Record

StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelSubFonds
Reference Number RNID/3
TitleInstitutional archives of RNID
Date18th-21st Century
DescriptionMinutes of RNID committees; correspondence files; attendance registers; indentures, etc.
AdminHistoryRNID (formerly Royal National Institute for Deaf People) is a charitable organization working on behalf of the UK's 9 million deaf and hard of hearing people. The head office of RNID is in Islington, Central London (19-23 Featherstone Street, London EC1Y 8SL).

RNID was founded as the National Bureau for Promoting the General Welfare of the deaf in 1911 by Leo Bonn, a deaf merchant banker. It was reorganised as the National Institute for the deaf in 1924. Alongside its role in influencing public policy in favour of people who are hard of hearing in the UK, it also developed a role as a provider of care to deaf and hard of hearing people with additional needs during the late 1920s and early 1930s.

During the 1940s, with the introduction of the National Health Service (NHS) to the UK, it successfully campaigned for the provision of free hearing aids through the new welfare state system. The 1950s and 1960s saw its increasing influence marked by Royal recognition: in 1958 the Duke of Edinburgh became the Patron of the Institute; and in 1961 H M the Queen approved the addition of the "Royal" prefix, creating the Royal National Institute for the Deaf (RNID).

The Institute expanded into medical and technological research during the 1960s and 1970s, being a key player in the development of NHS provided behind-the-ear hearing aids. During the 1980s it developed the Telephone Exchange for the Deaf, a pioneering relay service allowing telephone users and deaf "textphone" users to communicate with each other using a third-party operator to relay voice and text communication. This became the service known as Typetalk in 1991, funded by BT but operated on their behalf by RNID to this day. In March 2009 the name of the Typetalk service was changed to Text Relay.

In 1992 the Institute changed its name to the Royal National Institute for Deaf People but kept the initials RNID.
AcquisitionDeposited by the RNID Contracts Advisor in 2008.
AccessStatusPartially Open
AccessConditionsAccess to the collection may require a minimum of at least two weeks’ notice. Please contact Special Collections for further information. Some items are closed due to containing sensitive personal data. Please see the detailed catalogue for further information.
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