Record

StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelCollection
Reference Number MS OGDEN
TitleOgden Manuscript Collection
Date13th Century-20th Century
DescriptionManuscripts on a range of subjects including theology, law, language and literature. Paricular strengths of the collection are the early modern commonplace books and late 19th and early 20th century literary manuscripts.
Extent158 items
AdminHistoryManuscripts purchased from the library of the linguist Charles Kay Ogden in 1953. UCL acquired a portion of Ogden's library totalling around 5,000 volumes, including 20 incunables, "many early printed books", and a large number of modern works on linguistics and the study of communication. It also contained various bound manuscripts and over 1,000 packets of Brougham correspondence.

At one time Ogden's library contained over 50,000 printed books and manuscripts dating from the medieval period to the 20th century. The majority of these books were purchased by the University of California after Ogden's death in 1957.

There are around 150 manuscripts in UCL's collection and they are arranged approximately by date. Within MS Ogden there is a sub-section known as the "Bacon-Tottel" collection, so called because they were believed to have been compiled for Francis Bacon by his clerk William Tottel (or Tothill), although it is now known that this is not the case. This sub-group can be found under the reference MS Ogden 7. Note that not all of the Bacon-Tottel manuscripts currently have online catalogue records, but a list was compiled by Stuart Clark in 1976 (see bibliography).
AcquisitionPart of the C K Ogden Library acquired by University College London in 1953. The exact details of acquisition are unclear, with some sources referring to it as having been purchased by the Nuffield Foundation and presented (presumably immediately) to UCL as a loan for "not less than 10 years" in order that it would form the basis of a new Communication Research Centre. However, in the college records there is a copy of a legal Agreement dated 23 January 1953 between C K Ogden (the vendor) and UCL (the purchaser) for the sale of books and manuscripts to the value of £50,000 as listed in the schedule made by Alan Keen, including a collection of Brougham-Bentham books at that time housed in Cambridge.
AccessStatusOpen
AccessConditionsThe papers are available subject to the usual conditions of access to Archives and Manuscripts material, after the completion of a Reader's Undertaking.
FindingAidsSome of these manuscripts are included in: N R Ker, Medieval Manuscripts in British Libraries / 1, London / by N. R. Ker. (Oxford: Clarendon, 1969). A copy is held in Stores.
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