policy (CSSP), and became the Policy Studies Institute (PSI).
PEP functioned both as a club, and as a think tank. Research was organised by groups including Agriculture, Land use, Economics, Government, Industry, and Technique of Planning (TEC PLAN). Members were asked to research, and contribute according to their expertise, to the production of PEP reports which were edited for publication by the organisation's paid secretaries, Kenneth Lindsay, Max Nicholson, David Owen, and Michael Young. Following World War II, PEP employed executive directors including Ray Goodman, Richard Bailey, and John Pinder.
Although not present at the initial two meetings in the spring of 1931, Leonard Elmhirst soon became involved with PEP both as an advisor, and as the principal source of funding during the group's first three years. He served on the early Directorate, and was a continuous member of the PEP Executive until about 1971. He also served as Chairman of Political and Economic Planning from 1939 to 1953, following Israel Sieff in that role, and preceding Max Nicholson. Dartington Hall served as a rural retreat for PEP meetings and conferences from April 1931.
Information for Researchers
All papers belonging to The Dartington Hall Trust Archive (with the exclusion of Dartington Hall School pupils individual records) are held at the Devon Record Office. All enquiries relating to research should be made to Devon Records Office, Great Moor House, Bittern Road, Sowton, Exeter, Devon EX2 7NL
+44 (0)1392 384253
+44 (0)1392 384256
devrec@devon.gov.uk
www.devon.gov.uk/record_office
The following requests should be made direct to the Archives & Records at The Dartington Hall Trust as shown below:
Copies of images as seen on The Dartington Hall Trust online catalogue with appropriate reference number (Ref No.)
Permission to publish or quote from any document held in the Dartington Hall Trust Archive
Former pupils of Dartington Hall School wishing to view their records
Archives & Records
The Dartington Hall Trust
Dartington Hall
Totnes TQ9 6EL
01803 847200
yvonne.widger@dartington.org
This information is copyright The Dartington Hall Trust
