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  • [nb-NO]Title[nb-NO]
    Plates of TS corrections of 'A Doomsday of English Enclosure Acts and Awards', by W. E. Tate.
  • [nb-NO]Reference[nb-NO]
    D MS2570
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  • William Edward Tate, (1902–1968), teacher and historian, was born on 28 March 1902 in Retford, Nottinghamshire, the only son of three children. The Tate family had come from a farming background in Yorkshire. W. E. Tate was educated at Grove Street School and King Edward VI Grammar School at Retford, where he was a scholar. In 1917 he left school, aged fifteen, to work for two years in war service as a laboratory assistant analysing steels in Sheffield. He qualified as an elementary schoolteacher at Westminster Teacher Training College (1920–22). Tate taught scientific subjects at various elementary schools between 1922 and 1945, and became headmaster of Sutton Bonington village school, Nottinghamshire, in 1925, where he insisted upon higher-quality village education. Active in local politics, he was a founder and chairman of the Sutton Bonington Labour Party and of the Sutton Bonington and Normanton branch of the National Union of Agricultural Workers. His Labour Party membership was continuous from 1923. He was brought up a Methodist and joined the Church of England in 1933. His interests in agricultural history and parliamentary enclosure developed from the late 1920s at Sutton Bonington. He became a fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 1927 and of the Society of Antiquaries in 1947. In 1935 he became headmaster of the Sneyd Holy Trinity School in Burslem, Staffordshire. By all accounts he was extremely good with children and a very fine teacher. He was also a very enthusiastic Workers' Educational Association member and tutor from 1935 to 1962. In 1945 Tate left schoolteaching to go to Oxford University (Ruskin and Balliol colleges). He was awarded a BLitt in 1947. At Oxford he was Houblon-Norman research fellow in agrarian history (1945–7) and the G. W. Medley senior research scholar at All Souls (1948–50). From 1947 to 1950 he was senior programme assistant in the history unit of the schools department of the BBC. In 1950 Tate became a lecturer in the education department at Leeds University, and in 1959 he was promoted to a readership there. From 1956 he was also curator of the Museum of the History of Education, University of Leeds, which he started. In these capacities he produced many publications, particularly on the history of education and the charity schools of Yorkshire. He retired from Leeds University in 1966, and went to Clare Hall, Cambridge, as a visiting fellow. Tate's most famous publication was The Parish Chest: a Study of the Records of Parochial Administration in England (1946), a wide-ranging survey of local records. He also published The English Village Community and the Enclosure Movements (1967). In addition he published very many county handlists of enclosure acts and awards, often in the historical and archaeological journals of local record societies. These came together after his death in A Domesday of English Enclosure Acts and Awards (1978), completed, co-authored, and introduced by Michael E. Turner. Tate wrote many articles in scholarly journals. His publications stretched to such subjects as child welfare, the history of education, Yorkshire local history and topography, inn signs, travellers in Yorkshire, and a number of school texts. Tate married in 1925 Ethel Markham (1902–1941), a schoolteacher, with whom he had a son and two daughters. Following her death he married in 1942 Margery Whitfield (1912–1991), another schoolteacher. This marriage produced a daughter. The couple divorced in 1953. Tate married a third time in 1958, to Margery Kerr (c.1911–1973). He died in Bristol from a heart attack on 22 March 1968, and was buried at Westbury-on-Trym.
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  • D TATE, D MS1093, D MS 1234, D MS 1234A, D MS 1234B, D74/11