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        <titleproper encodinganalog="title">Sharp (Thomas) Archive</titleproper>
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        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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      <unitdate normal="1932/1984" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932-1984</unitdate>
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        4 linear metres    </physdesc>
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        <persname id="atom_156646_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
      </origination>
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      <note>
        <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
      </note>
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      <p>Published</p>
    </odd>
    <odd type="levelOfDetail">
      <p>Full</p>
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    <odd type="statusDescription">
      <p>Revised</p>
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      <p>The papers held at Newcastle are a substantial repository of the personal papers and plans of Sharp. The major part of the collection consists of papers collected from Sharp's Oxford house on his death by the now-retired Professor Brenikov of this University. The papers were subsequently put into storage. Their significance realised they were deposited with the University Library Special Collections. The principal elements of the collection are as follows:<lb/><lb/>Files of information and correspondence relating to individual texts, including unpublished works<lb/><lb/>Files of information and correspondence relating to individual plans. This includes, for example, work on historic cities, new villages, new towns and overseas commissions and competition entries<lb/><lb/>Original plans for many commissions<lb/><lb/>Extensive documentation on key planning cases where Sharp appeared as a witness at public inquiry e.g. Oxford Roads, Kepier Power Station Durham, Clarendon Hotel Oxford<lb/><lb/>Extensive books of press-cuttings on all of the above<lb/><lb/>Typescript of an unpublished autobiography and manuscript autobiographical notes<lb/><lb/>Typescripts of government information films, radio talks, lectures<lb/><lb/>Documentation on unsuccessful commissions<lb/><lb/>Correspondence regarding the formation of the Civic Trust<lb/><lb/>Lecture slides<lb/><lb/>Miscellaneous personal correspondence<lb/><lb/>Creative writing i.e. poetry, novels, radio plays etc., largely unpublished<lb/><lb/>Collectively these resources:<lb/>Demonstrate the evolution of Sharp's thinking both in terms of individual commissions and over the course of his career<lb/>Illustrate important issues about the process of undertaking planning commissions in the period e.g. fees charged, numbers of staff employed, briefs set etc.<lb/>Provide a rich source of information on how commissions were received both by clients and professional and local audiences<lb/>Provide a rich source of material on how competing arguments and ideologies of urban evolution were advanced.</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
      <p>The collection has been arranged in accordance with Thomas Sharps town planning projects.</p>
    </arrangement>
    <controlaccess>
      <persname role="subject">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Holford, William Graham, 1907-1975, Baron Holford, architect</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Betjeman, Sir John, 1906-1984, Knight, poet, writer on architecture, broadcaster</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Roberts, David Wyn, 1911-1982, Architect.</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
      <corpname role="subject">Christ Church Meadow (Oxford, England)</corpname>
      <genreform>Landscapes</genreform>
      <genreform>Architecture</genreform>
      <genreform>Maps</genreform>
      <genreform>Correspondence</genreform>
      <subject>Land use</subject>
      <subject>Regional Development</subject>
      <subject>Urban renewal</subject>
      <subject>Urban policy</subject>
      <subject>Urban Planning</subject>
      <subject>Architecture</subject>
    </controlaccess>
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      <p>The collection predominantly consists of paper documents, maps and photographs.</p>
    </phystech>
    <acqinfo encodinganalog="3.2.4">
      <p>Rachel Sharp's sister gave the collection to the University and it was subsequently deposited in Robinson Library by John Pendlebury, School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape. Recently acquired for the collection are copies of documents and original items from Patrick Horsbrugh.</p>
    </acqinfo>
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      <p>No accruals are expected</p>
    </accruals>
    <processinfo>
      <p>
        <date>Description originally created by Laura Fernandez Project Archivist 2013.<lb/>Description revised by Jemma Singleton, September 2025.</date>
      </p>
    </processinfo>
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      <p>An AHRC funded project titled 'The Life and Work of Thomas Sharp' catalogued and conserved his personal papers, along with collating other related Sharp Works. Outputs of this project can be found at<lb/><lb/>https://researcharchive.ncl.ac.uk/sharp/index.html.<lb/><lb/>Other works can be located at other institutions around the country, including:<lb/>The Wiltshire and Swindon Record Office: G23/701/33 and G23/701/35PC<lb/>The Landscape Architect's Institutes Library: reference codes unknown<lb/>The West Sussex Record Office: FILE - WESTGATE FIELDS - ref. Hussey/171 - date: 1951-1960;<lb/>The National Archives: HLG 71/778; HLG 71/779<lb/>Birmingham University Special Collections Department: FILE [no title] - ref. WMG/2/Bundle9/7<lb/>Hertfordshire Local Studies and Records Office: B135 //NRA 34633 Osborn; ref. FJO/B135; ref. FJO/E5 POST-WAR RECONSTRUCTION<lb/>Warwick University, Modern Records Centre: MSS.119/3/S/RT/1-86<lb/>Local Studies Department - Kensington Central Library; MSS.119/3/S/RT/1-86<lb/>Durham Record Office: D/X 1132/1; D/X 1132/2 and D/X 1132/3; D/X 1132/4</p>
    </relatedmaterial>
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      <p>Open</p>
    </accessrestrict>
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      <p>UK Copyright Law Applies</p>
    </userestrict>
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        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and Countryside</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1932/1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932-1946</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
        </did>
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          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>File of material, letters, agreements and royalty statements on the publication, including letters between Clough Williams Ellis and his review of Sharp's book</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University press, 1946.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt    </physdesc>
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              <corpname id="atom_82940_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Final Account for the year 1946, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1944.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
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        Receipt    </physdesc>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Final account for the year 1944, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1943.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
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        Receipt    </physdesc>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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            <p>Final Account for the year 1943, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1942.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
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        Receipt    </physdesc>
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            <p>Final Account for the year 1942, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1941.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
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        Receipt    </physdesc>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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            <p>Final Account for the year 1941, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1940.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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            <p>Final Account for the year 1940, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
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        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1939.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82946_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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            <p>Final Account for the year 1939, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1938.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82947_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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            <p>Final Account for the year 1938, relating to the book Town and Countryside by Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89327_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
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            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-publication of Town and Countryside.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
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        Letter    </physdesc>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-publication of the book Town and Countryside.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <persname id="atom_89328_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book Town and Countryside.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir S. Milford, Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82555_actor">Milford, Sir Humphrey Sumner, 1877 - 1952, publisher, editor</persname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the plan to issue the book Town and Countryside in a new Library entitled The Oxford Bookshelf.</p>
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        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1937.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for the book Town and Countryside.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1936.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
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              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
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            <p>Receipt for the book Town and Countryside.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1935.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1935" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1935</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82951_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Oxford University Press, 1934.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89329_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the translation of the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press, 1934.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82952_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the translation into Japanese of the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Kin, 1934.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89330_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the translation into Japanese of the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Kin, 1934.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the translation into Japanese of the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1934.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82953_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt from Oxford University Press for the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Oxford University Press, 1933.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82954_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt from Oxford University Press for the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Thomas Adams.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89331_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Garden City Movement.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Thomas Adams.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Garden City Movement and the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S. Dalton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84216_actor">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A. Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89332_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84217_actor">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.A. Fuller, Assistant Secretary, Society of Authors.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89333_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Society of Authors (Great Britain).</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83710_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.A. Fully, Assistant Secretary, Society of Authors.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83711_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to A. Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932/1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932-1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89334_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Handwritten letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. Tristan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84218_actor">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.M. Rose.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A. Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89335_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Gerard Hopkins, Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82955_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84078_actor">The New Statesman and Nation, 1913 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89336_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Clough Williams-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89337_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter to Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis concerning their dispute.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough Williams Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84369_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter from Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis relating to the book Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft letters from Thomas Sharp and William-Ellis to the Editor The New Statesman.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Draft letters.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89338_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten draft of a letter concerning the dispute between Sharp and William-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89339_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Gerard Hopkins, Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89340_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr Clough Williams-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89341_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from P. Abercrombie to C. Williams-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89342_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough Williams-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84370_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89343_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book Town and Countryside published in The New Statesman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Editor of The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89344_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough Williams-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84371_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84079_actor">The New Statesman and Nation, 1913 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Clough Williams-Ellis</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89345_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84080_actor">The New Statesman and Nation, 1913 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Society of Authors.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83712_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Society of Authors.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83713_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book Town and Countryside published in The New Statesman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Editor of The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89346_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book Town and Countryside published in The New Statesman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to the Editor of The New Statesman and Nation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89347_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book Town and Countryside published in The New Statesman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82956_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89348_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.G. Salter, National Trust.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89349_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Rural England and Garden City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.G. Salter, National Trust.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82686_actor">National Trust (Great Britain), 1895 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S. Scaitle.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.S. Read.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Thomas Sharp and Mr. Clough Williams-Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.T. Thomson.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Town Planning Informal Dinning Club.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82957_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book Town and Countryside on New English Weekly and the Journal of the Town Planning Institute.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Gerald Hopkins, Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89350_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book Town and Countryside on New English Weekly and the Journal of the Town Planning Institute.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. Tristan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84219_actor">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward G. Culpin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.66</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81046_actor">Culpin, Ewart Gladstone, British Labour Party politician, town planner, Chairman of London County Council</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a review of the book Town and Countryside to be published in Town Planning Institute Journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward G. Culpin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.67</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81047_actor">Culpin, Ewart Gladstone, British Labour Party politician, town planner, Chairman of London County Council</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a note to be published in Town Planning Institute Journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Drury.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.68</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.T. Thomson.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.69</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book Town and Countryside and a meeting with planners.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward G. Culpin, Town Planning Institute Journal.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.70</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89351_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a review of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Editor of the Journal, Town and Planning Institute.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.71</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89352_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a review of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Edward G. Culpin, Editor of Town and Planning Institute Journal.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.72</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81048_actor">Culpin, Ewart Gladstone, British Labour Party politician, town planner, Chairman of London County Council</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a note on the Town Planning Institute Journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.73</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84220_actor">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough Williams-Ellis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.74</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84372_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Sharp for the book Town and Countryside sent to Clough Williams-Ellis and Sharp's reply.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to Mr. Reade.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.75</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89353_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the contents of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. W. Drury.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.76</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89354_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Linear City and Garden City Movement.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. W. Drury.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.77</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Linear City and Garden City Movement.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.78</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89355_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book Town and Countryside and the Town Planning Institute Journal issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.79</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84221_actor">Trystan Edwards, Arthur, 1884 - 1973, architectural critic, town planner, amateur cartographer</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book Town and Countryside and the Town Planning Institute Journal issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward G. Culpin, Editor of the Town Planning Institute Journal.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.80</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81049_actor">Culpin, Ewart Gladstone, British Labour Party politician, town planner, Chairman of London County Council</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Edward G. Culpin, Editor of the Town Planning Institute Journal.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.81</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89356_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Town planning Institute Journal review of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Reade</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.82</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1933" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89357_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Reade.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.83</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.84</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82958_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.85</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89358_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.86</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82959_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the advance copy of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.87</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82960_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.88</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89359_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.89</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82961_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Williams.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.90</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1. 91</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82962_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Memorandum of Agreement between Oxford University Press and Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.92</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Memorandum, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82963_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Contract between Oxford University Press and Thomas Sharp for the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.93</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82964_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.94</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82965_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.95</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89360_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning details of the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.96</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82966_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.97</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89361_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.98</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82967_actor">Oxford University Press, c. 1480 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-5cd7a4d5e2eead3e4cf97e7313540784" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford University Press</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to Oxford University Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 1.99</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89362_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Financial agreements, jobs etc.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1945/1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945-1957</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89363_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Agreements for planning consultancy jobs in Oxford, Todmorden, Taunton, Kensington, Kings Lynn, New Sarum, Chichester, St. Andrews, Minehead, Hemel Hempstead, Stockport, West Hartlepool.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract between Oxford City Council and Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82800_actor">Oxford City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d3c5d74d13a6b2d03ba3e71e2e1e26c9" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford City Council.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract between the Mayor and citizens of Oxford and Thomas Sharp to prepare and submit a report on the planning and development of the City of Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Town Clerk, Oxford City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82801_actor">Oxford City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d3c5d74d13a6b2d03ba3e71e2e1e26c9" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford City Council.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the possibility of being contracted as a planning consultant for the City of Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harry Plowman.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89364_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>The content of the letter is about Sharp's offer to continue being a planning consultant in the City of Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Harry Plowman.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82802_actor">Oxford City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d3c5d74d13a6b2d03ba3e71e2e1e26c9" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford City Council.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy for the City of Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Report on the planning consultancy for Oxford City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89365_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>report on meeting with the Town Clerk of Oxford City Council involved with the possibility of contracting T. Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">A proposal for the re-planning of the City of Oxford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945/1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945-1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89366_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Covering letter acompanying a model sent for the Oxford plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Corporation of Todmorden.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89367_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the agreed fee for the preparation of planning scheme and report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract between Sharp and Exeter City Council,1944.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract,2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81295_actor">Exeter City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant for Exeter City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant in Taunton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant between the Mayor and Burgesses of the Borough of Taunton and Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant in Kensington.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82360_actor">Kensington and Chelsea London Borough Council</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant between the Mayor and Councillors of the Royal Borough of Kensington.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant in King's Lynn.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80754_actor">Borough Council of King's Lynn &amp; West Norfolk, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of Planning Consultant between the Mayor and Burgesses of the Borough of King's Lynn and Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant in King's Lynn.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80755_actor">Borough Council of King's Lynn &amp; West Norfolk, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of Planning Consultant with The Mayor Aldermen and Burgesses of the Borough of King's Lynn and Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant in Chichester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80908_actor">Chichester City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of Planning Consultant between the Mayor Aldermen and Citizens of the City of Chichester and Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant at St. Andrews.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83749_actor">St. Andrews Town Council, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Minutes of the agreement between St. Andrews Town Council and Dr. Thomas Sharp, for the appointment as Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant in Minehead.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82560_actor">Minehead Town Council, 1983 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract between the Urban District Council of Minehead and Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Hemel Hempstead Development Corporation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81860_actor">Hemel Hempstead Development Corporation, 1946 - 1982</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's participation in the design of a neighbourhood called Leverstock Green, in Hemel Hempstead.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Hemel Hempstead Development Corporation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81861_actor">Hemel Hempstead Development Corporation, 1946 - 1982</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's participation in the design of a neighbourhood called Leverstock Green, in Hemel Hempstead, fees.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract between Stockport City Council and Dr. Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83777_actor">Stockport Council, 1888 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Agreement contract as to the appointment of Dr. Sharp as Planning Consultant to the County Borough of Stockport.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">West Hartlepool Works Extension.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83737_actor">South Durham Steel and Iron Co., 1860 - 1967</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the landscape treatment of West Hartlepool Works extension in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to South County Steel &amp; Iron Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89368_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to the landscape treatment of West Hartlepool Works extension in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to South County Steel &amp; Iron Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter,3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89369_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to the landscape treatment of West Hartlepool Works extension in Durham; preliminary report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Lyons &amp; Company Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 2.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_91148_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting with The Chairman of J. Lyons &amp; Company Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Failed jobs.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1943/1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943-1956</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89370_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence re. unsuccessful consultancy appointments.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_91648_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Houses at Christmas and Common Latimer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_91646_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Watlington-Housing-Christmas and Common.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_91647_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Watlington- Housing-Christmas Common.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83259_actor">Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a failed job in Minnesota, USA.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89371_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a failed job in Minnesota, USA.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville, Minnesota.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83260_actor">Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter asking Sharp to prepare a report for St. John's Abbey.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.J. Dumas, Director of Works, Agent General Western Australia.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81136_actor">Dumas, Sir Russell John, 1887 - 1975, Director of Works, Agent General Western Australia</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's rejection of the job offer proposed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.J. Dumas, Director of Works, Agent General Western Australia.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89372_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Development Plan for Perth and Environments.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.J. Dumas, Director of Works, Agent General Western Australia.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89373_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's planning consultancy for the "Development Plan for Perth and Environments, Australia".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.J. Dumas, Director of Works, Agent General Western Australia.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81137_actor">Dumas, Sir Russell John, 1887 - 1975, Director of Works, Agent General Western Australia</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's planning consultancy for the "Development Plan for Perth and Environments, Australia".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the University Botanic Garden, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80843_actor">Cambridge University Botanic Garden, 1831 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the project to extend the University Botanic Garden, Cambridge.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.S.R. Gilmour, University Botanic Garden, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81716_actor">Gilmour, John Scott Lennox, 1906 - 1986, botanist</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the project to extend the University Botanic Garden in Cambridge.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Towns Clerk's Office, Port Glasgow.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's inability to act as planning consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Wooler, Towns Clerk, Port Glasgow</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89374_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Town planning consultant for general development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Towns Clerk's Office, Port Glasgow.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Town planning consultant for general development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Rt. Hon. Lewis Silkin, Minister of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89375_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the National Parks Commission.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Town Clerk's Office of Henley on Thames.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a planning consultancy in Henley on Thames.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Town Clerk's Office of Henley on Thames.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the possibility of a planning consultancy position in Henley on Thames.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Town Clerk's Office of Henley on Thames.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89376_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Henley on Thames.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Town Clerk's Office of Henley on Thames.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89377_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a planning consultancy in Henley on Thames.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Town Clerk's Office of Henley on Thames.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Henley on Thames.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Chesterton &amp; Sons.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the New Town of Bracknell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80724_actor">Bishop Auckland Urban District Council, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the appointment of a planning consultant for the Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.W. Blythe, Clerk and Chief Financial Officer, Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89378_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the appointment of a planning consultant for the Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.W. Blythe, Clerk and Chief Financial Officer, Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89379_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the appointment pf a planning consultant for the Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.W. Blythe, Clerk and Chief Financial Officer, Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_80743_actor">Blythe, R.W., unknown dates, Clerk and Chief Financial Officer of the Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting for the planning consultancy issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.W. Blythe, Clerk and Chief Financial Officer, Urban District Council of Bishop Auckland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80725_actor">Bishop Auckland Urban District Council, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy appointment.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Town Clerk, Slough City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83699_actor">Slough Borough Council, 1863 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Reconstruction Plan for Slough.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Town Clerk, Slough City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83700_actor">Slough Borough Council, 1863 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Reconstruction Plan for Slough.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.E.C. Austin, Town Clerk of St. Pancras.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89380_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Appointment of Town Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Metropolitan Borough of Saint Pancras.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83754_actor">St Pancras Railway Station, 1868 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-58fd52c4d28a1dc4e38f0f271310946b" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>St. Pancras (London, England).</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled; Appointment of Town Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83000_actor">Paynes &amp; Paynes Solicitors, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89381_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's recommendation of different consultants for Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83001_actor">Paynes &amp; Paynes Solicitors, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89382_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83002_actor">Paynes &amp; Paynes Solicitors, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89383_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Paynes solicitors, Hull.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83003_actor">Paynes &amp; Paynes Solicitors, unknown dates</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Hull.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.C. Rennie, Town Clerk Deputy, Aberdeen.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89384_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Appointment of Town Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Town Clerk Deputy, Aberdeen.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Appointment of Town Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Ernest D. Townsend, Town Clerk, Worthing.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89385_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp declines a planning consultancy at Worthing.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Ernest D. Townsend, Town Clerk, Worthing.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84424_actor">Worthing Rural District Council, 1933 - 1974</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-development plan for Worthing.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82621_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Greater London Plan proposed Satellite at Stevenage.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Seaton Urban District Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83293_actor">Seaton Urban District Council</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy for Seaton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.F. Greenwood, Town Clerk, Leamington Spa.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89386_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the development plan of Leamington Spa.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.F. Greenwood, Town Clerk, Leamington Spa.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89387_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy for Leamington Spa.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.F. Greenwood, Town Clerk, Leamington Spa.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Leamington Spa Post War Development.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Leonard Elmhirst.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89388_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy of Worsborough and Barnsley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Elmhirst.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81276_actor">Elmhirst, Leonard Knight, 1893 - 1974, philanthropist, agronomist</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's visit to Worsborough and Barnsley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Elmhirst.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81277_actor">Elmhirst, Leonard Knight, 1893 - 1974, philanthropist, agronomist</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting Sharp's fees for the planning consultancy in Urban District of Worsborough Dale.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Leonard K. Elmhirst.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89389_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a planning consultancy in Totnes.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard K. Elmhirst.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81278_actor">Elmhirst, Leonard Knight, 1893 - 1974, philanthropist, agronomist</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a planning consultancy in Totnes, Devon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Holford, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82622_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy in Seaton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Chairman of the Hampshire Advisory Planning Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81828_actor">Hampshire County Council</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's planning advice at Hampshire.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Ladmore, Borough Engineer, Torquay.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89390_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp declines a planning consultancy at Torquay.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Herbert A. Hield, Town Clerk and Solicitor, Torquay.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 3.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84188_actor">Torbay Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Future planning of parts of Torquay.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of museum proposal, Market Hill (no. 10) and scaled down plans of Rugby Central Area Re-development.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 4</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1961/1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961-1962</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph and plans.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89391_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Photograph of museum proposal, Market Hill (no. 10) and scaled down plans of Rugby Central Area Re-development, 1962.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Borough of Rugby.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 4.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Five plans: Central Area re-development Scale. 1.500, First stage Scale. 1.100, Second stage Scale. 1.100, Independent Stages Scale 1.100, Proposed re-development Scale. 1.1250.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89392_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Borough of Rugby Central Area re-development Plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Museum proposed in Market Hill no. 10.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 4.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960/1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph, A4 format.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84328_actor">Weddle, Arnold E., unknown dates</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Photograph of Museum proposed in Market Hill no. 10.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Abstracted correspondence.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1936/1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936-1956</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 files.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89393_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Selected correspondence re. journal articles, talks, films, etc., letters re. preservation of Coxhoe Hall, Durham, letters from other academics and professionals and general planning correspondence.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Selected general correspondence 1936-1943.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936/1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936-1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89394_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted correspondence 1936-1943.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from N.L. Carrington, Country Life Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80864_actor">Carrington, Noel Lewis, 1895 - 1989, book designer, editor, publisher</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the possibility of Sharp's collaboration with Country Life books.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Richards.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83823_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking Sharp to write a short article for Architectural Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Richards, Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89395_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a short article for the journal and also Sharp's hope of part time job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Noel Carrington, Country Life.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89396_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Country Life review of the book: English Panorama. Sharp asks as well for a part time job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.Hastings, Architects' Journal.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80503_actor">Architects' Journal</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning planning theories.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to C. Hastings, Architects' Journal.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89397_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an article for Architect's Journal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Noel Carrington, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80865_actor">Carrington, Noel Lewis, 1895 - 1989, book designer, editor, publisher</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the offer to write a book entitled: The City.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Noel Carrington, Country Life.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89398_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp declines the invitation to write a book entitled: The City.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C. Hastings, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84010_actor">The Architectural Review.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the possibility of writing a column for the Architect's Journal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Noel Carrington, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80866_actor">Carrington, Noel Lewis, 1895 - 1989, book designer, editor, publisher</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the possibility of writing a book entitled: The City.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Noel Carrington, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80867_actor">Carrington, Noel Lewis, 1895 - 1989, book designer, editor, publisher</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London and the possibility of recording a film about planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Ruth Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in Wiltshire.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.G.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in Park Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Bernard J. Collins, Planning Officer, Winchester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Bernard J. Collins congratulates Sharp on his writings about segregation.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Committee for Spanish Medical Aid.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his contribution to the Committee for Spanish Medical Aid.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William A. Robson, School of Economics and Political Science, University of London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84237_actor">University of London, 1836 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter congratulating Sharp on his book Town and Countryside and asking him about Haussmann planning in Paris.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to William A. Robson, School of Economics and Political Science, University of London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89399_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Haussman's planning in Paris.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Selected general correspondence 1939-1940.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1939/1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939-1940</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89400_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted correspondence 1939-1940.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note from Ruth Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note. On the other side of the document is printed propaganda for the Trade Union Congress.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note about the Second World War.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84231_actor">University of Durham, 1832 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the University of Durham's recommendation the Sharp be admitted as candidate for the degree of M.A. by submitting a thesis.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.L.P. Jowitt, The Georgian Group, Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84147_actor">The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the protection of Coxhoe Hall, Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.L.P. Jowitt, The Georgian Group, Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89401_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the protection of Coxhoe Hall, Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.L.P. Jowitt, The Georgian Group, Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84148_actor">The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the protection of Coxhoe Hall, Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Fabian Society.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81386_actor">Fabian Society, 1884</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning changes to Sharp's conference.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donal Boyd, British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89402_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a broadcast on Wensleydale greens theme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donal Boyd, British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80626_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a broadcast on Wensleydale greens theme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donal Boyd, British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80627_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a broadcast on Wensleydale greens theme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.H.J. Mills, British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80628_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Contract with The British Broadcasting Corporation for a broadcast on Village Greens theme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82771_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the terraced houses and Welwyn Garden City.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89403_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to F.J. Osborn.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82772_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning garden cities, size of towns, standards of density and planning in general.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82773_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany Osborn's article.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89404_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the National Planning Front.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82774_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Welwyn Garden City and garden city movement.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.W. Barr, Secretary to the Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80519_actor">Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning USSR Tour.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.V. Penn, Assistant Secretary to the Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80520_actor">Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning USSR Tour.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.W. Barr, Secretary to the Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80521_actor">Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning USSR Tour and Sharp's decision not to participate.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.W. Barr, Secretary to the Association of Architects Surveyors and Technical Assistants.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89405_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning USSR Tour and Sharp's passport.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Prospect Tours.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89406_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter acknowledging receipt of passport.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84232_actor">University of Durham, 1832 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the title of the thesis for the degree of M.A.: "Planning for living: the aims and principles of town and country living".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89407_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter sent with thesis for the degree of M.A.: "Planning for living: the aims and principles of town and country living".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to William Holford Consulting Architects Department.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89408_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks his colleague for a position.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Holford, Consulting Architect's Department.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81899_actor">Holford, William Graham, 1907-1975, Baron Holford, architect</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's thesis.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Taylor Peddie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter expressing J. Taylor Peddie's interest in working with Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Taylor Peddie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89409_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to J. Taylor Peddie.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.H. Powell, Features Editor of The Star.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84161_actor">The Star</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>The Editor asks Sharp to write an article on the topic: How I would rebuild London? Assuming the proportion of bombing expected.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to P.H. Powell, Features Editor of The Star.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89410_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany three articles sent to P.H. Powell, Features Editor of The Star.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.H. Powell, Features Editor of The Star.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84162_actor">The Star</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking the three articles received.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Allen Lane, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89411_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp proposes a book about the reconstruction of the country after the war. His suggested title is: "When the peace comes" and the index and contents it should have.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Allen Lane, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83005_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book entitled: When peace comes, with the suggestion of being an anonymous book as the Science in War collection.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Allen Lane, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89412_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book entitled: When peace comes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83006_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book entitled: When peace comes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89413_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed content of the book entitled: When the peace comes. Sharp propose an alternative scheme and content of the book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83007_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed contents for the book entitled: When the peace comes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89414_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the possible contributors to the book entitled: When the peace comes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Allen Lane, Penguin Books.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89415_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks the Editor if he can propose the book to another Editorial, because he has not heard from them in a long time. He asks as well how the sales of Town Planning are going.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Woolf, The Political Quarterly Editorial.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84418_actor">Woolf, Leonard Sidney, 1880 - 1969,  political theorist, author, publisher, civil servant</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>The Editor asks Sharp to write an article about the problems of reconstruction.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Christopher Hussey, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80977_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>The Editor asks Sharp for an article about the reconstruction plan for London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Christopher Hussey, Country Life Editor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89416_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an article on the reconstruction of London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Christopher Hussey, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80978_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an article on the reconstruction of London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript letter to Christopher Hussey, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89417_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany the article sent to Country Life Editor about the reconstruction of London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P. H. Should, Country Life Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.2.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80979_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter expressing thanks for Sharp's contribution with to Country Life.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Selected general correspondence 1941-1943.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1941/1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941-1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89418_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted correspondence 1941-1943.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Wood, The Political Quarterly Ed.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84419_actor">Woolf, Leonard Sidney, 1880 - 1969,  political theorist, author, publisher, civil servant</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>The Editor reminds the author about an article he asked to write about Lord Reith.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.A. Robson, The Political Quarterly Ed.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84128_actor">The Political Quarterly</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>This is confidential letter to alert Sharp about the possible contents of his new article on Lord Reith.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard from Leonard Wood, The Political Quarterly Ed.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84420_actor">Woolf, Leonard Sidney, 1880 - 1969,  political theorist, author, publisher, civil servant</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Postcard expressing thanks for Sharp's article.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Wood, The Political Quarterly Ed.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84421_actor">Woolf, Leonard Sidney, 1880 - 1969,  political theorist, author, publisher, civil servant</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter apologising to Sharp for the fee attached to his expenses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mary Hamilton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's script.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript letter to Edward J. Carter, Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89419_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a script for a documentary film on reconstruction.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Jack Beddington, Films Division, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89420_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a script for a documentary film on reconstruction.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward Carter, Librarian, Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83217_actor">Royal Institute of British Architects</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the scenario for planning documentary sent to him, and some comments about it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward Carter, Librarian of the Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83218_actor">Royal Institute of British Architects</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copies of the scenario and some alterations in the original text.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.F.B. Houston.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which G.F.B. Houston asks Sharp if he wants to collaborate on an article about the New World Post-war.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Telegram from Jeane.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Personal telegram expressing Christmas greetings.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Ralph Bond, The Strand Film Company Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80750_actor">Bond, Ralph, 1904 - 1989, film - maker</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee suggested for Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.B. Parkes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the scheme for the new village submmitted by Sharp, and the discussion of some aspects of it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.B. Parkes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the model of the city for the film and the discussion of some aspects of it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of letter to C.B. Parkes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89421_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the model of the city and the discussion of some aspects of it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.B. Parkes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the model of the city: film and exhibitions.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.B. Parkes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89422_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the model of the city and the final densities proposed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.B. Parkes, Estate Office, Bourneville.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which C.B. Parker asks Sharp for a copy of the plan sent to Bond.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.B. Parkes, Estate Office, Bourneville.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89423_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the construction of the model of the city.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.B. Parkes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the satellite town designed and the question about letting some parts of its plans for educational works.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter sent to P.J. Lucas from the British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89424_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the production of a film about planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.J. Lucas from the British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80794_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the production of a film about planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a script.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Scenario, 10 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89425_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Scenario for a documentary on planning in England.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edgar H. Anstey, Film Centre Limited.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80494_actor">Anstey, Edgar, 1907 - 1987, documentary film-maker</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the scenario and the fee for doing this work.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Lucas, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89326_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the discussions on the documentary.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harden.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89427_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the discussions on the documentary.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Anstey.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89428_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the discussions on the script for the planning documentary.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.J. Lucas, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80795_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the script of the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edgar H. Anstey, Film Centre Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80495_actor">Anstey, Edgar, 1907 - 1987, documentary film-maker</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the discussions on the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.J. Lucas, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80796_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting between Sharp and Colonel Bywater on the film issue.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the South Metropolitan gas company, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80797_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter returning the copy of the scenario "Building Britain".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Colonel F.J. Bywater, Executive Chairman, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80798_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's contribution to the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Colonel F.J. Bywater, Executive Chairman, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89429_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's contribution to the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Colonel F.J. Bywater, Executive Chairman, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80799_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's contribution to the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Col. F.J. Bywater the Executive Chairman of the British Commercial Gas Association</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89430_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's contribution to the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Colonel Bywater, South Metropolitan gas company, The British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80800_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Post War Planning film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Colonel Bywater, South metropolitan gas company from The British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80801_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Post War Planning film and Sharp's decision not to collaborate in it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.J. Lucas, British Commercial Gas Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80802_actor">British Commercial Gas Association, 1911 - 1946</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking Sharp to join the production of the film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.B.J.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter inviting Sharp to collaborate on the periodical: Rhyme and Reason.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edwin C. Fairchild, Cooperative Permanent Building Society.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80925_actor">Co-operative Permanent Building Society</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Edwin C. Fairchild asks Sharp to collaborate on one the pamphlets he is publishing about the post-war reconstruction.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Edwin C. Fairchild, Cooperative Permanent Building Society.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89431_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Response to the invitation to collaborate with Edwin C. Fairchild on a pamphlet on the post-war reconstruction.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edwin. C. Fairchild, Cooperative permanent Building Society.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80926_actor">Co-operative Permanent Building Society</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's declination to collaborate on the series: Design Britain.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.G. Chandler, Physician, St. Bartholomew's Hospital.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80882_actor">Chandler, Frederick George, 1885 - 1942, physician</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to certify Sharp's illness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83282_actor">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for Sharp's assistance with a meeting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Ian MacAlister, Secretary to the Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82466_actor">MacAlister, Sir Ian, 1878 - 1957, Secretary of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) (1908–1943)</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the decision of not publish one of Sharp's articles due to criticism. The letter has attached a personal note and a drawing about this censorship.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Redmayne, Cadbury Brothers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80833_actor">Cadbury</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the design of a panel for the "city model" exhibition.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Redmayne, Cadbury Brothers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80834_actor">Cadbury</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the exhibition of the model of the satellite town in Preston.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Redmayne, Cadbury Brothers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89432_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's "city model" exhibited in Preston, and some aspects of the exhibition with which he was disappointed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Holmes, Crown Film Unit, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81913_actor">Holmes, J.B., unknown dates, Crown Film Unit, Ministry of Information.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a script sent to J.B. Holmes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Noel Carrington.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80868_actor">Carrington, Noel Lewis, 1895 - 1989, book designer, editor, publisher</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a script sent to Noel Carrington.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Holmes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89433_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a script for a town and country planning film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Secretary Executive Committee, Town and Country Planning Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89434_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the exhibition of the model of the city and the criticism of it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.G. Osborn, Town and Country Planning Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82775_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp about the model of the city.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Elizabeth McAllister.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89435_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning McAllister's criticism of the model exhibited.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Elizabeth McAllister, Town and Country Planning Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82513_actor">McAllister, Elisabeth, unknown dates, Town and Country Planning Association.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning McAllister's criticism of the "city model exhibited.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to F.J. Osborn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89436_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Town and Country Planning Association criticism of the "city model" exhibited.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.J. Osborn, Town and Country Planning Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82776_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Town and Country Planning Association criticism of the "city model" exhibited.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.J. Osborn, Town and Country Planning Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5. 3.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82777_actor">Osborn, Sir Frederic James, 1885–1978, member of the UK Garden city movement, chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Town and Country Planning Association criticism of the "city model" exhibited.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of the script for: When we build again.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.3.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89437_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Script presenting the "Model of a Town" used for the film "When We Build Again".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Selected general correspondence 1944-1949.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944/1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944-1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89438_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted correspondence 1944-1949.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.G.V. Vaughan, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84256_actor">Vaughan, W.G.V., unknown dates, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter inviting Sharp to collaborate on a pamphlet entitled "British cities in Wartime".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.G.V. Vaughan, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89439_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the details of Sharp's collaboration on the pamphlet entitled: British Cities in Wartime.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.G.V. Vaughan, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84257_actor">Vaughan, W.G.V., unknown dates, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the pamphlet entitled: British Cities in Wartime.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.G.V. Vaughan, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89440_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's inability to undertake the collaboration with the pamphlet.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.G.V. Vaughan, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84258_actor">Vaughan, W.G.V., unknown dates, Director, General Production Division, Ministry of Information</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning pamphlet entitled: British Cities in Wartime and Sharp's suggestion of Elizabeth Denby as his substitute.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Blaise Gillie, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81710_actor">Gillie, Blaise, unknown dates, Ministry of Town and Country Planning</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking for full time senior assistant, who is in Italy because of war, called Lt.D.W. Roberts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.R. Wagner, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84285_actor">Wagner, A.R., unknown dates, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lt.D.W. Roberts in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evelyn C. Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking for Sharp's advice.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evelyn C. Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89441_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Evelyn C. Sharp concerning Ministry staff.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jacquetta Hawkes, Department of Intelligence and Public relations, Ministry of Education.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81856_actor">Hawkes, Jacquetta, 1910 - 1996, archaeologist, writer</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Miss Mander's film.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80420_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Abercrombie's salary.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Muriel Harris.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter on three different topics: asking Sharp to include Elspeth Buxton as an assistant in Oxford plan, MOI in America wanted a copy of Sharp's Plan for Durham, and related to salary for planning consultants.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Muriel Harris.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89442_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Muriel Harris.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Wilhem Krner, Licensed Architect, Engineer, Town and Country Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82387_actor">Krner, Wilhem, unknown dates, architect, engineer, town and country planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Krner's interest in the books published for Sharp. Translation attached.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Wilhem Krner, Licensed Architect, Engineer, Town and Country Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89443_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Krner's interest in the books published by Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80421_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning remuneration for planning consultancies.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89444_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the discussion with the Town Planning Institute on the remuneration of planning consultants.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note about correspondence with war-prisoners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note about correspondence with the Enemy War-Prisoners in UK Camps.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George Nemes, registered architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Neme's interest in meeting Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Nikolaus Pevsner, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83116_actor">Pevsner, Sir Nikolaus Bernhard Leon, 1902 - 1983, art historian, architectural historian</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking Sharp for an article on visual planning and precinct planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Leonard Woolf, The Political Quarterly.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89445_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp declines to write an article for The Political Quarterly.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Woolf, The Political Quarterly.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84422_actor">Woolf, Leonard Sidney, 1880 - 1969,  political theorist, author, publisher, civil servant</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking Sharp to write an article about the present position of Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Trystan Edwards.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89446_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to thank Edwards.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting with Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83283_actor">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting with Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Ian A. Richard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a Saxon church in Exeter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Muriel Harris.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter inviting Sharp for lunch and tea at Moreton-in-Marsh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Muriel Harris.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks following Sharp's visit.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80422_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the remuneration for planning consultancies.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sam.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the city plan of Greater London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83284_actor">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Scott congratulates Sharp on his appointment as consultant in Oxford and some personal notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Mrs. Pinney.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84405_actor">Wood, John G. Barrington, unknown dates</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning accommodation in Oxford College.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Lord Reith, Treasury Chambers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83184_actor">Reith, John Charles Walsham, 1889 - 1971, 1st Baron Reith</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter of a report sent to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Lord Reith.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89447_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Lord Reith's on the receipt of the report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F. Laffite.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84182_actor">Times Publishing Company, 1904 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London to discuss about the news on planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to F. Laffite.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89448_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the treatment of planning news.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Lord Reith.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89449_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the report on the New Towns Committee.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Elton, Director of Lectures Department of the British Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81283_actor">Elton, Leonard, unknown dates, Director of Lectures Department of the British Council</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Elton asks Sharp to participate in some lectures about Town Planning in Norway and Finland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Maud A.M. White.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning planning and policies.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Humphrey Pallington.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to invite Sharp to spend some holidays with him.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.R. Pollitzer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83137_actor">Pollitzer, H. R., unknown dates, Ministry of Town and Country Planning</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Committee on Qualifications of Planners.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Peggy Barker, The British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80629_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter inviting Sharp to participate in a broadcast about planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Thomas Houghton, County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81922_actor">Houghton, Thomas, dates unknown, Berkshire County Planning Officer</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Basset discussion.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Peggy Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80630_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast discussion.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Thomas Houghton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89450_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89451_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Thomas Houghton, Berkshire County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81923_actor">Houghton, Thomas, dates unknown, Berkshire County Planning Officer</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Peggy Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80631_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Thomas Houghton, Berkshire County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89452_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a visit to Letcombe Bassett for the broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Peggy Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80632_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Peggy Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89453_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the script for Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Peggy Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89454_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast, asking for a draft of the opening speech.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Ronald Boswell, Talks Booking Manager, The British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80633_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast fees for speakers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Ronald Boswell, Talks Booking Manager, The British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89455_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast fees.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89456_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter of Sharp's script for Letcombe Bassett broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Ronald Boswell, Talks Booking Manager, The British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80634_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Bassett broadcast fees.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letcombe Basset Broadcast. Draft of opening statement by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89457_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letcombe Basset Broadcast. Draft of opening statement by Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard from John Betjeman.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80714_actor">Betjeman, Sir John, 1906-1984, Knight, poet, writer on architecture, broadcaster</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note in response to Sharp's speech for Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's speech in Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Peggy Barker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80635_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's disappointment with Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Thomas Houghton, Berkshire County Planner Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81924_actor">Houghton, Thomas, dates unknown, Berkshire County Planning Officer</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Boyd, Talks Department The British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80636_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donald Boyd, Talks Department The British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89458_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Richards, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89459_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the review of Liverpool Cathedral surroundings by students, and Newcastle planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.C. Yorke, Junior Bursar, New College, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89460_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's use of Senior Common Room in Oxford whilst he was a planning consultant.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Peacock &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89461_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's not satisfaction with the clothes made for him.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from CAR. Crosland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Chairman of the West Midland Group, University of Birmingham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.69</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany the book entitled: Conurbation. Thanking Sharp for his addition relating to Catshill.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.70</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83219_actor">Royal Institute of British Architects</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning R.I.B.A. intention to offer Sharp a Distinction in Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.71</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89462_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning R.I.B.A. intention to offer Sharp a Distinction in Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.W. Livingstone, University of Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.72</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82427_actor">Livingston, Richard Winn, 1880-1960, British classical scholar and educationist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting with Sharp on 13 October 1946.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur C. Holden, Princeton University.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.73</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81893_actor">Holden, Arthur Cort, 1890-1993, Architect, planner and poet.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a conference on planning to be held in Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie and Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.74</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81894_actor">Holden, Arthur Cort, 1890-1993, Architect, planner and poet.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a conference on planning to be held in Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.75</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89463_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a conference on planning at Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.76</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89464_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a conference on planning at Princeton University and the travel expenses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Arthur C. Holden, University of Princeton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.77</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89465_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a conference on planning at Princeton University and the travel expenses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.78</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80423_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the travel expenses for conference on planning at Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur C. Holden, Princeton University.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.79</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81895_actor">Holden, Arthur Cort, 1890-1993, Architect, planner and poet.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning travel expenses for the conference on planning at Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.80</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89466_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the travel expenses for the conference on planning at Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kenneth S. Dodd, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.81</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89467_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Schofield's job as inspector.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R. Douglas Paul, Oldham Press Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.82</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82998_actor">Paul, R. Douglas, Editor of Oldhams Press Ltd c. 1940s.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-6887d1a387bffbd7761b8402cd94780f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>R. Douglas Paul, Odhams Press Ltd.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which the Editor asks for Sharp's contribution to a chapter on Durham in a tourist guide book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur E. Fox, Assistant to President Dr H. Dodds Princeton Univeristy</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.83</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81661_actor">Fox, Arthur E., d.1957.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the conference at Princeton University.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Arthur E. Fox, University of Princeton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.84</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89468_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's not to attend the conference in Princeton.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Arthur C. Holden, University of Princeton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.85</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89469_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's not to attend the conference in Princeton.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur E. Fox, University of Princeton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.86</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81662_actor">Fox, Arthur E., d.1957.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's not to attend the conference in Princeton.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur C. Holden, University of Princeton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.87</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81896_actor">Holden, Arthur Cort, 1890-1993, Architect, planner and poet.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's not to attend the conference in Princeton.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evelyn Sharp, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.88</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89472_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the inclusion of Mrs. Hugh Dalton on the Advisory Committee for New Towns of the Ministry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Royal Institute of British Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.89</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83220_actor">Royal Institute of British Architects</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's decision not to accept the Distinction.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the West Midland Group of Post-War reconstruction and planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.4.90</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91146_actor">West Midland Group on Post-War Reconstruction and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Catshill scheme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Selected general correspondence, 1949.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89470_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted correspondence, 1949.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. Robin.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Letcombe Basset broadcast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Boris Ford, Chief Editor, The Bureau of Current Affairs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89471_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Rachel Morrison's pamphlet on Town and Country Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89473_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Cadbury book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Anthony Dale, Secretary to The Regency Society of Brighton and Hove.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83172_actor">Regency Society of Brighton and Hove.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's report on Chichester.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Thomas Sheepshanks, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83632_actor">Sheepshanks, Sir Thomas Herbert, 1895-1964, British Civil Servant.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sheepshanks' interest in the reports and works of Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Sheepshanks, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89474_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London with Sheepshanks.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Thomas Sheepshanks, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83633_actor">Sheepshanks, Sir Thomas Herbert, 1895-1964, British Civil Servant.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Wilson, Senior Treasurer, University College, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89475_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a boat house by the river in Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr John Wilson, Senior Treasurer, University College, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a boat house by the river in Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from James Hunter Blair.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81934_actor">Hunter Blair, James, 1926-2004, Scottish landowner and historic preservationist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Scottish forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to James Hunter Blair.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89476_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning forestry villages in Scotland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from James Hunter Blair.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81935_actor">Hunter Blair, James, 1926-2004, Scottish landowner and historic preservationist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning forestry villages in Scotland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Denis Winston, Department of Town and Country Planning, The University of Sydney, New South Wales.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84399_actor">Winston, Arthur Denis, 1908-1980, Architect and Town Planner, First Professor of Town Planning at the University of Sydney.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter congratulating Sharp on his victory in connection with the sitting of the gas works at Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Denis Winston, Department of Town and Country Planning, The University of Sydney, New South Wales.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89477_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Winston's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89478_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's proposed series of text books entitled: The Planners Library.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Richards, Editor, The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89479_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Exeter plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80487_actor">Angus, William Stephenson, 1899-1982, Historian.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning County planning scheme for Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80488_actor">Angus, William Stephenson, 1899-1982, Historian.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright house in Byers Green and the Observatory Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89480_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright house in Byers Green and the Observatory Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's absence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80489_actor">Angus, William Stephenson, 1899-1982, Historian.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the County Planning Scheme for Byers Green.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80490_actor">Angus, William Stephenson, 1899-1982, Historian.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright's house and Westerton Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's absence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89481_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Westerton Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80491_actor">Angus, William Stephenson, 1899-1982, Historian.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright's house and Observatory Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80492_actor">Angus, William Stephenson, 1899-1982, Historian.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright's house and tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89482_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright's house and Observatory Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Angus, University of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Thomas Sharp absence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B.D. Storey, Town Clerk, Norwich.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89483_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Norwich City Plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.J. Spicer, The Secretary, The Clarendon Press, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84028_actor">The Clarendon Press, Oxford.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking for Sharp's advice on a typescript book by Professor T.H. Hughes on the History of Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to P.J. Spicer, The Secretary, The Clarendon Press, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89484_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to the Editor concerning Professor T.H. Hughes' typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.G. Griffin, General Secretary, The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84035_actor">The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's advice on Shincliffe Village, near Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.G. Griffin, General Secretary, The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89485_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's advice on Shincliffe Village, near Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.G. Griffin, General Secretary, The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89486_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's advice on Shincliffe Village, near Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.G. Griffin, General Secretary, The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89487_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's advice on Shincliffe Village, near Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.J. Spicer, The Secretary, The Clarendon Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89491_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's report on Hughes' manuscript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.G. Griffin, General Secretary, The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84036_actor">The Council for the Preservation of Rural England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his advice on Shincliffe, near Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.H. Beattie, Solicitor and Town Clerk, Borough of Penzance.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: re-development of Newlyn.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.H. Beattie, Solicitor and Town Clerk, Borough of Penzance.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89488_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the re-development of Newlyn.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Richard Livingston, Oxford Preservation Trust.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89489_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the landscape between Iffley Road and the river at Oxford City.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Richard Livingston, Oxford Preservation Trust.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 5.5.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82428_actor">Livingston, Richard Winn, 1880-1960, British classical scholar and educationist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the landscape between Iffley Road and the river in Oxford City.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan for Port Eynon and Horton.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 6</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89490_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Copy of development plan for Port Eynon and Horton, Gower Peninsular, with Press cutting and illustration.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Development Plan of Port Eynon and Horton by Thomas Sharp, 1964.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 6.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        A3. 21 pages. Including six figures of the plan.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89492_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Development Plan for Port Eynon and Horton by Thomas Sharp, 1964.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Proposed village development, Port-Eynon and Horton by Thomas Sharp. Drawing by John Warren.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 6.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report and drawing    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89493_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Proposed village development, Port-Eynon and Horton by Thomas Sharp. Drawing by John Warren.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting, Evening Post, relating to the Development of Port-Eynon and Horton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 6.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Press cutting.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Three Press cutting concerning the Development of Port-Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Cambridge.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1951/1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951-52, 1964</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89495_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Plans and notes re. the planting of grounds at St. John’s College, Cambridge, 1951-2 and re-development of new museum site, University of Cambridge, with notes, 1964.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Report St. John's College: Cambridge. Re-planting of Grounds, 1951-1952; Notes.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951/1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951-1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89494_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Report St. John's College: Cambridge. Re-planting of Grounds, 1951-1952; Notes.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the plan: St. John's College, Cambridge. The present layout and planting of the grounds.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89496_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>St. John's College, Cambridge. The present layout and planting of the grounds.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the plan: St. John's College, Cambridge. esign for re-planning and replanting.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89497_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>St. John's College, Cambridge. Design for re-planning and re-planting.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Proof of evidence of the Re-development of the New Museums Site, University of Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 8 pages. Plus one about Modelscope.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89498_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Proof of evidence for the Re-development of the New Museums Site, University of Cambridge. Including an informational document about Modelscope.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.L. Luarde, Planning officer, Cambridgeshire County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80849_actor">Cambridgeshire County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's implications for the re-development of the Museum of Cambridge.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">report on New Museum Site Cambridge, Harold Pagh and Denis Lasdun.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Proof of evidence on the behalf of the University of Cambridge at the Public Enquiry concerning the outline town planning application for Stage I of the re-development of the New Museums Site, Cambridge.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 7.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951/1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951-1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89499_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Plan of present layout of part of the city of Cambridge, with the design of a new road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Borough of Rugby Central Area Re-Planning</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 8</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file, 46 pages.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89500_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>report on Rugby Central Area.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inquiry to the development plan for the City of Oxford.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 9</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 files: 1st 29 pages, 2nd 61 pages, 3rd 55 pages, 4th 43 pages, 5th 67 pages, 6th 60 pages, 12th 84 pages, 13th 81 pages, 14th 76 pages.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89501_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Public Inquiry into proposals for alterations or additions to development plan for the City of Oxford and application for a hotel on land at Folly Bridge, Oxford. File numbers 1-6; 12-14.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Loose items; Crawley, Cambridge, Woolworths: Guilford, India, Vienna, Civic Trust.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1949/1981" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949-1981</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 files    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89502_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Crawley, Cambridge, Woolworths: Guilford, India, Vienna, Civic Trust, loose items.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence concerning the application of Thomas Sharp and Sir Patrick Abercrombie to design the New Capital of East Punjab, India.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949/1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949-1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89503_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence concerning the application of Thomas Sharp and Sir Patrick Abercrombie to design the New Capital of East Punjab, India.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.E. the High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89504_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the planning of a New Capital of East Punja, and the final decision not to include Sharp and Abercrombie in the work .</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.E. the High Commissioner for India, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82745_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the planning of a New Capital of East Punja, and the final decision of not including Sharp and Abercrombie in the work .</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Assistant Secretary to the High Commissioner for India, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82746_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the absence of Mr. Varma.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Assistant Secretary to the High Commisioner for India, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82747_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting between Mr. P.L. Varma, Abercrombie and Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89505_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning different correspondences with Chatterjee and P. C. Bhandari.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89506_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.N. Chatterjee.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89507_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.N. Chatterjee, Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain)</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82748_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the scheme for the construction of the capital of the Province of East Punjab, and the revision of all development projects and plans in India.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80424_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from James W.R. Adams.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80431_actor">Adams, James W.R., d.1969, President of the Town Planning Institute.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to James W.R. Adams.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89508_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89509_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job and correspondence with Potter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80425_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job and the size of it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes of costings for the India job.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89510_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Notes about costing the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Patrick Abercrombie.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80426_actor">Abercrombie, Sir Leslie Patrick, 1879-1957, Knight, architect, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning India job and Potter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to the General Office, The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82749_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the reception of Sharp's documentation.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89511_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a letter concerning the summary of qualifications, works and published books of Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89512_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a letter concerning a meeting on 21st of July.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to James W.E. Adams, Planning Department, Kent.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89513_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a letter concerning the meeting on 25th of July.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89514_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a letter concerning the meeting on 25th of July.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to James W.R. Adams, County Planning Officer, Kent.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89515_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a letter concerning the meeting with The High Commissioner for India.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82750_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a letter concerning the meeting with The High Commissioner for India.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Town Planning Institute.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84190_actor">Town Planning Institute.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee for the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from James W.R. Adams.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80432_actor">Adams, James W.R., d.1969, President of the Town Planning Institute.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee for the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82751_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the terms of the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89516_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes about costings.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89517_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Notes about costing the India job.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89518_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the site proposed for the new capital of the East Punjab.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Marlow, Secretary to the High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82752_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed sites and plans for the new capital of the East Punjab.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Office of the High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82753_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment of having received Sharp's letter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89519_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp interest in India job..</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary, General Department of The High Commissioner for India.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.1.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82754_actor">Office of the High Commissioner for India (Great Britain).</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the India job..</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ill-Starred Astronomer depicted by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1940/1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1940s]</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Play, 24 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89520_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Typescript script of a play entitled ll-Starred Astronomer, inspired by the life of Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham Consultancy, Inquiry into a proposal for a Power Station in Durham, Oxford Gas Works, Committee on Qualifications of Planners, Dartmoor Prison.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943/1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943-1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89521_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence re. Durham City planning consultant post, Inquiry into a proposal for a Power Station in Durham, Oxford Gas Works, Committee on Qualifications of Planners, Dartmoor Prison.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inquiry into a proposal to erect a power station at Kepier, Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 20 pages with a little note tipped in at the end of the script.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89522_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Typescript Inquiry into a proposal to erect a power station at Kepier, Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Piccadilly Circus: Suggested 2-Level Plan, Vehicle Level and Pedestrian level. Durham by Thomas Sharp planning consultant.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Scale. 1: 1250.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89523_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of Piccadilly Circus: Suggested 2-Level Plan, Vehicle Level and Pedestrian level. Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Committee on Qualifications of Planners Notes in evidence by Dr. Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89524_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Committee on Qualifications of Planners. Report on the new position and functions of the planners on 1947 Act about planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Oxford Gas Works Extension Inquiry.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89525_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Oxford Gas Works Extension Inquiry, List of evidence, 1948.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of the Inquiry by the Ministry of Transport into the proposed central road and bridges: City of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        14 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89526_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Typescript copy of the Inquiry by the Ministry of Transport into the proposed central road and bridges: City of Durham. Contents: Qualifications, Grounds of Objection, Function of the road, Traffic consideration, Bus station, Car park, Amenities, Bridges, A possible alternative, Elvet Claypath, Claypath North Road, Elvet Gilesgate, Inevitability, Western further alternative.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence, reports and inquiries about the Dartmoor prison in Princetown, 1960.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 items.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89528_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Correspondence, reports and inquiries about the Dartmoor prison in Princetown, 1960.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.W. Marshall, National Parks Commission.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.6.1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pages.    </physdesc>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter concerning Dartmoor Prison in Princetown, with an enclosed copy of the Sharp's report.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of the report "National Parks Commission, Dartmoor National Park".</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.6.2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 pages.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <persname id="atom_89529_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Report: "National Parks Commission, Dartmoor National Park, Considerations arising from the Prison Commission's proposals for Dartmoor Prison", Princetown.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Treasury Solicitor.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.3.6.3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter concerning the Public Inquiry-Dartmoor Prison.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence with the Civic Trust, 1957.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89530_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence between Thomas Sharp and the Civic Trust, 1957.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Colonel Kenneth Post.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89531_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the formation of a Civic Trust in the field of urban architecture and planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kenneth Post.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the formation of a Civic Trust.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R. Furneaux Jordan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82307_actor">Jordan, John Robert Furneaux, 1905-1978, Architect, Architectural Critic and Novelist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the formation of a Civic Trust.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R. Furneaux Jordan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89532_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the formation of a Civic Trust.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R. Furneaux Jordan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82308_actor">Jordan, John Robert Furneaux, 1905-1978, Architect, Architectural Critic and Novelist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the formation of a Civic Trust.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Colonel Kenneth Post.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89533_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Civic Trust.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="subfonds">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Colonel Kenneth Post, Civic Trust.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.4.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's resignation as a consultant to the Civic Trust.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">House at Kirk Merrington.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949/1981" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949-1981</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Drawing.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89534_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Scaled drawing of a house at Kirk Merrintong. Elevations: Garden front and East front. Plants: Ground Floor, First Floor. Scale: 1:16.Note about costings and on the other side of the paper; sketches of the house.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Re-development Plan for Central Stockholm. Submitted to an international competition, 1932.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89535_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Photograph of the plan for the Re-development Plan for Central Stockholm. Submitted to an international competition, 1932</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Several documents relating to Woolworth, Guilford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plans, Photograph, Press cuttings.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89536_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Plans, Photograph and Press cuttings about Woolworth, Guilford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of the Store and Shops High Street, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, Scale: Eight feet to one inch.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89537_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of the Store and Shops High Street, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd. Final elevation to High Street and plant of the main gate access to the building. Thomas Sharp and David Roberts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of the Lion Hotel Site, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: 1:500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89538_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of the Lion Hotel Site, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd M.G.O. Construction Dept. Oxford Street. Block Plan showing approaches, A. Thomas Sharp and David Roberts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of the Lion Hotel Site, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: 8 feet to 1 Inch.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89539_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a plan of the Lion Hotel Site, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd. Existing elevation. Thomas Sharp and David Roberts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting of The Surrey Advertiser and County Times, Saturday November 9, 1957.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Press cutting.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84164_actor">The Surrey Advertiser and County Times.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Front page Press cutting form The Surrey Advertiser and County Times, Saturday November 9 1957. A Drawing by A.C. Webb of the new design for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd. by Thomas Sharp and David Robert.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the drawing of the proposed stores for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd., Guilford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955/1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955-1957</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80930_actor">Coleman, Rex, fl 1959-1972, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of the drawing of A.C. Webb of the new design for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd by Thomas Sharp and David Robert.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of the Store and Shops High Street, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: Eight feet to one inch.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89540_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of the Store and Shops High Street, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd. Final elevation to High Street and ground plan of the main gate access to the building. Thomas Sharp and David Roberts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of the Store and Shops High Street, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.7.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: Eight feet to one inch.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89541_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of the Store and Shops High Street, Guilford for F.W. Woolworth &amp; Co. Ltd. Final elevation to High Street and ground plan of the main gate access to the building. Thomas Sharp and David Roberts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Wiener Strassenverkehrsenquete. Commission II. Planning of Road Traffic. Observations by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 10.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89542_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Typescript report on Planning of Road Traffic, Vienna by Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Crawley New Town.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1946/1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1948</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        File    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89543_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence, reports, plan, etc. concerning Sharp's planning consultancy at Crawley New Town.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Covering paper of the documentation of Crawley New Town.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946/1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Covering paper.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89544_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Covering paper to accompany the documentation of Crawley New Town.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Rt. Hon. Lewis Silkin, Minister of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89545_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Crawley New Town, enclosed Sharp's notes about the definition of its boundaries.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Muriel Jenkins, Private Secretary to the Minister of Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82623_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the reception of Sharp's notes of the definition of a boundary for the Crawley New Town.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.M. Dobbie, Private Secretary to the Minister of Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82624_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the first meeting of the Crawley Development Corporation on 27th February 1947.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Bath, Acting Accountant, Crawley Development Corporation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81032_actor">Crawley Development Corporation.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the consultant's fees for the work for the Crawley Development Corporation.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Alderson, Finance Division, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82625_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the consultant's fees for the work for the Crawley Development Corporation.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Alderson, Finance Division, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89546_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Consultant's fees.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Bennet, The Crawley Development Corporation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89547_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the town planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Bennet, The Crawley Development Corporation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89548_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the town planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M. M. Dobbie, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82626_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the town planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M. M. Dobbie, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82627_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the town planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.P. Bennett, Crawley Development Corporation.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81033_actor">Crawley Development Corporation.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting between Sharp and Bennett on April 1947.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M M. Dobbie, Ministry of Town &amp; Country planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89549_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the New-town at Crawley: the non-arrival of some maps and his decision of end his services as planning consultant for the Corporation.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Bennet, Ministry of Town &amp; Country planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89550_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting about the "New town" at Crawley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.M. Dobbie, Ministry of Town &amp; Country planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82628_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which the Minister of Town &amp; Country Planning asks Sharp to create an outline plan for the new town.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Alderson, Finance Division, Ministry of Town &amp; Country planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89551_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning fees for the new town, at Crawley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.G. Hansford, Ministry of Town &amp; Country planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89552_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for preparing the Perimeter plan for Crawley Newtown.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.G. Hansford, Ministry of Town &amp; Country planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82629_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for preparing the Perimeter plan for the new town at Crawley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Cutting from "The Architect &amp; Building News", January 23, 1948.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83819_actor">The Architect and Building News</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Cutting from "The Architect &amp; Building News" concerning the outline plan for Crawley and showing the different proposals of Sharp and Minoprio.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Crawley Development Corporation. Preliminary survey and outline development plan for the new town.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89553_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Preliminary survey and outline development plan for the new town at Crawley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of "Proposed New Town at Crawley- Three Bridges".</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89554_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>"Proposed New Town at Crawley- Three Bridges" report by Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of "Crawley New Town".</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89555_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>"Crawley New Town", Notes requested by Advisory Committee, January 30th, 1947.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Crawley/ Three bridges.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 11.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: 6 inches to 1 mile. Size: 74x76 cm.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89556_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Copy of the plan of Crawley/ Three bridges, including: uses, perimeter and information hand-coloured, as well as the key explaining those uses.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham Consultancy</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1943/1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943-1962</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89557_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence re. Durham City planning consultant post.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.E. Ellis, City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter,2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89558_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning problems with the Durham consultancy .</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81146_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the final resolution of the Planning Committee of Durham Council of not to renuew Sharp's contract.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89559_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the final resolution of the Planning Committee of Durham Council of not to renuew Sharp's contract.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81147_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Official letter concerning the final resolution of the Planning Committee of Durham Council of not to renuew Sharp's contract.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.E. Ellis, City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89560_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham consultancy and the New Elvet development.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81148_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's re-appointment as a planning consultant in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81149_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's re-appointment as a planning consultant in Durham and New Elvet development.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81150_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's re-appointment as a planning consultant in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81151_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89561_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81152_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89562_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81153_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89563_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81154_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81155_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89564_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89565_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81156_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89566_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81157_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81158_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89567_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81159_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89568_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81160_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89569_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81161_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89570_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81162_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.H. Napper</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89571_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham flats.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.H. Napper.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham flats.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B.Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81163_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning flats at New Elvet.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B.Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89572_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning flats at New Elvet.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B.Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81164_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning flats at New Elvet.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B.Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89573_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning flats at New Elvet.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.H. Napper.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89574_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the possible association of Sharp and Napper with the Forestry Villages project and in the re-development of New Elvet in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81165_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-development of New Elvet in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Wilfrid Green, City Engineer &amp; Surveyor, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89575_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the flats in New Elvet in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Wilfrid Green, City Engineer &amp; Surveyor, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81166_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's one, dated 13th April 1951.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89580_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting with the Planning Committee.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81167_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting with the Planning Committee.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81168_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to D.B. Martin-Jones, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89576_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract between Thomas Sharp and the Mayor Aldermen and the citizens of the City of Durham and Framwellgate</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947/1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947-1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81169_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Duplicate: "Thomas Sharp and the Durham Corporation, Agreement as to the appointment of a planning consultant, 1947 and Supplemental agreement, 1948" .</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81170_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81171_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the University's extension plans.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89577_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of notitification about Sharp's absence.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81172_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Covering letter to accompany the copy of the contract between Sharp and Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89578_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the city road scheme in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89579_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the city road scheme in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.R. Edis, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81258_actor">Edis, John Reed, 1860-1942, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the photographs of Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.R. Edis, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81259_actor">Edis, John Reed, 1860-1942, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the photographs of Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Daisy Edis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89581_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the photographs of Exeter.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89582_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the planning report on Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Daisy E. Edis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81254_actor">Edis, Daisy E., c. 1887-1964, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the photographs of Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81173_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the report on Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89583_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the perspective drawing of Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81174_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the planning report on Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89584_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the planning report on Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.C. Webb.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the drawing for the planning report on Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.D. Rowland, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81175_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fee for the contract as planning consultant with the Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract between Thomas Sharp and the Mayor Aldermen and the citizens of the City of Durham and Framwellgate.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81176_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Duplicate: "Thomas Sharp and the Durham Corporation, Agreement as to the appointment of a Planning Consultant, 1943.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.D. Rowland, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89585_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the agreement contract between the Council and Sharp for the position as Town planning consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.D. Rowland, Town Clerk, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 12.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89586_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the planning consultancy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Port Eynon.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1964/1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964-1966</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89587_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Plans, correspondence, photos re. proposed re-development of Port Eynon and Horton, Gower Peninsular</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.A. Bland, County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81718_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which the officer informs Sharp of the considerable amount of opposition to his Port Enynon Plan. The Council decided not continuing with it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.A. Bland, County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89588_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp congratulates Bland on his new appointment and enquires about his plan for Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the County Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89589_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the Port Eynon and Porthcawl plans.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the County Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81719_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the work of Port Eynon and Horton and Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor, County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81720_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Porthcawl plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor, County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89590_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Porthcawl plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on Porthcawl sent to the Planning Committee, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89591_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Report on Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes of costings for Porthcawl report.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89592_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Notes of costings for Porthcawl report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on Porthcawl sent to the Planning Committee, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89593_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Report on Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89594_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the plan for Porthcawl plan and Sa meeting about how to progress it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Richard John, Town Clerk, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81721_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Porthcawl plan and a meeting to treat it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89595_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Porthcawl plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89596_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter replying to a request for copies of the Port Eynon and Horton reports.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk , Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81722_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting further copies of Port Eynon and Horton reports.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.E. Boote, The Nature Conservancy.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84074_actor">The Nature Conservancy</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the plan for Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk , Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81723_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the Port Eynon and Porthcawl plans.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.E. Boote, The Nature Conservancy.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89597_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.E. Boote, The Nature Conservancy.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84075_actor">The Nature Conservancy</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the conservation aspects of Sharp's plans.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk , Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81724_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's letter of 11th August 1964.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Miss Jennifer Beaver, The Architect &amp; Building News.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83820_actor">The Architect and Building News</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some prints and ordinance received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Jennifer Beaver, The Architect &amp; Building News.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89598_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some prints and ordinance of Port-Eynon plan sent to the journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Miss Jennifer Beaver, The Architect &amp; Building News.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83821_actor">The Architect and Building News</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrative material of the Port-Eynon plan for the journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Ruth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a planning report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81725_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fee for Port Eynon plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89599_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the final account for Port Eynon plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81726_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the negatives of the plans for Port Eynon-Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89600_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the negatives of the plans for Port Eynon-Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81727_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the negatives of the plans for Port Eynon-Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89601_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the negatives of the plans for Port Eynon-Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to News Editor, South Wales Evening Post.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89602_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph of Port Eynon-Horton plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Low, News Editor of South Evening Post.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83741_actor">South Evening Post</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph of Port Eynon-Horton plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81728_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Covering letter to accompany six maps of Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89603_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon Report and a visit to Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81729_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the presentation of the Port Eynon report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89604_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some copies of the Port Eynon report mailed to E. John Powell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84306_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fee for Port Eynon perspective drawing.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89605_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon perspective drawing.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84307_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the negative of the Photograph of Port Eynon perspective drawing.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89606_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon reports sent to E. John Powell and the delay of the illustrations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81730_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon report and its reproduction.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89607_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon and Horton report and its reproduction.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81731_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon and Horton report and its copies with illustrations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84308_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon perspective drawing and confirming that Wets has received the material.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89608_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon perspective drawing.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84309_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for Port Eynon bromostats.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84310_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon bromostats, and the shading of the drawings.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89609_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon bromostats and drawings.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84311_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon bromostats and drawings.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89610_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the documentation required for the presentation of the report on Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81732_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the presentation of the Port Eynon and Horton report: number of copies and the account for it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89611_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the copies of the Port Eynon and Horton report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84312_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the preliminary drawing for the Port Eynon report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84313_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the preliminary drawing for the Port Eynon report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84314_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Warren asks Sharp for some photographs of Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89612_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning how many illustrated copies of the Port Eynon report are required; plus an interim account enclosed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89613_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the drawing of Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84315_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the drawings of Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89614_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London to discuss the drawings of Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Warren, Chartered architect and planner.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_84316_actor">Warren, John, 1932-2018, Architect and Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London to discuss the drawings of Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Rowland Sales, F.V.I. Managing Director, Salcoso Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the development of Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Rowland Sales, F.V.I. Managing Director, Salcoso Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89615_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the development of Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Rowland Sales, F.V.I. Managing Director, Salcoso Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the interest of a Development Company in the Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the County Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81733_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89616_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's request for documentation for the drawing of Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.66</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81734_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's request for information about Port Eynon sandhills.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.67</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89617_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter confirming receipt of the photographs of Port Eynon sandhills.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.68</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81735_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Covering letter to accompany the plan showing the layout and levels of Loosemore Caravan Site and Port Eynon and three Aerial photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.69</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89618_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the documentation for Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.70</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81736_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the delay of the documentation requested for Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.E. Boote, The Nature Conservancy.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.71</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89619_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon and Horton development plan, and the conservation consideration arising from its being located in a National Nature Reserve.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.E. Boote, The Nature Conservancy.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.72</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84076_actor">The Nature Conservancy</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon and Horton development plan, and the conservation consideration arising from its being located in a National Nature Reserve.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the County Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.73</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89620_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the development plans for Port Eynon and Horton, and Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the County Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.74</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81737_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the contract as a planning consultant for Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.V. Walters, Deputy Clerk of the County Council, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.75</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81738_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the contract as a planning consultant for Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.76</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89621_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a visit to Port Eynon and Horton for the development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.77</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81739_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the requirement of a school in the plan for the Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.78</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81740_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the requirements for development plan of Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.79</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89622_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.80</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89623_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.81</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81741_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the hotel reservation for Sharp's visit.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.82</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89624_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's visit to Cardiff on Monday 19th and 20th Tuesday of August, 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.83</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81742_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's visit to Cardiff.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.84</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89625_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp transcribes a letter received from D. Le Cronier Chapman of Oxwhich about a land near Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D. Le Cronier Chapman, Chartered Surveyor, Oxwhich.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.85</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89626_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp's informs Chapman he has passed a copy of his letter to the County Planning Officer at Cardiff.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D. Le Cronier Chapman, Chartered Surveyor, Oxwhich.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.86</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning land at Port Eynon and Horton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.87</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81743_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's request.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.88</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89627_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the preparation of the Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E. John Powell, County Surveyor and County Planning Officer, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.89</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81744_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Port Eynon and Horton development plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of Port Eynon and Horton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.90</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map 54X50 cm, paper.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81745_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Map of Port Eynon and Horton. Caravan Sites, 27th August 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.91</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map 31X46 cm, A/A Section 1: 1250 natural, paper. Part O.S. 31.9 1915 Edition.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81746_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Map of Port Eynon; Line of main ridge with high points indicated, Loosemore's caravan site. 6th December, 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of Port Eynon and Horton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.92</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map 57X67 cm, paper. Scale: 1/ 2500 being 25.344 Inches to a Statute Mile or 208.33 feet to one inch. Printed and Published by the Director General at the Ordnance Survey Office, Southampton, 1915.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Map of Port Eynon, with the demarcation of the land private properties and their owners. September, 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.93</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map 41X44 cm, paper.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81747_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Map of Port Eynon; Caravan sites, Drafts of the plan. 13th September, 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.94</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard entitled: Look Out, Coast. Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.95</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard entitled: General view. Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.96</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard entitled: The beach. Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.97</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map 31X30 cm, paper. Part O.S. 31.9. 1915 Edition.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81748_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Map of Port Eynon; Levels to Liverpool Datum. 28th November, 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Emlyn Davies.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.98</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89629_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the village design competition for Eisteddfod.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Emlyn Davies.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.99</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89630_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the village design competition for Eisteddfod, and Sharp's report on it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pamphlet of a village design competition for Eisteddfod.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.100</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Pamphlet.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Pamphlet of a village design competition in Eisteddfod: Information for Competitors.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pamphlet of a village design competition for Eisteddfod.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.101</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Publicity pamphlet: including map and photographs.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Pamphlet of a village design competition for Eisteddfod.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Emlyn Davies.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.102</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89631_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the village design competition for Eisteddfod</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Emlyn Davies, Secretary, Arts and Crafts Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.103</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the presentation of the village design competition for Eisteddfod.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.A. Bland, County Planning Office, Glamorgan County Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.104</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89632_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the village competition of Eisteddfod.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Emlyn Davies, Secretary, Arts and Crafts Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.105</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the accommodation booked for Thomas Sharp in Swansea.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Emlyn Davies, Secretary, Arts and Crafts Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.106</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89633_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the village competition of Eisteddfod.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M. Francis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.107</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89634_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to a letter received in welsh.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M. Francis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.108</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in Welsh.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.109</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89635_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition with an enclosed draft of it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.111</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition and suggested amendements to Sharp's draft.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.110</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.112</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89636_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.113</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition and the reception of the different works.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.114</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89637_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition and the excellent documentation produced for it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.115</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition and documentation produced for it.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.116</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89638_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the date for the selection date for entries in the architecture competition.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.D. Scourfield, General Secretary to Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales, Swansea and District.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.117</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the date for the selection date for entries in the architecture competition.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Emlyn Davies, Secretary, Arts and Crafts Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.118</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the architecture competition.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Emlyn Davies, Secretary, Arts and Crafts Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.119</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89639_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the file on Reynoldston and Davies' son who was a lecturer in Manchester.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.120</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard entitled: The caravan sites. Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Port Eynon.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.121</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard entitled: The caravan sites. Port Eynon.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Horton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.122</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80937_actor">Colourpicture Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d28d80dd5b9c2ae9c158eb82ec34f3e0" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Colourpicture Publishers.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard of Horton with a view of the beach.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Horton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.123</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80938_actor">Colourpicture Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d28d80dd5b9c2ae9c158eb82ec34f3e0" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Colourpicture Publishers.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard of Horton with a view of the coast.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of Horton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.124</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80939_actor">Colourpicture Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d28d80dd5b9c2ae9c158eb82ec34f3e0" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Colourpicture Publishers.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard of Horton with a view of the coast.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Porthcawl.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.125</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph, 25X20 cm.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80445_actor">Aerofilms and Aero Pictorial Limited.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Aerial photograph of Porthcawl.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Porthcawl.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.126</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph, 18.5X22 cm. No. 0008. 2F22. 543/RAF/1475.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81749_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Aerial photograph of Porthcawl.13th October 1961.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Porthcawl.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.127</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph, 18.5X18.5 cm. No. 0007. 2F22. 543/RAF/1475.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81750_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Aerial photograph of Porthcawl.13th october 1961.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Porthcawl.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.128</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph, 18.5X22 cm. No. 0006. 2F22. 543/RAF/1475.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81751_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Aerial photograph of Porthcawl.13th October 1961.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town map of Porthcawl.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 13.129</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Town map copy, paper. Scale: 6 inches to 1 mile.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81752_actor">Glamorgan County Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Town map of Porthcawl with the existing development. Glamorgan Porthcawl TM/3.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence relating to different jobs.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1946/1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1962</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89640_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence re. planning consultancies including Rugby, Guildford, South Durham Steel, Cambridge and Birmingham.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.L. Duffy, Town Clerk, Rugby.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89641_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the expenses for the Town Centre Planning of Rugby.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.L. Duffy, Town Clerk, Rugby.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the planning consultant appointment for Rugby.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Maldwyn Jones, Scale Hall Farm.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89642_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the work on Scale Hall.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Joynson-Hicks and Co.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82317_actor">Joynson-Hicks and Co.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the payment for the Observatory House, Slough work.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.W. Woolworth and Co. Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81300_actor">F.W. Woolworth and Co. Limited.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the payment for the work on the new store in Gilford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Roberts, Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_83196_actor">Roberts, David Wyn, 1911-1982, Architect.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the payment for the work on the new store in Gilford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Roberts, Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89643_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning payment for the work on the new store in Gilford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Roberts, Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_83197_actor">Roberts, David Wyn, 1911-1982, Architect.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning payment for the work on the new store in Gilford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from South Durham Steel and Iron Co. Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83739_actor">South Durham Steel and Iron Co. Limited.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning payment for the work on West Hartlepool.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to South Durham Steel and Iron Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89644_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the work of Landscaping, South Works, West Hartlepool.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harry Plowman, Town Clerk, Oxford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89645_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning fees for the work on Oxford Roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Harry Plowman, Town Clerk, Oxford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning fees for the work on Oxford Roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.E.L. Parnis, Treasurer, University Financial Board, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89646_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning fees for providing city planning advice.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.E.L. Parnis, Treasurer, University Financial Board, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89647_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning fees for providing city planning advice.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Roberts, architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89648_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning payment for Woolworths work.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from The National Trust.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82687_actor">National Trust (Great Britain), 1895 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt from The National Trust.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.W. Woolworth and Co. Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81301_actor">F.W. Woolworth and Co. Limited.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning fees for the design of the new store facade.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Herrn Oberstadtbaurat Rudolf Boeck, Stadtauamt, Vienna.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89649_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for providing Vienna city planning advice.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Wordie, The Master St. John's College, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89650_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking the College collaboration in the time that Sharp was doing the landscaping of the College ground.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Wordie, The Master St. John's College, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83751_actor">St. John's College, Cambridge University.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his work on the College.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.A. Benians, the Lodge. St. John's College, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89651_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a work on the College.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.A. Benians, The Lodge. St. John's College, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83752_actor">St. John's College, Cambridge University.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning work on the College.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from West Midland Group on Post-War Reconstruction and Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84336_actor">West Midland Group on Post-War Reconstruction and Planning.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting Sharp's advice on Birmingham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.H. Gough-Cooper, Cooper Estates Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89652_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the development plan for Swanley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.H. Gough-Cooper, Cooper Estates Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80961_actor">Cooper Estates Limited.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the development plan for Swanley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.H. Gough-Cooper, Cooper Estates Limited.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80962_actor">Cooper Estates Limited.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the development plan for Swanley.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.H. Gaunt, J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89653_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's inability to accept an offer of work and his recommendation of alternative professionals.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.H. Gaunt, J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81965_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a job offer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subfonds">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harry Salmon, J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 14.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89654_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a job offer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1947/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947-1955</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file, 4 folders    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89655_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence, plans, photographs etc. re. housing project in Kielder Forest with specific files on Kielder, Stonehaugh and Byrness.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Commission</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89656_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Documentation relating to the project in Kielder Forest.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of T.S. Christmas Card.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Christmas Card.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89657_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Christmas Card: drawing of one of the streets and church of Comb village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89658_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on the visit to North Tyne and Warksburn Valleys.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91649_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>report on the visit: the purpose of the visit was to consider the possible housing sites.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the W. Hamilton, for Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91650_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder, Redesdale and Wark. Housing; with a copy of a report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91651_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on visit to North Tyne, Redesdale and Warksburn valleys.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91652_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on Kielder, Redesdale and Wark.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on John Dower.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on Kielder Forest: Sitting of the forest workers' cottages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91653_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on Kielder Forest: information about of the housing needs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91654_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter on Kielder Forest: information concerning permanent housing needs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report from the F.B. Nightingale, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82630_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on the Inspection of sites for housing for Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report for the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 8 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89659_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of Kielder Forest: boundary, sites for forest villages, area planted to 1949.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, 27X21 cm. Scale: 0.5 inches to 1 mile.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91655_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Map of the Forestry pocket, Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91656_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder Forest: Housing project, Electricity.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Commercial Officer of Forestry Commission with a map attached.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and map; 69 X 67 cm. Scale. 1 inch to 1 mile.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91657_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany a map entitled: North Eastern Electricity board.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission, including a handwritten schema of costings.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter; 1 letter, 1 model of agreement contract (5 pages) and schema of costings.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91658_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with a model of the agreement contract for the Forestry Villages and one handwritten schema of costings for the consultancy.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Drawing schema of the School for the forestry villages.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Drawing schema.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89660_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Drawing schema of the School for the forestry villages; location the school, church and houses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of the Plan for the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 75X 47 cm. Scale. 1/500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89661_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Forestry Commission: Copy of plan sent to Ministry of Works, July 1 1948. Stonehaugh, Initial Development.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan for the Forestry Commission: Falstone.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946/1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 35.5X 46.5 cm, paper. Scale of the site 1/2500.Scale of Section A-A 1/500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89662_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Falstone; site for suggested village and Section A-A.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a plan for the Forestry Commission: Catcleugh.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 28 X 26 cm, paper. Scale 1/500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89663_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Catcleugh. Key: Water main, water branches, soil and sewage drains, rain water drains.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on the account of strata bored in Kielder Castle.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80748_actor">Boldon Drilling and Engineering Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Boldon Drilling and Engineering Co. Ltd.: Account of the Strata bored in Kielder Castle.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a plan for the Forestry Commission: Stonehaugh.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 47 X 33 cm, paper. Scale 1/2500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89664_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of Stonehaugh and its surroundings. 4 copies sent to the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a map for the Forestry Commission: Village sites, existing and extraction roads.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, 60 X 32.5 cm, paper.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89665_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Map for the Forestry Commission: Village sites (Kielder-Plashetts-Comb-Mounces-Bower), existing and extraction roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from Eric G. Lediard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82400_actor">Lediard, Eric G., Chartered Civil Engineer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the nature of the ground of the Stonehaugh shields site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eric G. Lediard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82401_actor">Lediard, Eric G., Chartered Civil Engineer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the nature of the ground at the Stonehaugh Shields site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Commission; new zoning in Kielder, Redesdale and Wark forest.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89666_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Forestry villages: schema of houses and population for 1948 to 1957.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan for the Forestry Commission, Kielder.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947/1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947-1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 64 X 49 cm, paper. Scale. 1/500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91659_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Depot for Forestry Commission. Kielder-Northumberland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Memorandum of a meeting held in Kielder, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Summary, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83268_actor">Sargeant, T.J., Conservancy engineer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Minutes of a meeting; requirements of the development area adjoining Kielder village. Road alignments to Plashetts village and general discussion on housing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a plan for the Forestry Commission: Kielder.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 34 X 21 cm, paper.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89667_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of Kielder village: Kielder station paths, Sketch elevation of curtain walls. Key: Front curtain walls and back fencing and gates.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a plan for the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 77 X 18 cm, paper.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89668_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Rough. Copy of a drawing sent to Mr. Edwards, July 5, 1949.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from the North Eastern Electricity Board.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 77 X 18 cm, paper.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82716_actor">North Eastern Electricity Board.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Commission houses in Kielder. Electrical energy.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from W.J.J. Protlock, Land Agent for Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947/1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947-1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91660_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with meeting notes regarding the allocation of places of worship.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from L.G. Barter.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91661_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the official invitation to work for the Forestry Commission in Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">H.M. Forestry Commission. Kielder village development. Station road site, Sewerage and Sewerage disposal.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82402_actor">Lediard, Eric G., Chartered Civil Engineer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Engineer's report and calculations.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Falstone. Site for suggested village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948/1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948-1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 35X46 cm. paper. Scale: 1/ 2500. Section A-A Scale: 1/500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89669_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of Falstone. Site for suggested village. Suggested embankment.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Falstone. Site for suggested village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948/1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948-1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, 35X46 cm. paper. Scale: 1/ 2500. Section A-A Scale: 1/500.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89670_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of Falstone. Site for suggested village. Suggested embankment.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.E.F.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the permanent housing in Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Report on the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91662_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on the permanent housing in Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Schedule of electricity.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Schedule.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91663_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Schedule of poles required to provide a supply of electrical energy to the Forestry Commission Houses in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91664_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91665_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning new houses proposals. Extracts from the 1951 housing programme and the 1952-1956 proposed 5 year programme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of the Forestry Villages, Kielder Forest.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, 7 pages 20X33 cm. Contour interval 25 feet; contours instrumental and contours sketched.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91666_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Map of the Forestry Villages, Kielder Forest. Sites of the villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89671_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Painting Pre-war Houses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91667_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the external painting of pre-war Houses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91668_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads and paths of Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89672_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91669_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89673_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91670_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91671_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91672_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89674_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89675_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91673_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads and bridges of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.F. Garnett, County Surveyor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads and bridges of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A.Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91674_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Rose, County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89676_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the layouts of Kielder, Byrness and Stoneaugh villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89677_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91675_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from the Conservator.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91676_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89678_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91677_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the schools of Kielder and Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A.Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91678_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89679_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91679_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Northumberland villages planting, with an enclosed scheme of Sharp's planting requirements.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89680_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs for the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91680_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs for the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89681_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs for the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89682_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the villages planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.A. Walker, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.69</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91681_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting at the villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.70</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91682_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street lighting and street name signs for the villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.71</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89683_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street lighting and street name signs for the villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.72</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89684_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the street names of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.73</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91683_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village street lighting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.74</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89685_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.75</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91684_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.76</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91685_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.77</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89686_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.78</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91686_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.79</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89687_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning street name signs of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.80</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89688_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone cables of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.81</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91687_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Telephone, Butteryhaugh, Kielder and Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.82</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91688_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.83</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89689_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting in the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.84</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91689_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting in the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.85</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91690_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgement from the Director of Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.86</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91691_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgement from the Director of Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.87</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89690_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting in the Northumberland Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.88</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89691_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Salih Mohamed Salih Elmek.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.89</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89692_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting in the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.90</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91692_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the village plans.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.91</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91693_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the village plans.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.92</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91694_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone facilities.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.93</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89693_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone facilities.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.94</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91695_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone facilities at Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.95</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91696_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.96</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89694_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.F. Garnett, County Surveyor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.97</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.98</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91697_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.99</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89695_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.F. Garnett, County Surveyor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.100</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89696_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.F. Garnett, County Surveyor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.101</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the suggested elevations of the bridges in Kielder and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.102</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91698_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.103</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91699_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the front gardens of the houses, Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.104</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89697_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the front gardens of the houses, Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.105</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89698_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the front gardens of the houses, Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.106</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89699_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the meetings about the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.107</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91700_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the greens and verges of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.108</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89700_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.109</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91701_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.110</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89701_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the greens and verges of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.111</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89702_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.112</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89703_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages; roads and bridges.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.F. Garnett, County Surveyor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.113</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89704_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the layout plans of Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.114</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89705_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bridges and roads of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.115</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91702_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bridges and roads of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.116</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89706_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bridges and roads of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.117</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91703_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bridges and roads of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.118</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89707_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.119</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91704_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the road from Stonehaugh to the Public Highway.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.120</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89708_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads and bridges of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.121</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91705_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads and bridges of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Cripps, Editor of The Country Man.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.122</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81037_actor">Cripps, John Stafford, 1912-1993, Journalist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an inquiry in the quarter suggested.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.123</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91706_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Cripps, Editor of the Countryman.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.124</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89709_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Cripps, Editor of the Countryman.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.125</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81038_actor">Cripps, John Stafford, 1912-1993, Journalist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.126</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91707_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.127</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89710_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.128</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89711_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the greens and roadside verges of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.129</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91708_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads of Wark Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.130</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91709_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.131</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89712_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages tree planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.132</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91710_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages tree planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.133</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89713_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for a cheque as payment for Sharp's work in 1953.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.134</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91711_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany payment for Sharp's work in 1953.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.135</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91712_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the Forestry Villages’ plans received.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.136</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89714_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting plan for the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.137</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89715_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning tree planting plan for the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.138</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91713_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.139</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89716_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages and Sharp’s suggestion for the houses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.140</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91714_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness shops.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.141</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91715_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.142</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89717_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.143</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91716_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village development in Northumberland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.144</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89718_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter regarding Sargeant’s determination to leave the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.145</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91717_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter regarding Sargeant’s determination to leave the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.146</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91718_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Comb village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.147</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91719_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.148</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89719_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Comb village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.149</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91720_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Comb village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.150</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91721_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.151</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91722_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.152</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91723_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Roberts, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.153</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89720_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.154</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91724_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Henry Spink, Director of Education, County of Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.155</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89721_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry villages schools.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.H. Pescod, New Works Architect, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.156</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89722_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter Henry Spink, Director of Education, County of Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.157</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89723_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Village schools.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.H. Pescod, New Works Architect, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.158</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89724_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Commission villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.H. Roberts, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.159</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89725_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Village schools.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.H. Roberts, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.160</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91725_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry Village schools.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.L. Edlin, Publications Officer, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.161</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91726_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copy Unasylva, containing Sharp's article on Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.1.162</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89726_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copy of sketch plans.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Commission</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953-1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89727_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Documentation about the project in Kielder Village.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89728_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91727_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91728_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Church in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91729_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Church in Kielder-Butteryhaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91730_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Kielder village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Gilligan, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91731_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Kielder village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89730_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Kielder village planting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91732_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the garage in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89731_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the garage in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91733_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the garage and filling station near Kielder village Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89732_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh bridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89733_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh bridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89734_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh bridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91734_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh bridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91735_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh bridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89735_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Post box, Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91736_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the temporary Post box at Butteryhaugh Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91737_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Painting Pre-war Houses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91740_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosk at Butterhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91738_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89736_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosk, Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91739_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the development of Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Northumberland County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89737_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village school and Village Hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Northumberland County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82729_actor">Northumberland County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village school and Village Hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89738_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the school and Community Building in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91741_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the school and Community Building in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89739_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Square in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89740_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the school and Community Building in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89741_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Village schools.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Northumberland County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82730_actor">Northumberland County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sites for the Forestry Villages schools.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91742_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village Square in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89742_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village Square in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89743_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning schools in Kielder and Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91743_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning schools and community buildings in Kielder and Byrness villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89744_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning schools and community buildings in Kielder and Byrness villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89745_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the roads at Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91744_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning discussions on the villages schools and eucation needs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Northumberland County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89746_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the school and community building in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Northumberland County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82731_actor">Northumberland County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the site for County Primary school in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89747_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the names of the roads in Kielder-Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89748_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a copy of the layout plan of Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91745_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the development of the Butteryhaugh site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91746_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89749_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91748_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91747_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89750_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Village hall in Kielder village and the colours of the houses.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82650_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting of the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91749_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Village Hall and the paths in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91750_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.W. Preston, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89751_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the tree planting in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.W. Preston, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91751_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89752_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91752_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91753_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Village hall and school in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91754_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the reviewed plans of Byrness and Kielder villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89753_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the reviewed plans of Butteryhaugh in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89754_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the reviewed plans of Butteryhaugh in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89755_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the paths in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91755_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the extra cost for changing the paths in Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91756_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the houses of Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89756_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning reviewed plans of the layout of Kielder village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.G. Lediard, Chartered Civil Engineer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89757_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a copy of the drawing of Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.G. Lediard, Chartered Civil Engineer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82403_actor">Lediard, Eric G., Chartered Civil Engineer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a copy of the drawing of Kielder Village, with corrections.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91757_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a copy of the plan of Kielder to be sent to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.G. Lediard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89758_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder Village Development. Contract No. 2.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.G. Lediard, Chartered Civil Engineer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82404_actor">Lediard, Eric G., Chartered Civil Engineer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder Village Development. Contract No. 2.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89759_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.G. Leriard, Chartered Civil Engineer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.69</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89760_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Butteryhaugh in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.70</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89761_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a linen negative of Butteryhaugh in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.71</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91758_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the housing development at Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.W. Bell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.72</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91759_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a visit to the Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.W. Bell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.73</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89762_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a visit to the Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.74</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91760_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bowling green and tennis court of Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.75</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89763_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bowling green and tennis court of Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.76</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91761_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the bowling green and tennis court of Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.77</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91762_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telegraph poles in Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.78</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91763_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the trees in Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.S. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.79</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91764_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.S. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.80</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89764_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder tennis court.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.S. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.81</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91765_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder tennis court.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.82</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91766_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning telephone kiosk in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.83</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91767_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosks in Kielder, Byrness and Sotnehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.84</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91768_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the tennis club of Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.85</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89765_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the trees of Kielder village and castle.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.86</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89766_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telegraph poles in Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, County of Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.87</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82732_actor">Northumberland County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the site for the County Primary School in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.88</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91769_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the tennis court in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.89</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89767_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the plans of Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.90</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91770_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the school in Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.91</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89768_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the school in Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.92</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91771_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.93</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91772_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Kielder school and community buildings.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.94</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89769_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Kielder school and community buildings.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Spink, Director of Education, County of Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.95</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89770_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the site for Kielder Village school.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.96</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89771_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Butteryhaugh Drainage at Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.97</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91773_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Butteryhaugh Drainage at Kielder Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.98</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91774_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder plan scheme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.99</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89772_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder and Butteryhaugh drainage.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.100</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91775_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder and Butteryhaugh drainage, with copies of letters enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.101</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91776_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder scheme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.102</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91777_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the site for the Kielder village school.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.103</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91778_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the site for the Kielder village school.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.104</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89773_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.105</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91779_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.106</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91780_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.107</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89774_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.2.108</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89775_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953/1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953-1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89776_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Documentation about the project in Byrness Village.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89777_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Bungalow and the Filling station in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91781_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Bungalow and the Filling station in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89778_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness streets names.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91782_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness streets names.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91783_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89779_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed power line in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91784_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed power line in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89780_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning shops in Byrness Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, Northumberland County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82733_actor">Northumberland County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed general store in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Porlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89781_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the temporary shop in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Porlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91785_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the temporary shop in Byrness Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91786_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed Byrness primary school.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91787_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed Byrness primary school.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91788_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed Byrness primary school.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91789_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the filling station in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89782_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the primary school in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89783_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the filling station in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91790_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the primary school in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91791_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed filling station in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89784_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone lines in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91792_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone lines in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89785_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91793_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the transport facilities for Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89786_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the temporary shop for Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91794_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the temporary shop in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89787_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled Village development in Northumberland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91795_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled Village development in Northumberland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91796_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91797_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Redesdale- Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89788_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sites for the garage and the transport cafe in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91798_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91799_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89789_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91800_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the filling petrol station in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89790_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the filling petrol station in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91801_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sites for the filling petrol station and the transport cafe in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89791_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled Kielder Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89792_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the position of the electricity sub-station in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91802_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the position of the electricity sub-station in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89795_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: new village, Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91803_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Redesdale-Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89793_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness new village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89794_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the shops in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91804_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proposed shops in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Assistant Regional Director, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82651_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Roberts, Assistant Regional Director, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89797_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh and Byrness villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Assistant Regional Director, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82652_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh and Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript note.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89796_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note on Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Roberts, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89798_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness and Stonehaugh villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Roberts, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89799_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness and Stonehaugh villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89800_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript note.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89801_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note referring to Stonehaugh file.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91805_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the new village in Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91806_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript note.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89802_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note referring to Stonehaugh file.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connel, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89803_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copies of plans of Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.3.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91807_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the housing development in Byrness village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Commission</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953-1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89804_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Documentation relating to the project at Stonehaugh Village.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91808_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village street lighting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89805_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village street lighting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91809_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village street lighting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91810_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh-Bridge and Approach road.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89806_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh-Bridge and Approach road.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91811_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh-Bridge and roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91812_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the postal facilities in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91813_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh and Byrness villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89807_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning postal facilities in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91814_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning postal facilities in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89808_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosk in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91815_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosk in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89809_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91816_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosk in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89810_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91817_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the telephone kiosk in Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91818_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning village roads and bridges.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89811_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the drainage of Stonehaugh site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91819_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the drainage of Stonehaugh site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91820_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copies of Stonehaugh village layout.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.W. Preston, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89812_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting about the Stonehaugh site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89813_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village layouts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91821_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh farm.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91822_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh farm.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89814_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh farm.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91823_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh farm homestead at Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91824_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaughshields village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91825_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaughshields village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91826_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the housing development at Stonehaughshields.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Roberts, Regional Architect, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89815_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sub-soil conditions at Stonehaughshields.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Roberts, Regional Architect, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82653_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sub-soil conditions at Stonehaughshields, with a report enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89816_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sub-soil conditions at Stonehaughshields.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T.J. Sargeant, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91827_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to R. Mauchlen, Chartered Architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91828_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the drainage of Stonehaugh village, copy sent to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91829_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning new school in Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, County Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89817_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning new school at Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89818_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning new school at Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, County of Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89819_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning new school in Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, County of Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89820_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning new school in Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript note.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89821_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note referring Byrness file.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Conservator of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89822_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh sewage works.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Blott, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91830_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh sewage works.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript note.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91831_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note referring to Byrness file.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, County planning office.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89823_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to accompany plans of Stonehaugh layout.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89824_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled Stonehaugh sewage works.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91832_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled Stonehaugh sewage works.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91833_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled Stonehaugh sewage works and the temporary structures.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript note.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89825_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note referring to Byrness file.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91834_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages; Stonehaugh, Byrness and Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J.J. Portlock, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 15.4.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89826_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry villages; Stonehaugh, Byrness and Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broad Sanctuary, Westminster</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1965/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965-1969</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file, 4 folders.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89827_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Plan, reports, correspondence and notes re. Broad Sanctuary inquiry, City of Westminster.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broad Sanctuary, Westminster</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1965/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965-1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89828_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Plan, reports, correspondence and notes re. Broad Sanctuary inquiry, City of Westminster.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Public Inquiry of the Broad Sanctuary Site City of Westminster.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Published report, 66 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82564_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report on a Public Inquiry of the Broad Sanctuary Site City of Westminster. Appendix C by Thomas Sharp, with several handwritten notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plans of the Broad Sanctuary Site City of Westminster.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 plans 1-5 A4, Scale: 1/2500. 20 copies; 8 paper copies, 6 tracing paper copies and 6 acetate copies.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89829_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plans of the Broad Sanctuary Site City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a report on the Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89831_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Public Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster, notes by Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of the correspondence of the Public Inquiry; Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 8 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89832_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Correspondence of the Public Inquiry; Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Public Inquiry; Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 8 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89833_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>report on the Public Inquiry; Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster, with handwritten notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Public Inquiry 4th day; Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 12 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89834_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>report on the Public Inquiry; Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster, with handwritten notes. Transcription by Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Whitehall report, Royal Fine Art Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Report with observations on the re-development in the Whitehall Area prepared by Sir Leslie Martin and Professor Colin Buchanan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of the Public Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 16 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89835_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Public Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster. Notes by Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to The Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89836_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Public Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a Summary of the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Minutes, 13 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82565_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>report on the Public Local Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84269_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the enquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster. Enclosed it is a copy of a letter from W.R.Davidge and Partners to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Summary of the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Minutes, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82566_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>report on the Public Local enquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89837_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to the Public Local enquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site. City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89838_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reports, correspondence and notes re. Broad Sanctuary inquiry, City of Westminster.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89839_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Westminster enquiry and politics.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82567_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Westminster enquiry. Enclosed a copy of a letter from Athur Skeffington.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82568_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Westminster enquiry and the treatment of Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89840_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the report on Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster, and Sharp's observations.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter with 3 Reports enclosed; 21 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82569_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter and reports of the public enquiry of Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84270_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster, with two letters enclosed from N.H. Clavert.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edmund Compton to Evan Luard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80943_actor">Compton, Sir Edmund Gerald, 1906-1994, Civil Servant,  Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration 1967-1971.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82570_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edmund Compton to Evan Luard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80944_actor">Compton, Sir Edmund Gerald, 1906-1994, Civil Servant,  Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration 1967-1971.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89841_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten notes of Sharp's complaint.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89842_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sharp's complaint notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edmund Compton, Parliament Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80945_actor">Compton, Sir Edmund Gerald, 1906-1994, Civil Servant,  Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration 1967-1971.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting about September.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edmund Compton, Parliament Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89843_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edmund Compton, Parliament Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80946_actor">Compton, Sir Edmund Gerald, 1906-1994, Civil Servant,  Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration 1967-1971.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82571_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint. A copy of a letter from Edmund Compton enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82572_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89844_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint and his dissatisfaction with the progress.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82573_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint. Enclosed a copy of a letter from N.H. Calvert.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Secretary to the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.19</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89845_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the enquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.20</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82574_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the enquiry to the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Hope, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.21</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89846_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.22</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89847_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.23</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82575_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.24</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89848_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.25</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82576_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Hope, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.26</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89849_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from J.M. Hope to Sir Robert Matthew.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.27</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82577_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.28</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82578_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.29</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89850_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.30</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84271_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.31</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82579_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.32</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89851_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Hope, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.33</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89852_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Hope, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.34</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82580_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry. With an enclosed copy of Sir Robert Matthew's comments.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.35</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89853_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to V.D. Lipman, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.36</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89854_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to V.D. Lipman, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.37</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89855_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from V.D. Lipman, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.38</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82581_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the White Paper; the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.39</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82582_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment from the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Minister of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.40</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89856_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary Site, City of Westminster. Inspector's report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alistair Macdonald, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.41</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80968_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's letter to the Minister of Housing and Local Government.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Alistair Macdonald, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.42</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89857_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alistair Macdonald, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.43</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80969_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Ministry of Hosing and Local Government, and jurisdictions.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alistair Macdonald, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.44</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80970_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.45</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80971_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inspector's report on the Inquiry into the future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary City of Westminster.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rachel.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.46</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lipman and Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.47</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84272_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning complaints to the Inspector’s report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward F. Williams, Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.48</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80785_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inspector’s report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to the Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.49</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81947_actor">Institution of Civil Engineers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp and returning the six volumes of the Transcript of the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.50</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89858_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.51</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84273_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.52</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84274_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from Edward F. Williams to H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.53</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80786_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.54</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89859_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Alexander Macdonald, Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.55</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89860_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the return of the six volumes of the Transcript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alexander Macdonald, Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.56</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81948_actor">Institution of Civil Engineers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the six volumes of the Transcript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.57</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84275_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.58</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84276_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the transcription.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.59</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89861_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Alexander Macdonald, Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.60</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89862_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.61</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89863_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.62</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80787_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rachel.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.63</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry with information about the inspector who wrote the report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from Edward F. Williams to H. Claude Delves.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.64</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80788_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Claude Delves, W.R. Davidge and Partners.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.65</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84277_actor">W.R. Davidge and Partners.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry, with copies of correspondence enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Alexander Macdonald, Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.66</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89864_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the Inspector's report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alexander Macdonald, Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.67</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81949_actor">Institution of Civil Engineers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the Inspector's report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.68</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89865_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the Inspector's report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.69</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80789_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry and the Inspector's report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.70</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89866_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.71</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80790_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from the Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.72</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81950_actor">Institution of Civil Engineers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fees and expenses for the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.73</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89867_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Institution of Civil Engineers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.74</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89868_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fees and expenses for the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.75</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89869_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.76</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80791_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.77</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89870_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fees for the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.78</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89871_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edward F. Williams, Bristows Cooke and Carpmael.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.79</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80792_actor">Bristows-Cooke and Carpmael, Commercial Law Firm</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Stanley Hicks and Son, Chartered Surveyors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.80</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83766_actor">Stanley Hicks and Son, Chartered Surveyors.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Institution of Civil Engineers and the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Stanley Hicks and Son, Chartered Surveyors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.81</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89872_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Institution of Civil Engineers and the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Stanley Hicks and Son, Chartered Surveyors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.2.82</unitid>
              <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83767_actor">Stanley Hicks and Son, Chartered Surveyors.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Institution of Civil Engineers and the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry. An appendix enclosed of the outline of evidence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89873_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reports, correspondence and notes re Broad Sanctuary inquiry, City of Westminster.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Published report.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82583_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>report on a Public inquiry into the Future use or uses of the Broad Sanctuary site, City of Westminster. Including Sharp's notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from Evan Luard to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82584_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82585_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Luard's communication to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government in support of the complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89874_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Luard's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82586_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89875_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Hope, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 7 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89876_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry, (with an enclosure).</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broad Sanctuary, City of Westminster.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89877_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reports, correspondence and notes re. Broad Sanctuary inquiry, City of Westminster.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89878_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82587_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from J.M.Hope to Sir Robert Mathew.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Niall Macdermot to Evan Luard.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages. Original letter and copy.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82588_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from Niall Macdermot to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Hope, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89879_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from J.M. Hope to Thomas Sharp and Sir Roberts Mathew.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82589_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82590_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from Evan Luard to J. McColl, Parliamentary Secretary, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82591_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the report on the Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89880_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled White Paper; Broad Sanctuary Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82592_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89881_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint and the reply from the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 16.4.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, reports and plans (A4 Scale; 1/2500), 32 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89882_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint with several documents enclosed: 1. White Paper report by Sir R. Mathew, Transcript of evidence given at the public enquiry, Prints of the plans referred, a copy of the Notes, and copies of correspondence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Anatomy of the Village</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1942/1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942-1973</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 folder, 2 files.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89883_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence, Agreement contract and plans regarding the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Anatomy of the Village</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1942/1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942-1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89884_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence and Agreement contract regarding the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough William-Ellis.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84373_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's village research and some suggested village examples.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract between Thomas Sharp and Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83008_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Agreement contract between Thomas Sharp and Penguin Books Ltd. for the literary content of the book at the present entitled: "Village Planning".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83285_actor">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book Anatomy of the Village, sent to Scott.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83286_actor">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book Anatomy of the Village, sent to Scott.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Leslie Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89885_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book Anatomy of the Village, sent to Scott.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Vincent.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89886_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.L. Hutchinson, Visual Department, The British Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80804_actor">British Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village research for the book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.L. Hutchinson, Visual Department, The British Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89887_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village research for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from N. Pevsner, Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84011_actor">The Architectural Review.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner, Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89888_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the village book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Will F. Taylor.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89889_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning photographs to be used the English village book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Faber and Faber.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89890_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with an enclosed a copy of Anatomy of the Village for the Editor's consideration.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Stephen Tallents, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82631_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning some of the photographs for the book: Anatomy of the Village for a new journal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. de C. Hastings, Editor of the Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89891_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book: Anatomy of the Village sent to Editor.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Stephen Tallents, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82632_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book: Anatomy of the Village and the negotiations with Architectural Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Stephen Tallents, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89892_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Tallents.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89893_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with the enclosed draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Stephen Tallents, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89894_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with the enclosed draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83824_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89895_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83825_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to William Holford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89896_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book on English villages, and the illustrations and photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Stephen Tallent, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82633_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Stephen Tallent, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89897_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from N. Pevsner, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89898_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the return of the draft of the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R. Ellersley Mc Caughan, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82634_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning reports and plans of several English villages sent to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F. Scothorne, Public Relations Officer, London Transport.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84192_actor">Transport for London.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of the Board's passenger.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Holford, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82635_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book of English Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Holford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book of English Villages and the illustrations.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80980_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the reproduction of Hoxne.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from N. Pevsner, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84012_actor">The Architectural Review.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the English villages book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89899_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the English villages book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89900_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning various books: Town Planning, English Panorama and Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89901_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting with N. Pevsner.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83009_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eunice E. Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89902_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book Anatomy of the Village, and a meeting about this issue in London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner, The Achitectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89903_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book Anatomy of the Village with Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Stephen Tallents, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82636_actor">Ministry of Town and Country Planning, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Ministry acknowledgment accompanying Sharp's article in Architectural Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Faber and Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81303_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the impossibility of publishing Sharp's book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89905_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning photographs and illustrations of English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from N. Pevsner, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83117_actor">Pevsner, Sir Nikolaus Bernhard Leon, 1902 - 1983, art historian, architectural historian</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N. Pevsner, The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89904_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the 33 drawings sent to Pevsner for the essay; Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83010_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the revisions of Town Planning and the book about Village Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83011_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the contract for the book Village Planning and about Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eunice Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89906_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the contract for the book Village Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Allen Lane, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89907_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Town Planning and Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eunice Frost, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83012_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp about Town Planning and Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89908_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication progress of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83013_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication progress of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jasmine Gordon-Forbes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944/1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944-1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83014_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89909_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication progress of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83017_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication progress of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83015_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jasmine Gordon-Forbes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83016_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the different prints of the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83018_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the plan's size for the book Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83019_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the redesigned of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1945" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89910_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Letter of thanks for a card and also concerning a meeting.</p>
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              <p>Post card about a meeting in Cafe Royal.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the drawings, showing a village before and after planning, from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Allen Lane, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <p>Letter concerning maps included in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Gordon-Forbes, Transatlantic by Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Gordon-Forbes, Transatlantic by Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the revised proofs of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Allen Lane, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Gordon-Forbes, Transatlantic by Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the revised proofs and alterations to the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.S. Reader, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.79</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.W. Oberdorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the proofs and corrections to the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.S. Reader, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten note about requests dated 24.3.46.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Handwritten note concerning his requests for copies of Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Gordon-Forbes, Transatlantic by Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.83</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <p>Letter concerning the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Gordon-Forbes, Transatlantic by Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.84</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a failed meeting in London about the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.85</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <p>Letter concerning the proof of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.87</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.89</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the proof of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.90</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
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              <p>Letter concerning the list of publications to send a copy of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from The Rt. Hon. Lord Justice Scott.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.91</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a sent copy of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Rt. Hon. Lord Justice Scott (Leslie Scott).</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.92</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83287_actor">Scott, Sir Leslie Frederic, 1869-1950, Judge, conservative politician, MP for Liverpool Exchange</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's and concerning a sent copy of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.E. Morpurgo, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.93</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83037_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copies of Anatomy of the Village sent to publications.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Summers, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.94</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83038_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Summers, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.95</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89928_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Summers' request.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.96</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83039_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.E. Morpurgo, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.97</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83040_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copies of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Erskine Childers, Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Local Government, Dublin.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.98</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89929_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning copy sent to Childers of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G. Bell Berker, The Ayrshire Drawing Office.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.99</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83041_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book: Anatomy of the Village. G. Bell Berker wants to point out that Invernary is in Scotland and not England.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G. Bell Berker, The Ayrshire Drawing Office.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.100</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89930_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Berker.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.W. Oberndorfer, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.101</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89932_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs and drawings of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Kinnersley.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.102</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_82371_actor">Kinnersley, David, 1926-2004, Economist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Kinnersley.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.103</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89933_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.E. Morpurgo.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.104</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83042_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the announcement of the book Anatomy of the Village in a Dutch newspaper and referring the book sales in Holland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.E. Morpurgo.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.105</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89934_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the announcement of the book Anatomy of the Village in a Dutch newspaper and referring the book sales in Holland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Tatyana Kent, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.106</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83043_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the special edition of Town Planning prepared for American publication.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.S. Reader, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.107</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89935_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for the return of illustrative material from the book: Anatomy of the Village. Enclosed a portrait photograph for the American Edition of Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H.S. Reader, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.108</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83044_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter on the return of illustrative material from book: Anatomy of the Village and requesting a portrait photograph for the American Edition of Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Bryant Newbold, Official Architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.109</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80821_actor">Bryant Newbold, Harry, fl. 1940s, Architect and Author.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the permission to reproduce some illustrations for a review of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Bryant Newbold, Official Architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.110</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89936_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning illustrations for a review of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Summers, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.111</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83045_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning royalties for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Tatyana Kent, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.112</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83046_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning corrections and alterations to the South American edition of the book: Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Tatyana Kent, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.113</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89937_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning corrections to the South American edition of the book: Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Paul B. Redmayne, Cadbury Brothers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.114</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80835_actor">Cadbury</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a correction to the text on Dunster village and its tower in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Paul B. Redmayne, Cadbury Brothers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.115</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89938_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Redmayne.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Paul B. Redmayne, Cadbury Brothers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.116</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89939_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Redmayne's, thanking him for the correction to the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.117</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83047_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter responding to Randall's request for permission to reproduce some photographs from the book Anatomy of the Village, with non-publication purposes. Letter enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.I. Randall.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.118</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89940_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning permission to reproduce drawings and explaining he is not the copyright holder for the photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.119</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83048_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from June to December 1946 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.T. Owen.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.120</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter requesting the loan of the book entitled: Village planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.T. Owen.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.121</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89941_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Owen's enquiry regarding the loan of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.T. Owen.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.122</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking about the books: Anatomy of the Village and Village Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.T. Owen.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.123</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89942_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Owen's question about the title of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.124</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83049_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Central Office of Information question about the photograph on page 23 of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.125</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89943_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to a request from the Central Office of Information.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.126</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83050_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter informing Sharp about a letter received from USA, enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.127</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89944_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to a query about the book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Roy W. Meyer, St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.128</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89945_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to a query about the book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.129</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83051_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to December 1947 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Summers, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.130</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83052_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the books: Anatomy of the Village and Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Summers, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.131</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89946_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the books: Anatomy of the Village and Town Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.132</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83053_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to December 1948 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.133</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83056_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a question from the Illustrations Editor of Chamber's Encyclopaedia about one of the plans from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. Flitchew, Illustrations Editor of Chamber's Encyclopaedia.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.134</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89947_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a question from the Illustrations Editor of Chamber's Encyclopaedia about one of the plans from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.S.B. Glover, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.135</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89948_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a question from the Illustrations Editor of Chamber's Encyclopaedia about one of the plans from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jacob J. Berlin.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.136</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book: Anatomy of the Village. Two points about the differences between Village and Town.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Jacob J. Berlin.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.137</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89949_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Berlin regarding two points on the differences between village and town.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.138</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83054_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to December 1949 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.139</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter with a receipt enclosed.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83055_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with a receipt enclosed from the sales from January to June 1950 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.140</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter with a receipt enclosed.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83057_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with a receipt enclosed from the sales from January to June 1950 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur C. Holden, Holden, McLaughlin and Associates.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.141</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81897_actor">Holden, Arthur Cort, 1890-1993, Architect, planner and poet.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Frank Lloyd Wright's interest in the book: Anatomy of the Village. Arthur C. Holden also asks Sharp about the possibility of sending a copy to Wright and to Arthur Morgan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Arthur Morgan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.142</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89950_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a copy of the book: Anatomy of the Village sent to Morgan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Arthur C. Holden.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.143</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89951_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copies of the book: Anatomy of the Village sent to Morgan, Wright and Holden.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur Morgan, Community Service, Inc.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.144</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89952_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for a copy of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dr. E.A. Gutkind, Institute of Urban Studies, International History of City Development, University of Pennsylvania.</unittitle>
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                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
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                <persname id="atom_89954_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.M. Rust, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.172</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint that the book: Anatomy of the Village is appearing in their list without the name of the author.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_83082_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from July 1963 to June 1966 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.174</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_83083_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from July to December 1966 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.175</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83084_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to June 1967 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.176</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83085_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from July to December 1967 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.177</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83086_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to June 1968 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.178</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83087_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from July to December 1968 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
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          <c level="item">
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_83088_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to June 1969 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.180</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83089_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from July to December 1969 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.181</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83090_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from January to June 1970 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.182</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83091_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales from July to December 1970 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.183</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83092_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the balance unearned from January to June 1971 from Penguin Books Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.184</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89956_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter asking if the book: Anatomy of the Village is out of print.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.M. Rust, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.185</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83093_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter replying that the book: Anatomy of the Village is not of print.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Amanda Reeve.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.186</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking permission to reproduce for publication some of the plans of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Amanda Reeve.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.187</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89957_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter explaining that reproduction fees will be five guineas per plan.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Amanda Reeve.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.188</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter agreeing the cost for the permission to publish the drawings from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Amanda Reeve.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.189</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89958_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter the drawings from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Amanda Reeve.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.190</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89959_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee for the copyright of drawings from the book: Anatomy of the Village sent to Amanda Reeve.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Amanda Reeve.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.191</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the drawings from the book: Anatomy of the Village sent to her.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Thelma Philip, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.192</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83094_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's copyright status for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mary Hudson, Permissions Department, Macmillan Services Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.193</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82474_actor">Macmillan Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning photographs in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mary Hudson, Permissions Department, Macmillan Services Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.194</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89960_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the article entitled Rural Settlements and photographs in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mary Hudson, Permissions Department, Macmillan Services Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.195</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82475_actor">Macmillan Publishers.</corpname>
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              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the article entitled Rural Settlements and photographs in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mary Hudson, Permissions Department, Macmillan Services Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.196</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Thelma Philip, Permissions Editor, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.197</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
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        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Secretariat, The Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.198</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
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        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
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                <persname id="atom_89963_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the book: Anatomy of the Village and the royalties from the Faber and Faber Shell Guide.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Coleby, The Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.199</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_83714_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
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              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the book: Anatomy of the Village and the royalties from the Faber and Faber Shell Guide.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mary Hudson, Permissions Department, Macmillan Services Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.200</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Coleby, Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.201</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the book: Anatomy of the Village and the Faber and Faber Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Royalty Accounts Department of Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.202</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.M. Rust, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.203</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_83095_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the book: Anatomy of the Village, out of print.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.M. Rust, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the copyright and final account for the book: Anatomy of the Village, out of print.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.M. Rust, Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
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                <corpname id="atom_83096_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the copyright and the Macmillan fee for the book: Anatomy of the Village, out of print.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.206</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
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        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_83097_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
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              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright for the book: Anatomy of the Village, with an enclosed letter from the EP Group of Companies regarding a reprint.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Norman C. Alborough, The E.P. Group of Companies.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.207</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photolitho reprint of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Norman C. Alborough, The E.P. Group of Companies.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.208</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81289_actor">Evangelical Press.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photolitho reprint of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Norman C. Alborough, The E.P. Group of Companies.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.209</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
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        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_81290_actor">Evangelical Press.</corpname>
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              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the reprint of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Norman C. Alborough, The E.P. Group of Companies.</unittitle>
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              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
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        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
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              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
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            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Letter concerning the reprint of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Norman C. Alborough, The E.P. Group of Companies.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.211</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_81291_actor">Evangelical Press.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the reprint of the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
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          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Royalty Department of Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.212</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89970_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee charged to Macmillan for reprinting the article from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Royalty Department of Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.213</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89971_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee charged to Macmillan for reprinting the article from the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.C. Andrews, Royalty Department of Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.1.214</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83098_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fee chargeed to Macmillan's for reprinting of the article from the book: Anatomy of the Village. An enclosed letter from Macmillan informing that they are not going to use Sharp's article at last.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Anatomy of the Village</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1942/1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942-1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89972_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence, plans and photographs from: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Wickham Hampshire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pages with notes and 2 plans. Scale: 0,5 inches to 100 feet.Size: 26X28 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83174_actor">Regional Planning Office, Reading Borough Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Wickham Hampshire; descriptive notes about the village and map reference notes. One original map of the village and one copy with a descriptive note.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">West Wycombe Buckinghamshire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pages with notes and 2 plans. Scale: 0,5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 44X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83175_actor">Regional Planning Office, Reading Borough Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>West Wycombe Buckinghamshire; descriptive notes about the village and map reference notes. One original map of the village and one copy with a descriptive note.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of an English village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942/1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942-1951</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Size: 11X7 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of an English village, not used in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">West Bay Dorset village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Description notes, 2 pages. Map; Scale: 0,5 inches to 100 feet.Size:23 X 30 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83176_actor">Regional Planning Office, Reading Borough Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>West Bay Dorset map of the village with description notes, for the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Aberayron Cardiganshire village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter with a map enclosed. Scale: 0,5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 47 X 37 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter from the Planning Officer for Wales. Aberayron Cardiganshire map enclosed for the book: Anatomy of the Village. The descriptive note relating to the map is damaged and missing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Planning Officer for Wales.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual of Villages, Tremadoc and Aberayron.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.R. Phillips, Town Planning Officer Norfolk County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80756_actor">Borough Council of King's Lynn &amp; West Norfolk, 1974 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Planned Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard of a village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard, Size: 13.5 X 7.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83160_actor">Rafael Tuck and Sons, Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Postcard of an English village, not used in the book: Anatomy of the Village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Houltrie, R.Kelsall, The Merlin Film Company.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89973_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the possibility of making a short film on English villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Brill Buckinghamshire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pages with notes and 2 plans. Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 31 X 28.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83177_actor">Regional Planning Office, Reading Borough Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Brill Buckinghamshire; descriptive notes about the village and map reference notes. One map of the village and one copy with a descriptive note.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Brill Buckinghamshire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 26.5 X 33.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83178_actor">Regional Planning Office, Reading Borough Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Brill Buckinghamshire map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Chilham Kent map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 19.5 X 31.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89974_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Chilham Kent map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Clare Suffolk village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 page with descriptive notes. Map, Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 19.5 X 31.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81952_actor">Ipswich Borough Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Clare Suffolk village; map and description notes about the village. Thomas Sharp and T.B. Oxenbury, County Planning Officer, Ipswich.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Coneysthorpe Yorkshire map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 24 X 28 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89975_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Coneysthorpe Yorkshire map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.B. Walker, Regional Planning Officer, Ministry of Works and Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82642_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled; Model Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Coxwold Yorkshire map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map, Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 44.5 X 18.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89976_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Coxwold Yorkshire map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.B.Walker, Regional Planning Officer, Ministry of Works and Planning. Enclosures: Craster Northumberland village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages and a Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 21 X 30 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82643_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Craster Northumberland village; 2 letters and map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Gainford Co. Durham map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 31 X 36.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89977_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Gainford Co. Durham village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Great Massingham Norfolk map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 27.5 X 37.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89978_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Great Massingham Norfolk village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Harewood Yorkshire village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages and Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 23.5 X 27.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82644_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Harewood Yorkshire village; letter and map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">East Witton Yorkshire map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 26.5 X 34.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89979_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>East Witton Yorkshire village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Heighiton, Co. Durham map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 31 X 29.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89980_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Heighiton, Co. Durham village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Department of Health for Scotland, St. Andrews House.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter wit 2 Maps enclosed; 1. Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 23 X 37 cm. 2. Coloured, Scale; 1/2500. Size:33 X 53 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84139_actor">The Scottish Office, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Invernaray Argyllshire village; letter and maps reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Kimbolton Huntingdonshire map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 26.5 X 28.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89981_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Kimbolton Huntingdonshire village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Regional Planning Officer, Manchester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter 3 pages and 2 maps. Maps: 1.Lowther Westmorland. Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 18 X 23 cm.2.Milburn Westmorland. Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size 21 X 27.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82488_actor">Manchester City Council</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lowther and Milburn villages, with maps enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Middridge Co. Durham map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 19 X 28 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89982_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Middridge Co. Durham village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Milton Abbas Dorset village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pages with notes and 2 plans. Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 23.5 X 38.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82645_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Milton Abbas Dorset village map reference with notes. Regional Planning Office, Ministry of Works and Planning..</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Montacute Somerset map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 32 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89983_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Montacute Somerset village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Palgrave Suffolk map and notes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes and Map trees coloured; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 27.5 X 33 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81953_actor">Ipswich Borough Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Palgrave Suffolk map and notes. T.B. Oxenbury, County Planning Officer, Ipswich.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Regional Planning Office of Cambridge, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82654_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled; Manual on Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to William-Ellis.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89984_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual on Village design, also asking Ellis for some documentation and information about Welsh villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Regional Planning Officer, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter 2 pages and 1 Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 46.5 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80850_actor">Cambridgeshire County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual on Village with a map enclosed of Thaxted Essex.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Sherston Wiltshire map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 32 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89985_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sherston Wiltshire village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Regional Planning Officer, Newcastle upon Tyne, Ministry of Works and Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and 1 Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 41 X 22.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82646_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual on Village with a map enclosed of Staindrop, Co. Durham.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Regional Planning Officer, Bristol, Ministry of Works and Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and 1 Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 41 X 22.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82647_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual of interesting Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Regional Planning Officer, Bristol, Ministry of Works and Planning.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and 1 Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 22.5 X 32 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82648_actor">Ministry of Works and Planning.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual of interesting Villages with a map enclosed of Polperro Cornwall village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Sherston Wiltshire map and notes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes and Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 32 X 22.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89986_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sherston Wiltshire map and notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Tomintoul Village map and notes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes and Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 23 X 65.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89987_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Tomintoul Village map and notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Department of Health for Scotland, St. Andrews House.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84140_actor">The Scottish Office, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Manual on Village Design.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Tremadoc Carnarvonshire village map.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map; Scale: 0.5 inches to 100 feet. Size: 28.5 X 22.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84141_actor">The Scottish Office, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Tremadoc Carnarvonshire village map reference with notes.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting of The Northern Echo, Thursday, 16 December, 1943.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 17.2.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Press cutting.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84089_actor">The Northern Echo Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Press cutting about North East villages picked as models for the Ministry of Works and Planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ill-starred Astronomer, Thomas Wright.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 18</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file, 2 writings.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89988_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Carbon copy of Ill-starred Astronomer with biographical notes on Thomas Wright and a play also entitled Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ill-starred Astronomer, Thomas Wright.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 18.1</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">unknown</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 22 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89989_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Research report on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ill-Starred Astronomer by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 18.2</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Play, 24 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89990_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Carbon copy of the play entitled "Ill-Starred Astronomer", inspired by the life of Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_89991_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Research material relating to Thomas Wright, including illustrations and photographs of Wright and notes re. Wright’s Original Theory. Photocopied research notes and mss. notes for research and Sotheby’s catalogue.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of Gentleman's Magazine, 1793.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.1</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89992_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Gentleman's Magazine, 1793; Thomas Wright and his house in Byer's Green, with handwritten notes.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of Annals of Science Magazine.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.2</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        24 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89993_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>The Early Journal of Thomas Wright of Durham, by Edward Hughes, M.A. Professor of Modern History, University of Durham. Handwritten notes by Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of an article entitled: Thomas Wright Astronomical Heritage.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.3</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        12 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89994_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright Astronomical Heritage by Herbert Dingle, Professor of History and Philosophy of Science in the University of London, University College, London. Handwritten note by Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of the Journal for the History of Astronomy.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.4</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89995_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>The cosmology of Thomas Wright of Durham by Michael Hoskin, Cambridge University. Handwritten note by Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of Gentleman's Magazine,Vol.1, 1793.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.5</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        10 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89996_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright's house in Byer's Green.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten summary of publications about Thomas Wright.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.6</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        10 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89997_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Handwritten summary of publications on Thomas Wright, for the research paper entitled: "Ill Starred Astronomer".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting from The Listener Magazine.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 page    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Press cutting of the article entitled: Herschel's Dilemma by Michael Hoskin from The Listener Magazine. Includes references to Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright exhibition. Letter of exhibit.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Exhibition summary, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright exhibition. Letter of exhibit. Bishop Cosin's Library, Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright of Durham and Inmanuel Kant.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Article, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright of Durham and Inmanuel Kant by F.A. Paneth. Durham University Journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright of Durham and Immanuel Kant.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Article, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright of Durham and Immanuel Kant by F.A. Paneth. Durham University Journal.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright material for "Ill- starred Astronomer".</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11</unitid>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">unknown</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_89998_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>File with photographs and research material on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph entitled: Thomas Wright; engraving prefixed to copies of his Original Theory or New Hypothesis of the Universe, in 1750.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974?</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph entitled: Thomas Wright; engraving prefixed to copies of his Original Theory or New Hypothesis of the Universe, in 1750. This Photograph is a cut of a copy of a postcard dated in 1904 with other photographs relating to Thomas Wright, such as; his village in Byer's Green, Observatory Tower at Westerton, St. Andrew's church at Bishop Aukland and his gravestone at the same church. Notes, (in the same postcard), about his works and his dates of birth and death.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Illustrated article on Thomas Wright.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_89999_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Illustrated article on Thomas Wright.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft for a publicly presentation of: Ill starred Astronomer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90000_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft for a publicly presentation of: Ill starred Astronomer.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map showing location of Thomas Wright's house at Byer's Green and Westerton Observatory Tower.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map: 0.5 inch to 1 mile. Size: 9 X 12.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90001_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Map showing location of Thomas Wright's house at Byer's Green and Westerton Observatory Tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Westerton Observatory Tower.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Westerton Observatory Tower built by Thomas Wright, know as a Folly.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Thomas Wright's gravestone.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Westerton Observatory Tower built by Thomas Wright, known as a Folly.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Thomas Wright's House in Byer's Green.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Thomas Wright's House in Byer's Green. Copy of a photograph dated 1904.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the site of Thomas Wright's house in Byer's Green.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of the site of Thomas Wright's house in Byer's Green. Demolished 1965.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Sotheby's Catalogue of Valuable Printed Books: Autograph, letters and historical documents.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 19.11.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Catalogue, 94 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83735_actor">Sotheby's.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sotheby's Catalogue of Valuable Printed Books: Autograph, letters and historical documents. With ms annotation on page 77 against the entry for a Thomas Wright manuscript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 20</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">ongoing</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90002_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Notebook of research notes on Thomas Wright.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and countryside.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 21</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1932/1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932-1934</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90003_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Notebook of Press cutting with the different reviews published of this book:<lb/><lb/>Passages from reviews and notices of the book: "Town and Countryside" and "The Future Development of South-West Lancashire" <lb/><lb/> Oxford University Press publicity leaflet for the book: Town and Countryside. <lb/><lb/> News Chronicle review, dated 18.11.32 <lb/><lb/> The Observer review, dated 18.12.32.<lb/><lb/> Weekend review by John Dower, dated 10.12.32.<lb/><lb/> Times Literacy Supplement review, dated 15.12.32.<lb/><lb/> Morning Post review, 30.11.32.<lb/><lb/> The Times review, 16.12.32<lb/><lb/> Estate gazette review, 24.12.32.<lb/><lb/> The Star (London), dated 29.12.32.<lb/><lb/> Great Thoughts review, March 1933. <lb/><lb/> Leletworth Citizen, dated 30. 12. 32. <lb/><lb/> Country Life review, 31.12.32. <lb/><lb/> Broadcast, 2.1.33.<lb/><lb/> The Listener, 11.01.33.<lb/><lb/> CPRE. Journal, Dec. 1932.<lb/><lb/> Commons and Footpaths Society, January 1933.<lb/><lb/> The New English Weekly review, 12.01.33. <lb/><lb/> Welwyn Times, 05.01.33. <lb/><lb/> Southport Visitor, 18.02.33.<lb/><lb/> Manchester Evening Chronicle, 16.01.33. <lb/><lb/> National Trust Bulletin, Feb. 1933.<lb/><lb/> Dundee Evening Telegraph, 18.02.33.<lb/><lb/> Sunday Times, 12.02.33.<lb/><lb/> Town Planning Institute Journal, Dec.'32 and Feb.'33<lb/><lb/> Town and Country Planning Journal, Feb.'33.<lb/><lb/> Journal of Institution of A. and Country Engineers, 14.02.33. <lb/><lb/> RIBA Journal, 11.02.33. <lb/><lb/> Western Marl, 2.2.33.<lb/><lb/> Manchester Guardian, 6.3.33.<lb/><lb/> Architect and B. News, 19.02.33. <lb/><lb/> Middlesex Advertiser, Country Gazette, 10.07.36.<lb/><lb/> The New Statesman, 11.03.33.<lb/><lb/> Architects' Journal, 1933-1934<lb/><lb/> Land Agents Record, May 13.05.33. <lb/><lb/> Town Planning Review, May 1933.<lb/><lb/> The Nation (American), March 15, 33.</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and Townscape (London: Murray, 1968).</unittitle>
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        1 file with three subfiles.    </physdesc>
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          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
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          <p>Town and Townscape (London: Murray, 1968): Correspondence with the Editor. Royalty statements. Photographs.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and Townscape; contract and correspondence, 1968-1969.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
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        1 file.    </physdesc>
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            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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            <p>Town and Townscape; contract and correspondence regarding the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp, 1968-1969.</p>
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            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement contract for the book: Town and Townscape, 1968.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
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                <corpname id="atom_82168_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
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            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Agreement contract for the book: Town and Townscape, 1968.</p>
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          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.M. Stephens, Secretary to Russel Harty, Producer, Talks Department, British Broadcasting Corporation.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 8 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80637_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the transcript of the broadcast entitled: The world of books. Enclosed; the transcript of Sharp's broadcast: "Town and Landscape".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.Wood, County Planning Office, Cambridgeshire and Ely County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90006_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of the New Museum site of Cambridge used in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90007_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of Cambridge used in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82169_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning: the photographs of Cambridge and thanking Sharp for the booklet entitled: Dreaming Spires and BBC broadcast for "The World of Books".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90008_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Rubinstein's account and illustrations for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90009_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Rubinstein's account and illustrations for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83224_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Rubinstein's account of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Michael Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90010_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp. Enclosed; two copies of letters to Town Planning Institute Journal and RIBA Journal about their agreement to settle the dispute.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83225_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp over a passage in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83226_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp over a passage in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82170_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp over a passage in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90011_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp over a passage in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83227_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp over a passage in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and Townscape: amended paragraph pp. 126-127.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Text, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90012_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Town and Townscape: amended paragraph pp. 126-127. The text relates to the dispute between Mr. Denys Lasdun and T. Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90013_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the amended paragraph in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82171_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the amended paragraph in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82172_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the amended paragraph in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83228_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the paragraph on the New Museum site at Cambridge, in relation to the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82173_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90014_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the discussion on "The World of Books" programme on BBC.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Michael Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90015_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp over some of the content in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Editor of RIBA Journal.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90016_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's correction of the content regarding the New Museum site at Cambridge which is included in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of a letter to Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co. from Roche, Son &amp; Neale.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp in the book: Town and Townscape. Enclosed, the correction required by Lasdun to be published in RIBA and TPI Journal's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83229_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the settlement of the dispute between Lasdun and Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83230_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the settlement of the dispute between Lasdun and Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82174_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the settlement of the dispute between Lasdun and Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82175_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the settlement of the dispute between Lasdun and Thomas Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90017_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute over the content of: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83231_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute over the content of: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82176_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute over the content of: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83232_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute over the content of: Town and Townscape. Enclosed, a draft letter on this.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83233_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute over the content of: Town and Townscape. Enclosed, letter sent to Lasdun's solicitors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90018_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute, and the solicitor's response.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83234_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun's demands in the dispute over the content of: Town and Townscape. Enclosed, letter sent to Lasdun's solicitors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83235_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp over the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.L. Warde.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90019_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp over the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L. Norman B.E. Ayling, Deputy County Planning Officer, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90020_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute between Lasdun and Sharp over the book: Town and Townscape. Sharp asks to borrow an inquiry dated 1964 about this issue.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L. Norman B.E. Ayling, Deputy County Planning Officer, Cambridge and to G. Wood, Cambridgeshire and Isle of Ely County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 1 page 2 copies of letters.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90021_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning L. Norman B.E. Ayling's contract with the North Riding County Office. Second letter thanking G. Wood for the documents relating to Lasdun's towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90022_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning documentation relating to the dispute over Cambridge towers, sent to Rubinstein.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83236_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the documentation and other information relating to the dispute over Cambridge towers, sent to Rubinstein.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83237_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the open letter relating to the dispute over Lasdun's Cambridge towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael B. Rubinstein, Rubinstein, Nash &amp; Co.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83238_actor">Rubinstein, Nash and Co.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of the open letter relating to the dispute over Lasdun's Cambridge towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82177_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute over Lasdun's Cambridge towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Roche, Son &amp; Neale.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute over Lasdun's Cambridge towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90023_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute over Lasdun's Cambridge towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82178_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dispute over Lasdun's Cambridge towers, and the text on this issue published in the book: Town and Townscape. Enclosed; a letter from Lasdun's solicitors outlining his requirements.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of an acknowledgment to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82179_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd. comunicating Sharp's absence in the USA. Includes a note to Sharp warning him the seriousness of the issue.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.1.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82180_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the distribution of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and townscape; correspondence, 1965-1974.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1965/1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965-1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90024_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Town and townscape; correspondence.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipts for the royalty statements of the book: Town and Townscape.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 receipts.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82181_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipts for the royalty statements 1968-1974 of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Allen Lane, The Penguin Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90025_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking the publication of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to Allen Lane, The Penguin Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90026_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for a reply to his letter dated 1st November 1965.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Valerie White, Secretary to Sir Allen Lane, The Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83099_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter comunicating Allen's absence and mentioning as well that the letter has been passed to the Editorial Department.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dieter Pevsner, The Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83100_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Editorial board's interest in reading the typescript copy of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dieter Pevsner, The Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90027_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing the typescript copy of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dieter Pevsner, The Penguin Books Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83101_actor">Penguin Books.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Editorial board's decision not to publish the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B.T. Batsford, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90028_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking the publication of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from B.T. Batsford, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80539_actor">B.T. Batsford Ltd Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Rejection letter re. Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Thames and Hudson, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83810_actor">Thames and Hudson Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking the publication of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Walter Neurath, Thames and Hudson, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83811_actor">Thames and Hudson Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Walter Neurath, Thames and Hudson, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90029_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Walter Neurath concerning the rejection of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Walter Neurath, Thames and Hudson, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83812_actor">Thames and Hudson Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Rejection letter re. Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90030_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking the publication of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83826_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90031_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Townscape, and enclosed typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83827_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the receipt of Sharp's typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83828_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing the typescript copy of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83829_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, rejecting Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90033_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Philp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Phoenix House, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90034_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking the publication of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Phoenix House, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90035_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking a reply of a previous letter and the return of his typescript of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Phoenix House, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82087_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's, apologizing for not having acknowledged receipt of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Phoenix House, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82088_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's, rejecting Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82182_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter seeking the publication of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82183_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82184_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, rejecting Town and Townscape. Citing the inclusion of previously published material.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90036_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young, concerning the reasons given for the rejecting the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82185_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, asking to re-send the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90037_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young, with a copy of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82186_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82187_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with a list of the reviewed points of the typescript for publication.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90038_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young regarding the reviewed points from the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90039_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to accompany Sharp's amended typescript and list of illustrations for potential inclusion.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82188_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82189_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Townscape, declining it for second time.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90040_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young, requesting a meeting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten notes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90041_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>List of the publishers to which Sharp sent the typescript of the book: Town and Townscape with their reasons for having rejected it.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82190_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the publication of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82191_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning John Betjeman's review of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90042_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning John Betjeman's review of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80715_actor">Betjeman, Sir John, 1906-1984, Knight, poet, writer on architecture, broadcaster</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_80716_actor">Betjeman, Sir John, 1906-1984, Knight, poet, writer on architecture, broadcaster</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter inviting J. Betjeman to Oxford to visit him and Rachel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82192_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning John Betjeman's review of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eric de Mare.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90043_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs required for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82193_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book in conjunction with the photographs by Eric de Mare.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90044_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young, about the publication of the book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82194_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90045_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90046_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for copies of some photographs to illustrate the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edwin Smith.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90047_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for copies of some photographs to illustrate the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G. Bernard Wood, Free-Lance Journalist and Photographer, Author and Lecturer.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84403_actor">Wood, George Bernard, 1900-1973, Author, Journalist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the negatives of the photographs for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82195_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90048_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a reviewed typescript of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82196_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to acknowledge receipt of the typescript.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90049_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with the photographs for the book enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Edwin Smith.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90050_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for photographs and returning those which are not to be used in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eric de Mare.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81071_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs required for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eric de Mare.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90051_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs required for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Edwin Smith.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90052_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs required for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.B.Wood and Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90053_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs required for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80981_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, and concerning the photographs required for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82197_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82198_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, concerning the typescript with the photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90054_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82199_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in London on 1st of March.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90055_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning some changes to the typescript and illustrations for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.69</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82200_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.70</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90056_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sharp's request for a photograph to include in his book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.71</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82201_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing a layout of the book: Town and Townscape, for Sharp’s review.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.72</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90057_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.73</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82202_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.74</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82203_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the progress with the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.75</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90058_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sharp's request for the progress with publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Civic Trust.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.76</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84022_actor">The Civic Trust of England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter requesting the return of photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.77</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82204_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.78</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82205_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the conditions of the agreement contract for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.79</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90059_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young, and concerning the conditions of the agreement contract with the Publishers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.80</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82206_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.81</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90060_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Historic Towns Conference.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Holliday, Department of Town Planning, Lanchester College of Technology, Coventry.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.82</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs of the Cathedral and the tower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.83</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90061_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for the photographs of Grey Street.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Butler, North Eastern Regional Association.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.84</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90062_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Request for photographs of Newcastle and Durham for use in the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.85</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82207_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.B. Ross, County Planning Officer, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.86</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82697_actor">Newcastle City Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of Grey Street in Newcastle for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.87</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82208_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs and text for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.88</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90063_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.89</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82209_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Town Clerk of Richmond.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.90</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90064_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Town Clerk of Wigan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.91</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90065_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Town Clerk of Swindon.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.92</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90066_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R. Lawrie, Town Clerk of Richmond.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.93</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90067_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R. Lawrie, Town Clerk of Richmond.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.94</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83190_actor">Richmond Town Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.B. Wright, Secretary Cambridge Preservation Society.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.95</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90068_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an illustration of Trinity St. in Cambridge, (which Sharp had already used in his report entitled: Dreaming Spires and Teeming Towers), and about Sharp's interest in re-using it for: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Aerofilms Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.96</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90069_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter accompanying a cheque as payment for photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D. Murray, City Architect and Planning Officer, Town Hall, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.97</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82798_actor">Oxford Borough Council, United Kingdom.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Allan Royle, Town Clerk of Wigan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.98</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84355_actor">Wigan Town Council</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs of the city required for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Ed.J. Burrow &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.99</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90070_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's, and about the photographs of Wigan required for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of two letters to Geoffrey Wood, County Plannig Office, Cambridge, and Allan Royle, Town Clerk of Wigan.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.99a</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90071_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for the photographs received from Wood and guide book received from Royle.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eagle Photos (Cheltenham) Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.100</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90078_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letters about a photograph of Wigan for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.A. Smith, Production Manager, Ed.J. Burrow &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.101</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81252_actor">Ed . J. Burrow and Co. Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Wigan Official Guide.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from (signature illegible), Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.102</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning some photographs of Durham for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Cambridge Preservation Society.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.103</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80841_actor">Cambridge Preservation Society.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning photographs for inclusion in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copies of two letters to J.B. Wright, Cambridge Preservation Society and Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.104</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90072_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to J.B. Wright, concerning photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eagle Photos (Cheltenham) Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.105</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90073_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eagle Photos (Cheltenham) Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.106</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90074_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sharp's request for a photograph of a market square for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Aerofilms Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.107</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80446_actor">Aerofilms and Aero Pictorial Limited.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's with the price list enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Aerofilms Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.108</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90075_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for a reproduction of a photograph of Richmond.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.109</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90076_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.110</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82210_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp confirming the recepit of the photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Margaret Leibbrandt, Assistant to Priscilla Oakeshott, Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.111</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80845_actor">Cambridge University Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter informing Sharp that his letter of 17th August has been forwarded to the County Council.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.112</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90077_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with two more photographs enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Aerofilms Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.113</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80447_actor">Aerofilms and Aero Pictorial Limited.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from Aerofilms Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.114</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82211_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter confirming the receipt of two photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Norman B.E. Ayling, County Planning Office, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.115</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90079_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photograph of Trinity Street, Cambridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harold Gayton, City Planning Officer, Exeter.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.116</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90080_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photograph of Princesshay, Exeter with regard to its publication in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.117</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 11 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82212_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape. Enclosed is a list with the illustrations, (2 copies).</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.118</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90081_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.119</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82213_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape. Also concerning a filming location in Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.120</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90082_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape, and concerning the decision not to include the film on the grounds of its quality.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Josephine Reynolds, Department of Civic Trust.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.121</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90083_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape. Sharp's interest is in the existence of the old blocks from his article entitled: Teeming Towers, January 1963 issue of the Review.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Constable, Architectural Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.122</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90084_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for prints received.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from H. Gayton, Planning Officer, Exeter.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.123</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81108_actor">District Council of Exeter.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs requested for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from N.B. Ayling, Deputy County Planning Officer, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.124</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80851_actor">Cambridgeshire County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photograph of Trinity Street in Cambridge requested for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N.B. Ayling, Deputy County Planning Officer, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.125</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80852_actor">Cambridgeshire County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Ayling's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Eric de Mare.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.126</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90085_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks the photographer to take a few pictures for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eric de Mare.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.127</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81072_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.128</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82214_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter confirming the receipt of photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eric de Mare.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.129</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81073_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter accompanying two requested photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copies of two letters to Eric de Mare and Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.130</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90086_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Eric de Mare and sending the two photographs to Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copies of two letters to Josephine Reynolds, Department of Civic Design and Harold Gayton, City Planning Officer, Exeter.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.131</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90087_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Reynold and thanking Gayton for the photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.132</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90088_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Margaret Leibbrandt, Assistant to Priscilla Oakeshott, Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.133</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80846_actor">Cambridge University Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs requested for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Margaret Leibbrandt, Assistant to Priscilla Oakeshott, Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.134</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90089_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs requested for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Margaret Leibbrandt, Assistant to Priscilla Oakeshott, Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.135</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90090_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs requested for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.136</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82215_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter confirming the receipt of photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copies of two letters to Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd. and D. Murray City Architect and Planning Officer, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.137</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90091_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Foster and concerning the Whitehall photograph. Letter concerning some photographs from "Oxford Replanned" to be used in "Town and Townscape".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Margaret Leibbrandt, Assitant to Priscilla Oakeshott, Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.138</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80847_actor">Cambridge University Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs of Cambridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copies of two letters to Josephine Reynolds and Margaret Leibbrandt, Assitant to Priscilla Oakeshott, Cambridge University Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.139</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90092_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter returning the blocks to Josephine Reynolds and in answer to Leibbrandt's about the photographs of Cambridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kenneth Foster, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.140</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90093_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a possible competitor.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.141</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82216_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the paper texture for the book entitled: Town and Townscape. Enclosed, paper samples.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.142</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90094_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning paper samples, a meeting and Worskett's book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.143</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90095_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning some details of the first print of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.M. Watson, County Planning Officer, Worcester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.144</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90096_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for a copy of the photograph of Bridge Street, Pershore for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.145</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90097_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael Wright, RIBA.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.146</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83221_actor">Royal Institute of British Architects</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photograph of Bridge Street in Pershore for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H.M. Watson, County Planning Officer, Worcester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.147</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90098_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for the photograph received.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.148</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82217_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs received and enclosing a few sent by Habgood.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.149</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90099_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.150</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82218_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the booK: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.151</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90100_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.152</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82219_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the final cost for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.153</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90101_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the final cost for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.154</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82220_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the advanced paragraph for the publicity of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.155</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90102_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>A text in verse for the sales of the book: Town and Townscape, with a photograph enclosed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.156</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82221_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publicity of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.157</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90103_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the illustrated publicity material for Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.158</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90104_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the illustrated publicity leaflet for the book: Town and Townscape. Enclosed, a draft of the text for this leaflet.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.159</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82222_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the illustrated publicity leaflet for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.160</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82223_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's poem about Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Whitfield, Architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.161</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84346_actor">Whitfield, Sir William, 1920-2019, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of Glasgow.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Whitfield, Architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.162</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84347_actor">Whitfield, Sir William, 1920-2019, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of York.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.163</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82224_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of York, and the contract for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.164</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90105_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning several issues surrounding the publication of the book: Town and Townscape, such us, York pictures, Leaflet, Agreement, List of illustrations and acknowledgements.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B.E. Ayling, County Planning Office, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.165</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90106_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright oapplying to the report entitled: Dreaming Spires and teeming Towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Country Life Limited, Publishers.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.166</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90107_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright applying to the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from B.E. Ayling, County Planning Office, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.167</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80853_actor">Cambridgeshire County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.168</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82225_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's and several issues around the publication of the book: Town and Townscape, such us, York pictures, Leaflet, Agreement, List of illustrations and acknowledgements.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.169</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90108_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the agreement and the copyright applying to photographs in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.170</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82226_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the contract for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.171</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90109_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.172</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82227_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the agreement contract for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.173</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90110_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the agreement contract for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.174</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90111_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright applying to the text of the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.175</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82228_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the contract and the publicity leaflet of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.176</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90112_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publicity leaflet for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.177</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82229_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the printers for the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.178</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90114_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright applying to the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.179</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90113_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright applying to the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.180</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83715_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the copyright applying to the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.181</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90115_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright applying to the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Michael Gibson, Managing Editor, The Hamlyn Group.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.182</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90116_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright applying to the book: Oxford Observed, with a certificate of posting recorded delivery.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to N.B. Ayling, Deputy County Planning Officer, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.183</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90117_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright clearance for the "Teeing Towers" report, and about the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Michael Gibson, Managing Editor, Children's Books Division, The Hamlyn Group.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.184</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81824_actor">Hamlyn Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright clearance for the "Teeing Towers" report, and about the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.185</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82230_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the corrections for the final print of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.186</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82231_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publicity leaflet for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.187</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90118_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publicity leaflet for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.188</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90119_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proofs for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Trewin Copplestone, Publishing Directos, Arts Division, The Hamlyn Group.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.189</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81825_actor">Hamlyn Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright of the book: Oxford Observed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from British Travel.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.190</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90120_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the copyright fees.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.191</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90122_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning photographs belonging to Cambridgeshire County Council and also the Brenda Colvin book.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.192</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90121_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for advanced payment and concerning the biographical note for Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.193</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82285_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the biographical note of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.194</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82232_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the dust-jacket for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.195</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82233_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.196</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90123_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photo credits in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.197</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82234_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photo credits in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.198</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82235_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photo credits in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.199</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90124_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photo credits in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.200</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90126_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the index for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.201</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90125_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's trip to Ireland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.202</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82236_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the printing schedule of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.203</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82237_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the small alterations to the text of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.204</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90127_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the recording of Sahrp's poem about Oxford and his introduction to the book Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.205</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 7 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82238_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the delay in the publication of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.206</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90128_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the delay in the publication of the book: Town and Townscape. Sharp offers a novel for another publication.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.207</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82239_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp and saying he will look at the novels.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.208</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90129_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.209</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90130_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.210</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82240_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book Town and Townscape.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.211</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82241_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.212</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82242_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the production schedule for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.213</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90131_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the prelims of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.214</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82243_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgment of the proofs prelims of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.215</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82244_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the acknowledgments in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.216</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90132_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J. Gibbins, Publicity Manager, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.217</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82245_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a BBC television program in connection with "24 hours" called: Forward Planning Office", and Sharp's participation.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.J. Gibbins, Publicity Manager, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.218</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90134_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Gibbins.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.219a</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90135_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's American holiday dates.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.219b</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82246_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.220</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90136_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the dust jacket for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.221</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82247_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the release dates for Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.222</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82251_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.223</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82248_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning outstanding details relating to the edition of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.224</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90137_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning outstanding details relating to the edition of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.225</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82249_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the second batch of proofs for Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.226</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90138_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the correction of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.227</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82250_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.228</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82252_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publicity for the sales of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.229</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90139_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young concerning the publicity for the sales of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.230</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82253_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's participation in the National Library Week by delivering a talk to promote Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.J. Gibbins, Publicity manager, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.231</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82254_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's participation in the National Library Week by delivering a talk to promote Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.232</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90140_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the return of photographs in Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.233</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82255_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs used in the book: Town and Townscape, and arrangements for a BBC or ITV interview.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.234</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82256_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning several issues: return of illustrations, Inquiry in Richmond and a launch party.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.235</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90141_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young with instructions on how to proceed in a public inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.236</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82257_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his advice on the public inquiries and concerning the party and guest list.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.237</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90142_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.238</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90144_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning several issues: party guest list, copies of the book to the photographers that didn't charge anything and asking to send the author copies of Town and Townscape to Canada.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Norman B.E. Ayling, Deputy Planning Officer, Cambridge.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.239</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90143_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter returning the photographs borrowed.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.240</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82258_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Press Launch.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Susan Morrow, Secretary to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.241</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82259_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which are enclosed ten photographs used in the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.242</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82260_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Press Launch with a guest list.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.243</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90145_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning several issues: books to Taylor and Noble, and requesting copies to send to Canada.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Susan Morrow, Secretary to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.244</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82261_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with the press guest list.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.245</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82262_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.246</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82263_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the first reviews of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Alan Maitland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.247</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90147_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Maitland's request to use comments on Durham from the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.248</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90146_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning correspondence to Maitland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.249</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82264_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Maitland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Geoffrey Wood, County Planning Office, Cambridgeshire and Isle of Ely County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.250</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80854_actor">Cambridgeshire County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of the New Museums site in Cambridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.251</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82265_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs of the New Museums site in Cambridge.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.252</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90148_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the some photographs from the book: Town and Townscape to be used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.253</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82266_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the photographs and Lasdun's towers.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.254</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90149_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning several issues: photographs, Lasdun's fee for his towers and an invitation to go to Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Susan Ross, Subsidiary Rights Department, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.255</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82267_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Japanese translation of Town and Townscape, and the reproduction fees applying to the illustrations.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Susan Ross, Subsidiary Rights Department, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.256</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90150_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Ross concerning the Japanese translation of Town and Townscape, and the reproduction fees applying to the illustrations.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.257</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82268_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his collaboration.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.258</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82269_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's invitation to Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.259</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82271_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his report and synopsis.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.260</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90151_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the typescript of the book revised for Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.261</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82270_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the typescript of the book by Jill Craigie.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.262</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82272_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for the weekend in Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Susan Morrow, Secretary to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.263</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82273_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Lasdun affair, enclosing Sharp's documentation.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.264</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90152_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Cambridge photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.265</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90153_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning royalty statements and copies of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.266</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82274_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning royalty statements and the translation into Japanese Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.267</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82275_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning taxes on the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.268</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82276_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the contract to translate Town and Townscape into Japanese.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.269</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90154_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young's.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.W. Baker.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.270</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.271</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82277_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.272</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82278_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the translation into Japanese of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.273</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82279_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning final details of the translation to Japanese of Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.274</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82280_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing three copies of the Japanese version of the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mototsura Choh.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.275</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83191_actor">Richmond Town Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter from the translator of Town and Townscape into Japanese.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mototsura Choh.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.276</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83192_actor">Richmond Town Council, UK.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Choh asks some questions about the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Mototsura Choh.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.277</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90155_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Choh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.278</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82281_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Townscape, out of print.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.279</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90156_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Young.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Simon Young, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.2.280</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82282_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter with the last statement and royalties for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and townscape; photographs.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90157_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Town and townscape; photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Thaxted, Essex.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 14.5 X 20.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82283_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Thaxted, Essex for the book: Town and Townscape, page 99.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stamford, Lincs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 11 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80806_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Stamford, Lincs. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 83.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stamford, Lincs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 11 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80807_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Stamford, Lincs. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 86.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stamford, Lincs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16.5 X 21 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90158_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Stamford, Lincs. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 87.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stamford, Lincs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90159_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Stamford, Lincs. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 85.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Dorchester on Thames, Oxon.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 11.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80808_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Stamford, Lincs. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 85.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Bristol, Somerset.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20 X 25 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83704_actor">Smith, Edwin George Herbert, 1912-1971, Photographer and Artist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Bristol, Somerset for the book: Town and Townscape, page 81.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of York.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 22 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83222_actor">Royal Institute of British Architects</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of York for the book: Town and Townscape, page 78.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 15.5 X 22 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81255_actor">Edis, Daisy E., c. 1887-1964, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Durham for the book: Town and Townscape, page 75.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Canterbury Cathedral.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 11.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80809_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Canterbury Cathedral for the book: Town and Townscape, page 73 right.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the Gatehouse of Canterbury Cathedral.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 11.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84166_actor">The Times Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Gatehouse of Canterbury Cathedral for the book: Town and Townscape, page 73 left.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Canterbury.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 11.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84167_actor">The Times Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Canterbury for the book: Town and Townscape, page 72 right.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Ludgate Hill and St. Paul's, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 19 X 24 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81074_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Ludgate Hill and St. Paul's, London for the book: Town and Townscape, page 71.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Whitehall, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 19 X 24 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81075_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Whitehall, London for the book: Town and Townscape, page 68.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90160_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 27.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Richmond, Yorshire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 12 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80810_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Richmond, Yorshire for the book: Town and Townscape, page 94.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 12 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81261_actor">Edis Photographic Studio.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Durham for the book: Town and Townscape, page 74.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of King's Lynn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 22 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of King's Lynn for the book: Town and Townscape, page 90 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Richmond.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80448_actor">Aerofilms and Aero Pictorial Limited.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Richmond for the book: Town and Townscape, page 90 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 11.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80811_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire for the book: Town and Townscape, page 96 upper.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of High Street, Totnes.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 12 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80812_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of High Street, Totnes for the book: Town and Townscape, page 96 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Swindon.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 22 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Swindon for the book: Town and Townscape, page 101.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of St. Margaret's Place, King's Lynn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.22a</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 15 X 11 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of St. Margaret's Place, King's Lynn for the book: Town and Townscape, page 89.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of King's Street, King's Lynn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 11 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of King's Street, King's Lynn for the book: Town and Townscape, page 90 upper.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Nelson Street from North, King's Lynn.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 11 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Nelson Street from North, King's Lynn for the book: Town and Townscape, page 88.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Wigan, Lancs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 22 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Wigan, Lancs. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 100.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of St. James' Park, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 19.5 X 14.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of St. James' Park, London for the book: Town and Townscape, page 142 upper.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of St. James' Park, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 24.5 X 20 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of St. James' Park, London for the book: Town and Townscape, page 142 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kensington Gardens, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20.5 X 15 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84168_actor">The Times Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Kensington Gardens, London for the book: Town and Townscape, page 143 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Glasgow, University Library.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20.5 X 15 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Glasgow, University Library for the book: Town and Townscape, page 146 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Aylesbury, Bucks.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 30 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84091_actor">The Observer Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Aylesbury, Bucks. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 124.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Bison Wall Frame Flats, Rowlatts Hill, Leicester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16.5 X 21 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Bison Wall Frame Flats, Rowlatts Hill, Leicester for the book: Town and Townscape, page 135.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of London, Thames.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 19.5 X 15 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of London, Thames for the book: Town and Townscape, page 139.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Upper Regent St., London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 15 X 21 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80504_actor">Architects' Journal</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Upper Regent St., London for the book: Town and Townscape, page 141.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Coventry.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Coventry for the book: Town and Townscape, page 130.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the North Bar Gate, Beverley, Yorkshire.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80856_actor">Camera Press</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of the North Bar Gate, Beverley, Yorkshire for the book: Town and Townscape, page 108.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of York.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 15 X 20.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84023_actor">The Civic Trust of England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of York for the book: Town and Townscape, page 122.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Exeter.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 17 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81296_actor">Exeter City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Exeter for the book: Town and Townscape, page 117.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Oxford, Higher degrees in Engineering.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90161_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Oxford, Higher degrees in Engineering for the book: Town and Townscape, page 129.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting of Daily Express, 02.04.64.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Press cutting.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81057_actor">Daily Express Newspaper</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Press cutting of Daily Express, 02.04.64. Driving in cities.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Richmond Park in London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 26 X 9.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84169_actor">The Times Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Richmond Park in London for the book: Town and Townscape, pages 144-145.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Banbury, Oxon.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 15.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Banbury, Oxon for the book: Town and Townscape, pages 115.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Durham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 19.5 X 13 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Durham for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of West Street, Horsham, Sussex.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 15.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84024_actor">The Civic Trust of England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of West Street, Horsham, Sussex for the book: Town and Townscape, frontispiece page.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Elm Hill, Norwich.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 15.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80813_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Elm Hill, Norwich for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Ledbury.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 22.5 X 19 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81076_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Ledbury for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Diss, Norfolk.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Diss, Norfolk for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Chichester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80982_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Chichester for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Henley.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 11.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80814_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Henley for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Bewdley.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20 X 15 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80983_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Bewdley for the book: Town and Townscape, page 23.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of St. Paul's St., Stamford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16.5 X 21 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83705_actor">Smith, Edwin George Herbert, 1912-1971, Photographer and Artist.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of St. Paul's St., Stamford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 15.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Brighton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20 X 14 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81077_actor">de Mare, Eric, 1910-2002, Photographer.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Brighton for the book: Town and Townscape, page 16.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Gosport, Hants.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 16.5 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Gosport, Hants. for the book: Town and Townscape, page 20.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Gosport, Hants.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 28 X 14.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84025_actor">The Civic Trust of England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Gosport, Hants for the book: Town and Townscape, page 21.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Farnham, Surrey.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80984_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Farnham, Surrey for the book: Town and Townscape, page 22.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Broadway, Worcs.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 28 X 14.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80815_actor">British Travel Association.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Broadway, Worcs for the book: Town and Townscape, page 25.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Engraved illustration of Morpeth, Market Place, Northumberland.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Engraved illustration.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <name id="atom_80469_actor">Allom, Thomas, 1804-1872, Architect and Artist.</name>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Engraved illustration of Morpeth, Market Place, Northumberland for the book: Town and Townscape, page 41.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of New College Extension, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20.5 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90162_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of New College Extension, Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of High Street, Chippenham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 22 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84149_actor">The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of High Street, Chippenham for the book: Town and Townscape, page 35 centre.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Salisbury.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 22 X 16 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81298_actor">F. Futcher and Son Photographic Studio</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Salisbury for the book: Town and Townscape, page 33.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of High Street, Chippenham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21.5 X 14 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84150_actor">The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of High Street, Chippenham for the book: Town and Townscape, page 35 upper.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Winchester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 15 X 22 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84026_actor">The Civic Trust of England.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Winchester for the book: Town and Townscape, page 32.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of High Street, Chippenham.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 15 X 22 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84151_actor">The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of High Street, Chippenham for the book: Town and Townscape, page 35 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Holywell St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 20 X 25 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Holywell St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 35 lower.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Winchester.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 18 X 26 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Winchester for the book: Town and Townscape, page 31.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 11.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81081_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 65.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of High St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 11.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81082_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of High St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 53.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 21 X 11.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80449_actor">Aerofilms and Aero Pictorial Limited.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 63.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Catte St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 19 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81083_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Catte St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 47.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Catte St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.69</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 19 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81084_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Catte St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 48.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Catte St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.70</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 19 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81085_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Catte St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 49.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Catte St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.71</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 19 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81086_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Catte St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 46.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Catte St., Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.71a</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 16 X 18.5 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81087_actor">Dell and Wainwright Photographic Practice.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Catte St., Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 51.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Magdelen Tower, Oxford.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 22.3.72</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph: black and white, 23.5 X 30 cm.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of Magdelen Tower, Oxford for the book: Town and Townscape, page 55.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ill- starred astronomer.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1950/1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950-1976</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90163_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence about the play Ill- starred Astronomer based on research into Thomas Wright.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright, F.A. Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright, F.A. Paneth</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Thomas Wright, research notes.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90164_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Thomas Wright, research notes.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82975_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Paneth's (father) research on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82974_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning details of the research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82976_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning details of the research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82977_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning details of the research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82978_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning her flight to Paris to defend her thesis, and about Herchel.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82979_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning details of the research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. J. Zeitlin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90166_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Herschel’s material in relation with T. Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dr. J. Zeitlin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp, with a thermo fax copy of the description of the material acquired from Sotheby.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. J. Zeitlin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90165_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Zeitlin concerning details on the research into Herschel and Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82980_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning research into Herschel and Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Keeper of Manuscripts, British Museum, London.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90167_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting access to Thomas Wright manuscripts.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jack G.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82981_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jack G.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Superintendent of the Manuscript Student's Room, The British Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgment from the Superintendent of the Manuscript Student's Room, The British Museum.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82982_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Major E. Brown, Brancepeth Castle.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research into Thomas Wright, with a typescript note of the Durham Militia.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Major E. Brown, Brancepeth Castle.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90168_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks to Brown.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Lt.Col. W.S. Watson.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90169_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter asking for information about Militia archives, with regard to research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Lt. Col. W.S. Watson.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Militia and its archives.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Lt.Col. W.S. Watson.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90170_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Watson for information about Herschel and Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jack G.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jack G.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research into Thomas Wright and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Frank Graham, Publisher, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81774_actor">Graham, Frank, 1913-2006, Historian and Publisher.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Response on receiving a book of poems by Sharp and a panphlet received on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publisher, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90171_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a booklet on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Frank Graham, Publisher, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81775_actor">Graham, Frank, 1913-2006, Historian and Publisher.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the booklet on Thomas Wright, stating the publication details.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publisher, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90172_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Graham concerning the publication for the booklet on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note from D.H. Merry, Librarian of Bodleian Library, Oxford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note and receipt.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Note and receipt for copies of Annals of Science chapter on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.H. Merry, Librarian of Bodleian Library, Oxford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90173_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Merry.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The County Planning Officer of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90175_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp asks wheteher Thomas Wright's house and Observatory Tower are listed buildings.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Rector of St. Andrew's Church, Bishop Auckland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90174_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the gravestone of Thomas Wright and the issue about his daughter.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90176_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the acknowledgements to Paneth in the booklet Sharp is preparing for publication.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.R. Atkinson, County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the listed status Thomas Wright's house, (Grade III) and the Observatory Tower, (Grade II).</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Rev. John N. Harrison.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the records relating to Thomas Wright, deposited in Durham County hall.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82983_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning his pamphlet on Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The County Archivist.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90177_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81177_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Thomas Wright's daughter.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90178_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Seaman concerning research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82984_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright and Herschel text in the booklet.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard from Jack G.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard concerning a publication on Thomas Wright edited by Cambridge University Press.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publisher.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81776_actor">Graham, Frank, 1913-2006, Historian and Publisher.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a copy ot Ill-starred Astronomer for publication.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90179_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Elizabeth Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82985_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an article by Hoskins.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jack G.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning research into Thomas Wright and the photographs of his house and observatory tower.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81178_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the record of Elizabeth Wright's baptism.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90180_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Seaman for research into Elisabeth Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eric.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Thomas Wright's house in Byers Green.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publisher.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90181_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the typescript cf Il-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81179_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Thomas Wright burial.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.A.L. Seaman, County Archivist, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90183_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Seaman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90182_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter with the corrected typescript of Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90184_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the corrected typescript of Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Eva Paneth.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <name id="atom_82986_actor">Paneth, Eva,</name>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning research into Thomas Wright.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81777_actor">Graham, Frank, 1913-2006, Historian and Publisher.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90185_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Bishop of Lincoln.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the research into Thomas Wright's gravestone.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90186_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81778_actor">Graham, Frank, 1913-2006, Historian and Publisher.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter informing Sharp, they have stopped all the publications, including Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.R. Atkinson, County Planning Officer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81180_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Westerton Folly, Bishop Auckland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Frank Graham, Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90187_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Sharp asks about the possibility of publishing Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.H. Plume, Christ's College, Cambridge.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alan Hodge, History Today.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81887_actor">History Today.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Osyth Leeston, John Murray Publishers Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82284_actor">John Murray Publishing House.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Douglas Blackwood, Editor of Blackwood's.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.66</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80737_actor">Blackwood's Magazine</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Editors of Radio 3 and 4 of BBC.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.67</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90188_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the typescript of Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Maurice Leitch, Features Editor of Drama Radio 4, BBC.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 23.68</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80638_actor">BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, 1922-</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the typescript of Ill-starred Astronomer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">J. Lyons &amp; Co.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1964/1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964-1971</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 folder, 3 files.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90189_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence and inquiries.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">J. Lyons &amp; Co.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1965/1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964-1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90190_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted Correspondence.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 7 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90191_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: The Future of Cadby Hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Summary of documents of the meeting with Carterers' Association of Great Britain and J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Summary, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90192_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Summary of documents of the meeting with Carterers' Association of Great Britain and J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. on Wedsneady, 24th February 1971.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90195_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central Buildings, Southwark Street.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81966_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central Buildings, Southwark Street. Enclosed, a letter from the Ministry of Housing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90193_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central Buildings, Southwark Street.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81967_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central Buildings, Southwark Street.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81968_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Gorleston Street and 51 Brook Green.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81969_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Piccadilly Circus, about the report in The Times for Saturday 24th August, 1968.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90194_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the impact of the plan for Piccadilly on the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft letter to Westminster City Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90196_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the impact of the plan for Piccadilly Circus.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81971_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the impact of the plan for Piccadilly on the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81970_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel. Enclosed, a copy of a letter from Strand Hotels Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81972_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90197_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the re-development of Piccadilly Circus.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81973_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the re-development of Piccadilly Circus and the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81974_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copies of two letters to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. and Sir Hugh Wilson.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90198_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Hugh Wilson, Chartered Architect and Town Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84394_actor">Wilson, Sir Hugh, 1913-1985, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the future of Regent Street and the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90199_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Hugh Wilson, Chartered Architect and Town Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90200_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81975_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90201_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81976_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81977_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90202_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury Sports Ground and the Ariel Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81978_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury Sports with an enclosed copy of the Minister's decision.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81979_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Palace Hotel Ltd. with an enclosed copy of the Minister's decision.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81980_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Gloucester Rd., Almondsbury.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90203_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning 16, High Street, Solihull.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81981_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning 16, High Street, Solihull.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81982_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning 16, High Street, Solihull.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81983_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning 16, High Street, Solihull.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81984_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Palace Hotel Ltd., Ariel Hotel, Bath Road, Harlington.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81985_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury Sports Ground and the Ariel Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90204_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the statement of fees for the Sudbury Sports Ground and the Ariel Hotel appeal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81986_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, entitled: Ariel Hotel, Bath Rd., Harlington.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90205_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81987_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81988_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Hugh Wilson, Chartered Architect and Town Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84395_actor">Wilson, Sir Hugh, 1913-1985, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the future of Regent Street.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Hugh Wilson, Chartered Architect and Town Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84396_actor">Wilson, Sir Hugh, 1913-1985, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Hugh Wilson, Chartered Architect and Town Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84397_actor">Wilson, Sir Hugh, 1913-1985, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Street study.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Hugh Wilson, Chartered Architect and Town Planner.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90206_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the re-development of Piccadilly Circus.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90207_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Regent Palace Hotel and Piccadilly Circus.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90208_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Regent Palace Hotel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81989_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90209_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Covering letter to Borough Engineer of Ealing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90210_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford appeal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81991_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford appeal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81990_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81992_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford appeal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81993_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90211_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fees for the year of 1966.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to I.M. Gluckstein, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90212_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Gluckstein.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from I.M. Gluckstein, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81994_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's holiday in the USA and about Piccadilly Circus appeal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90213_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Garrets Green Service Station, Sheldon.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81995_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Garrets Green Service Station, Sheldon.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81996_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: West Moors Filling Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81997_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: West Moors Filling Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81998_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: West Moors Filling Station. Enclosed, the Inspector's report and Minister's decision.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90215_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central and East site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90214_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central site, Greenford. Document enclosed concerning a proposed car park.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81999_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the refusal to grant planning permission for Eastleigh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82001_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Eastleigh. Enclosed, extracted notes relating to planning decision in the November Journal of Planning and Property Law.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82000_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning 3, Cornmarket Street, Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90216_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning planning consultancy fees, 1965.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90217_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Hayes Laundry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82002_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Hayes Laundry-West Norwood.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.69</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90218_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning Cornmarket Street with reference to the new Carving Room.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.70</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82003_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Cornmarket Street with reference to the new Carving Room.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.71</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82004_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter Cornmarket Street with reference to the new Carving Room.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.72</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82005_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's increasing annual salary.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.73</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90219_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's increasing annual salary.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.74</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82006_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning West Moors Filling Station, Ring Road, West Moors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.75</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82007_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning West Moors Filling Station, Ring Road, West Moors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.76</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82008_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning West Moors Filling Station, Ring Road, West Moors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.77</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82009_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Wimpy kiosk at West Moors Filling Station, Ring Road, West Moors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.78</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82010_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: West Moors Filling Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.79</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90220_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the date of the West Moors Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.80</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82011_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the date of the West Moors Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.81</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90221_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Wimpy Kiosk at West Moors Filling Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.82</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82012_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Wimpy Kiosk at West Moors Filling Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.83</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90222_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: L.C.C. Amendment Proposals; Lansdown Hill.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.84</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82013_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.85</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90224_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.86</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82014_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Sewage Works Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.87</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90223_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: White Lady land; Bray.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.88</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90225_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's fees and planning consultant for 1964.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.89</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82015_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.90</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90226_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Hayes Laundry, West Norwood.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.91</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82016_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Little Copse Service Station, Cullompton.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.92</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90227_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Little Copse Service Station, Cullompton.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Hugh Arthur, Pleasure Foods Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.93</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82017_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in Exeter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Hugh Arthur, Pleasure Foods Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.94</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90228_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in Exeter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.95</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82018_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Cullompton Service Station, near Exeter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.96</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82019_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Cullompton Service Station, near Exeter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.97</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90229_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Cullompton Service Station.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.98</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82020_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Cullompton Service Station, near Exeter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.99</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82021_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Hayes Laundry - 6/20 Lansdowe Hill West Norwood.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.100</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90230_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning Hayes Laundry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.1.101</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82022_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Hayes Laundry - 6/20 Lansdowe Hill West Norwood.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">J. Lyons &amp; Co.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90231_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Abstracted Correspondence.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90232_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Appeal and Inquiry: East Site, Greenford, 1966, (fees and expenses).</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82024_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: East Site, Greenford. Enclosed, a letter related to the Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82023_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82025_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry. Enclosed a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Transport.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90233_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82029_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82026_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82027_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry and Sharp's site visits.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82028_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82030_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry. Enclosed a copy of a letter from Transport Holding Company.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 7 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90235_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry. Enclosed a copy of the Proof of Evidence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82031_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the height of the building at Greenford Road.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82032_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site, Greenford Inquiry. Enclosed a copy of the notes for the Proof of Evidence.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82033_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Davies request a meeting with Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90236_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning East Site, Greenford Inquiry and Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82034_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning East Site, Greenford Inquiry and Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82035_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning East Site, Greenford Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82036_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Conference on East Site, Greenford Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90237_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the meeting between Davies, Sharps and Pearson. Sharp asks for a copy of the plans, the Survey report and the Development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82037_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82038_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the date of the East Site Inquiry , Greenford at Ealing Town Hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90239_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site Inquiry, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90238_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site Inquiry, Greenford. Enclosed, copies of letters relating to the Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82039_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford. Enclosed, a copy of the evidence of 1953 in connection with J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. Middlesex Development Plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82040_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford. Enclosed, a copy of the evidence of 1953 in connection with J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. Middlesex Development Plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82041_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford. Enclosed,a copy of a letter related to the Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90240_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Reply to Davies concerning the East Site Inquiry, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82042_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90241_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford and West Moors.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82043_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90242_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning the East Site Inquiry, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82044_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82045_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the preliminary report on the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90243_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82046_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford. Enclosed a letter from the London Borough of Ealing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82047_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82048_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82049_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford. Enclosed a letter from the London Borough of Ealing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82050_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the East Site Inquiry, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90245_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning the East Site Inquiry, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90244_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Sudbury and West moors appeals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90246_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for permission to mention Sudbury and West Moors appeals at the Annual Conference of the Town Planning Institute.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 7 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90248_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the enclosed Ealing Council's note.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90247_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82051_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82052_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82053_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a meeting in Ealing Planning Office on the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82054_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Central Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town Planning Application to London Borough of Ealing.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Application Form, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82055_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Town Planning Application to London Borough of Ealing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90249_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of Eastleigh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82056_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Inquiry of East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90250_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82057_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the meeting with the Ealing Officials on the East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82058_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the date given by the Minister for the appeal on East Site, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82059_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Application of East Site, Greenford, Ealing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.2.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82060_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Land Bounded by Oldfield Lane, Rockware Avenue and Greenford Road. Enclosed, a report on the proposed road.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">J. Lyons &amp; Co.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90251_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence, application forms, reports, plans.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Application by Messrs. J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. to the London Borough of Ealing.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Application, 17 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82061_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Application by Messrs. J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. to the London Borough of Ealing for planning permission for warehouse development at Oldfield Lane, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Application by Messrs. J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. to the London Borough of Ealing.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Application, 16 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82062_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Application by Messrs. J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. to the London Borough of Ealing for planning permission for warehouse development at Oldfield Lane, Greenford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Minister of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 15 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82593_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the appeal of J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90252_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from B.J. Collins, Director of Planning, Greater London County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81791_actor">Greater London County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B.J. Collins, Director of Planning, Greater London County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90253_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82063_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90254_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus and East Site, Greenford inquiries.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82064_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82065_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90255_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry. Enclosed: a copy of a letter to B.J. Collins, Director of Planning, Greater London Council.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82066_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82067_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90256_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B.J. Collins, Director of Planning, Greater London Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90257_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus re-devolepment plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82068_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the East Site-Greenford inquiry and Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90258_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82069_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82070_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90259_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82071_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90260_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan. Enclosed a list with the questions of J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. interest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82072_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan. Enclosed a list with the questions of J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd. interest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90261_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82073_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus re-development plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Chandler's Ford, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence, reports and plans.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82074_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Correspondence, reports and plans of Chandler's Ford, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26.1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_82075_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter entitled: Chandler's Ford.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26.2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <persname id="atom_90262_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter concerning Eastleigh Inquiry. Enclosed a report on the appeal.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26.3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_82076_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter entitled: Chandler's Ford, Cold Store and Distribution Depot.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26.4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_82077_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter entitled: Chandler's Ford, Cold Store and Distribution Depot.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26.5</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <persname id="atom_90263_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter entitled: Ice Cream Depot, Eastleigh.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.26.6</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 6 pages, (with two sketches).    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_82078_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter entitled: Chandler's Ford, Cold Store and Distribution Depot. Enclosed Sharp's report and appeal, plus two sketches of the building.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Public Inquiry J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Public Inquiry, 11 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82079_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Greenford Road, Greenford. Outline application for use of land as offices, amenity grounds and car park.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter and appeal by J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and appeal, 12 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82080_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Greenford Road, Greenford. Outline application for use of land as offices, amenity grounds and car park.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82081_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90264_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Davies concerning Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90265_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90266_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sudbury Sports Ground. Enclosed a first draft of the text to present to the Public Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90267_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the installation of illuminated tubing at the Ariel Hotel, Bath Road, Harlington. Observations by Thomas Sharp, Town Planning Consultant and Architect, on the refusal of the London Borough of Hillingdon.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82082_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Sudbury Sports Ground. Enclosed, a copy of the Statement of the Submissions which Ealing City Council propose to put forward at the Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82083_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Sudbury Sports Ground. Enclosed; a copy of a letter from Ealing City Council.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90268_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.A. Dodds, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82084_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.D. Davies, J. Lyons &amp; Co. Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82085_actor">J. Lyons and Co. Ltd.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sudbury Sports Ground.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Proposed Residential Development of St. Paul's School Site. Hammersmith.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: 1.1250.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sketch Plan entitled: Proposed Residential Development of St. Paul's School Site. Hammersmith.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Piccadilly Circus and Conventry Street, Lyons Corner House.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966-1968</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan. Scale: 88 feet to one Inch.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90269_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Plan of Piccadilly Circus and Conventry Street, Lyons Corner House.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Picadilly Circus Future Development.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 20 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_81900_actor">Holford, William Graham, 1907-1975, Baron Holford, architect</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Picadilly Circus Future Development. Proposals for Comprenhensive Dvelopment by the Planning Consultant Sir William Holford. March 1962.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting of The Times, Friday April 13, 1962.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Press cutting.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84170_actor">The Times Newspaper.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Press cutting entitled: Ice skating and flower shows in new Piccadilly Circus Piazza. Sir William Holford's Guide to Developers visualizes three Pedestrian Levels.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of the model for the Piccadilly Circus Future Development.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph, Black and White, 24 X 19 cm.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81792_actor">Greater London County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photograph of the model for the Piccadilly Circus Future Development. Sir William Holford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from London County Council.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 24.3.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and Report.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81793_actor">Greater London County Council.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Piccadilly Circus Future Development. Enclosed: Piccadilly Circus and the New London Pavilion report by Sir Lord Holford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham City Roads.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1938/1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938-1960</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90270_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence and three plans 1947-1951.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.C. Richards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an article by Sharp on Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to G.C. Richards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90271_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Richards concerning Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.C. Richards.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Richards concerning Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.T. Duff, Vice-Chancellor, University of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84233_actor">University of Durham, 1832 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Richards' about Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to J.T. Duff, Vice-Chancellor, University of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90272_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Durham City Road scheme.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inquiry to the Ministry of War Transport into the proposed central road and bridges: City of Durham, May 2nd-3rd, 1946.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Inquiry, 11 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90273_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Inquiry to the Ministry of War Transport into the proposed central road and bridges: City of Durham, May 2nd-3rd, 1946.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">The Durham City Through Road. Some observations by the County Planning Officer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81181_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>The Durham City Through Road. Some observations by the County Planning Officer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham City Through Road. report on the County Surveyor.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 13 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81182_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>The Durham City Through Road. report on the County Surveyor to the Highways and Bridges Committee on Monday 9th, May, 1949.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk. City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81183_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled; Durham City Through Road. Enclosed, notes from the meeting about this issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from G.F. Stedman, Ministry of Transport.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82638_actor">Ministry of Transport, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled; Through road and bridges: City of Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from G.F. Stedman, Ministry of Transport.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82639_actor">Ministry of Transport, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the reports of the County Surveyor and County Planning Officer on Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from J.G. Taylor, Divisional Road Engineer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81184_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed through road in Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Sheepshanks, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90274_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green City Engineer, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81185_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham relief road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Report on Durham City Relief Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90275_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Report entitled: Durham relief road. Comparison between County Council Scheme and City Scheme.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Summary of the meeting about Durham City Relief Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Summary, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90276_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Summary of the meeting about Durham City Relief Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan entitled: Durham Relief Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, Scale: 1/2500. Size 27 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90277_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Plan of Durham Relief Road, Davidge Scheme as approved in 1947.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan entitled: Durham Relief Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, Scale: 1/2500. Size 27 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90278_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Plan of Durham Relief Road under Sharp's scheme, as proposed by City Council in 1951.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan entitled: Durham Relief Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan, Scale: 1/2500. Size 27 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90279_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Plan of Durham Relief Road, County Council Scheme with suggested modifications.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer and Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81186_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer and Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90280_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads and tree preservation.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90281_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham City through road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer and Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81187_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham City through road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer and Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90282_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sam.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.L.G. Beaufor, Ministry of Town and Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90283_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham City roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90284_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81188_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham City Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81189_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham City Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81190_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads. Enclosed a report from the Ministry.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81191_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting with Sharp to discuss the Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81192_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the decision of the Committee.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81193_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Taylor's criticism of the proposed amendments to the through road in Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81194_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Proposed Through Road, Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90285_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Martin, entitled: Durham Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81195_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Proposed Through Road, Durham City. Enclosed: a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Transport, Divisional Road Engineer, North Eastern.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81196_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Proposed Through Road. Enclosed: a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Transport.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81197_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Transport.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81198_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Proposed Through Road, Durham City. Enclosed, a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Transport.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D.B. Martin, Town Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90286_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Proposed Through Road, Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.C. Knox, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82594_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Sheepshanks, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82595_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham City Roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.L.G. Beaufoy, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82596_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham City Roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.L.G. Beaufoy, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90287_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham City Roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81199_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham City Roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.H. Hargreaves, Ministry of Transport.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82640_actor">Ministry of Transport, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham Relief Roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.H. Hargreaves, Ministry of Transport.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90288_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham Relief Roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, Carr Lodge, North Dalton, East Yorkshire.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81200_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning information from the Durham area traffic census.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from J.W. Green to Mr. Hargreaves.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81201_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham Relief Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Mayor, Town Hall, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90289_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Mayor, Town Hall, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90290_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Thomas Sheepshanks, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90291_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P. Richardson, The College Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P. Richardson, The College Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to P. Richardson, The College Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90292_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Richardson concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90293_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Green concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81202_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue. Enclosed: draft of a letter to Mr. Eden and a copy of a letter from the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90294_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Green concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81203_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue. Enclosed, a letter from the Mayor to Lord Londonderry.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81204_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue. Enclosed, a draft of a letter to Macmillan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81205_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue. Enclosed, a letter to Hargreaves.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90295_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Green, entitled: Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81206_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue. Enclosed copies of letters from the Ministry of Housing and Local Government and G.H. Hargreaves.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81207_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the level of Durham roads. Enclosed: draft letter on this issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81208_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Mayor of Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.66</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81209_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Mayor of Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.67</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81210_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads issue. Enclosed: copies of letter from the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Councillor G. McIntyre.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.68</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90296_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to McIntyre concerning Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin Jones, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.69</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81211_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham City Relief Road. Enclosed: Copies of letters to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government and Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.70</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81212_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed road scheme for Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.71</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90297_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Through road, re-allocation of properties.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Chairman and Members of the Planning Committee, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.72</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90298_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads, with a red pencil note: not presented.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.73</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81213_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.74</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81214_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's draft report on the traffic survey of Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.75</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90299_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Green concerning the draft report on the traffic survey of Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin Jones, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.76</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81215_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham Through Road. Enclosed: copies from the Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation and the Clerck of the County Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.B. Martin Jones, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.76a</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81216_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham Through Road. Enclosed: copies from the Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation and the Clerck of the County Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Chairman of the Town Planning Committee.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.77</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90300_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the strategic approach to the Durham roads issue.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G. McIntyre, Chairman of the City Planning Committee, Durham City.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.78</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81217_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp. Enclosed a copy of a letter from J.K. Hope.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.79</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81218_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the report on the Durham road scheme.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the County Clerk, Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.80</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90301_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Draft letter entitled: Durham City through road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dame Evelyn Sharp, Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.81</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90302_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Draft letter entitled: Durham City through road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.82</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81219_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.83</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81220_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.84</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90303_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.85</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90304_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Durham Through-Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.86</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90305_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.87</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81221_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.88</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81222_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.89</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81223_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning schemes for Durham roads. Enclosed: copies of letters from the Town Clerk of Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.90</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90306_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Green, entitled: Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.W. Green, City Engineer &amp; Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.91</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81224_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Through Road Scheme. Enclosed a copy of a letter from W.A. Geenty.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.92</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81225_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a report prepared by W.A. Geenty and also Ellis' notes.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.93</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81226_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the County Planning Officer's report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.94</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81227_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the County Planning Officer's report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.H.S. Dild, Dean of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.95</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84234_actor">University of Durham, 1832 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Dean’s interest in talking with Sharp about Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.96</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 9 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81228_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled Through Road. Enclosed: copy of the correspondence between the County Council and the Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.97</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90307_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Ellis concerning correspondence received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.98</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81229_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing copies of letters to the County Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.99</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90308_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Ellis concerning the correspondence received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.100</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 7 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81230_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing the report from the County Planning Officer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.101</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81231_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Ministry of Transport’s decision on Durham traffic.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.102</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90309_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Ellis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.103</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81232_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a draft of a letter for Sharp's review.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E. Ellis, Chartered Civil Engineer and Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 25.104</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81233_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing copies of letters from W.A. Geenty and C.W. Murray.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and country planning.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90310_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Town and country planning: Town and country planning – to plan or not to plan. (Printed published article), Drafts of the article Town and country planning and letters.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and Country planning; to plan or not to Plan?</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946?</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Printed article, 23 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Printed article entitled: Town and Country planning; to plan or not to Plan? Handwritten note on the cover page; "pre 1946".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Boris Ford, Editor in Chief of the Bureau of Current Affairs.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Last page of a letter concerning a pamphlet.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Boris Ford, Editor in Chief of the Bureau of Current Affairs.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90311_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in anwer to Ford concerning the pamphlet on Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a pamphlet on Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Pamphlet, 19 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90312_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Pamphlet entitled: Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes on the scheme of Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90313_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Notes on the scheme of the pamphlet entitled: Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a pamphlet on Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Pamphlet, 19 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90314_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Pamphlet entitled: Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft of the pamphlet on Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Pamphlet, 20 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90315_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Draft pamphlet entitled: Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft of the pamphlet on Town &amp; Country Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Pamphlet, 21 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90316_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Draft pamphlet entitled: Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Obiter dicta.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 26.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90317_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Obiter dicta for the pamphlet entitled: Town &amp; Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Oxford.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file, three sub files.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90318_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Oxford: Letters of complaints to Oxford tribunals, Oxford road schemes, 1972-73 and J. Miller, Traffic Assessor on the inquiry.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence of J. Miller, Traffic Assessor on the Oxford inquiry.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972/1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972-1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90319_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence from J. Miller, Traffic Assessor on the Oxford inquiry.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Department of the Enviroment.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90320_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled; Oxford Roads etc. Town map Amendment No. 2.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D.E. Powell, Department of the Enviroment.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_81092_actor">Department of the Environment, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp, entitled; Proposals for alterations and additions to the city of Oxford Development Plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90321_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which Sharp asks for a copy of the inspector's report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in which R. Sharp explains the delay in replying to Miller.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Oxford City Road proposals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Rachel Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90322_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Oxford road inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's letter to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Parliamentary Commission on Administration on Oxford roads Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of a suggested letter to the Concil of Tribunals on Oxford roads Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft of a suggested letter to the Concil of Tribunals on Oxford roads Inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90323_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Miller concerning a complaint on Oxford Roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90324_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter to update information regarding the complaint about Oxford roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Labour Party's stance regarding the Oxford roads complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a complaint about Oxford roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90325_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning a complaint about Oxford roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Oxford roads complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Oxford roads complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Oxford roads complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90326_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Oxford roads complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Oxford road schemes, 1972-74.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972/1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972-1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence and reports.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90327_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence and reports on Oxford road schemes, 1972-74.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Private Secretary to the Hon. C.M. Woodhouse.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84407_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing a letter from Sir Alan Marre, about Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Memo from the Private Secretary to the Hon. C.M. Woodhouse.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Memo, letter and report, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84408_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Memo enclosing a letter from Sir Alan Marre with a Report by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration on Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter and correspondence enclosed, 21 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90328_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Oxford Roads. Proposals for Alterations and Additions to the development Plan for the City of Oxford. Enclosed: correspondence relating to Oxford roads.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90329_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Woodhouse thanking him for the report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84409_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84410_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90330_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Woodhouse regarding the complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84411_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90331_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Oxford Roads Inquiry, 1970.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84412_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the the choice of the route for the southern relief road in the Oxford City Development plan. Enclosing a letter from Sir Alan Marre.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgement from the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgement.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82988_actor">Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration. UK Goverment.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgement of a letter received on 21.08.73.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90332_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Miller.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint. Enclosed the draft of a letter for review.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alan Marre, Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82989_actor">Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration. UK Goverment.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp arranging for a representative of the office to visit Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Alan Marre, Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82990_actor">Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration. UK Goverment.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about Oxford roads inquiry.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84413_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint about the Oxford roads inquiry. Enclosed a letter from Alan Marre.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84414_actor">Woodhouse, Christopher Montague, 5th Barron Terrington, 1917-2001, British Conservative Politician.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.M. Woodhouse, House of Commons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.2.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 31 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90333_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the complaint about the Oxford roads inquiry. Enclosed papers relating to that complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence of complaints to Oxford tribunals.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973/1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973-1976</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90334_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence of complaints to Oxford tribunals.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the J.M. Hawksworth, Secretary to the Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80972_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning his first letter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Hawksworth, Secretary to the Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90336_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the date of his first letter to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Hawksworth, Secretary to the Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80973_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's letter of 19th January 1974.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90337_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter thanking Luard for his support.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82597_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint. Enclosed a letter from the Secretary to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90338_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Luard concerning the complaint.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82598_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing a reply from Alan Marre, Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82599_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Luard's enquiries to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90339_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82600_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90340_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82601_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90341_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90342_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Council of Tribunals' response.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82602_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Council of Tribunals' response.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82603_actor">Ministry of Housing and Local Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning his delay in respluing to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Evan Luard, House of Commons, London.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90343_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's complaint to the Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90344_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to the Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80974_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's letter of 19th March.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90345_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's presentation to the Council of Tribunals on 19th January 1973.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Secretary, Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_80975_actor">Council on Tribunals, Ministry of Justice, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90346_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled; Oxford roads- Proposals for Alterations and Additions to the Development Plan for the City of Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a draft letter to the Council of Tribunals.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 27.3.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90347_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft letter entitled; Oxford roads- Proposals for Alterations and Additions to the Development Plan for the City of Oxford.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Port Eynon and Horton Development Plan by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 28</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 20 pages.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90348_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Port Eynon and Horton Development Plan by Thomas Sharp.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham City road.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1931/1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1931-1959</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence, reports and planning schemes.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90349_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Durham City road: correspondence, reports and planning schemes.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham City Through Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1931" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1931</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81234_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Durham City Through Road. Copy of the County Surveyor's report, 16th November, 1931.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Durham City Through Road and Town Planning.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1931" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1931</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 20 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81235_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Durham City Through Road. report on the County Surveyor to the Works Committee. June, 1945.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Observations in reply to the County Surveyor's report to the County Council Works Committee regarding the outline scheme for the city prepared by the City Council's Town Planning Consultant.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1931" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1931</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90350_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Observations in reply to the County Surveyor's report to the County Council Works Committee regarding the outline scheme for the city prepared by the City Council's Town Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Prof. H.G.A. Hickling, University of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84235_actor">University of Durham, 1832 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Claypath crossing Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81236_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90351_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81237_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's consultancy to the planning scheme of Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90352_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting about the Durham planning scheme.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90353_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting about the Durham planning scheme.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81238_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Appointment of Town Planning Consultant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90354_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the clauses of the agreement between Sharp and Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81239_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the clauses of the agreement between Sharp and Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90355_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the annual fee for the appointment as Town Planning Consultant for Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81240_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's appointment as Town Planning Consultant for Durham City Council.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to George R. Bull, Town Clerk, Durham City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90356_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Through Road and bridges.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Report on New Central Roads for Durham City Council by Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90357_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Report on New Central Roads for Durham City Council by Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E.Ellis, Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81241_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Relief road- Durham City.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E.Ellis, Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81242_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham city roads.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.E.Ellis, Chartered Municipal Engineer, City of Durham.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81243_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Durham city roads. Enclosed: Copy of a letter from A.H.M. Irwin.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Report entitled: Duham City Relief Road. History.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90358_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Report entitled: Duham City Relief Road. History.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Interim Report on The County Surveyor's Proposals for the Durham City Through Road.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81244_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Interim Report on The County Surveyor's Proposals for the Durham City Through Road.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Directional Traffic Survey 1953. County Surveyor's Report.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 6 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90359_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Directional Traffic Survey 1953. County Surveyor's Report. Observations by Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Proposed Through Road. Report on the History of the Through Road proposals and the Reasons which have made the City Council Favour the Low Road Scheme.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 29.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 13 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81245_actor">Durham City Council.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Proposed Through Road. Report on the History of the Through Road proposals and the Reasons which have made the City Council Favour the Low Road Scheme.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photo print copy of an Illustration of Newcastle upon Tyne. W. Miller, XVIII century.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 30</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">XVIII</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photo print.    </physdesc>
        </did>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Photo print copy of an Illustration of Newcastle upon Tyne. W. Miller, XVIII century.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">City of Oxford Development Plan, amendment no. 2 , 1970.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 31</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 52 pages.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90360_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>City of Oxford Development Plan, amendment no. 2 , 1970. Copy of proof of evidence by Thomas Sharp and plan of proposal with notes and some changes by Sharp.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plan of Swanley: Kent.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 32</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1960/1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-70</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Plan: Scale: 6ins/1 mile, 34 X 31 cm.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90361_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Plan of Swanley: Kent. Suggested development. Cooper States Limited, Thomas Sharp. Scale: 6ins/1 mile.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Oxford – 5th inquiry, 1970.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 33</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1960/1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-70</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Reports.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90362_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>“Oxford – 5th inquiry, 1970” Inspector’s report and Minister’s decision.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inspector report on Oxford Inquiry, 1970.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 33.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 22 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Inspector report on Oxford Inquiry, 1970. Objection no. 96 by Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Oxford roads. proposals for alterations and additions to the development plan for the city of Oxford. Town map amendment map no. 2 Central Area Comprehensive Development Area Map no. 2 written statement.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 33.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81093_actor">Department of the Environment, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Oxford roads. proposals for alterations and additions to the development plan for the city of Oxford. Town map amendment map no. 2 Central Area Comprehensive Development Area Map no. 2 written statement.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Town and Country planning Act. 1962. Proposals for alterations or additions to the City of Oxford Development Plan. Inquiry into Objections and Representations.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 33.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 14 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81094_actor">Department of the Environment, UK Government.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Town and Country Planning Act. 1962. Proposals for alterations or additions to the City of Oxford Development Plan. Inquiry into Objections and Representations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Kathryn Stansfield re. M.A. thesis on Thomas Sharp.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1972/1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972-1975</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
        </did>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence: Stansfield and Sharp, and Roy Kantorowich, supervisor. Discussions for publication of book on the subject.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter through which Stansfield introduces herself to Thomas Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90363_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Stansfield inviting her to stay in his house.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp accepting his invitation to stay in his house for the weekend.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90364_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Stansfield arranging the weekend of her visit.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp arranging the weekend to visit him.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter confirming when she will arrive in Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his attention during her visit.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Stansfield explains the state of her project on Sharp’s life.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter informing Sharp about her award with a grant from the Science Research Council to write a thesis for an M.A.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning her award with a grant from the Science Research Council to write a thesis for an M.A.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stansfield’s improvements to the first stages of the thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90365_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Notes about correspondence relating to Stansfield’s thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning books by T. Sharp which Stansfield borrowed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stansfiel's visit to Lord Holford and Mr. Peck and asking to visit Mr and Mrs. Sharp on Friday December 15th.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stansfiel's visit to Mr and Mrs. Sharp on Friday December 15th.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning different people relating to Sharp's work.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stansfield's plans to visit Durham, and the forestry villages. Enclosed: a first thesis outline.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90366_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Stansfield’s questions and about her thesis outline.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning her visit to Oxford on 7th May.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90367_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Stansfield concerning her visit to Oxford on 7th May.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield's trip to Northumbria next June.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes about the material sent to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90368_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Notes about the material sent to Kathryn Stansfield.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning her visit to Northumbria and the meeting with Lord Holford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard from Norway.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp for the memoirs he sent.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning improvements to the thesis and about a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Sharp in November.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes and comments on Stansfield's thesis.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Notes, 6 notes.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Notes and comments on Stansfield's thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning her visit to the Forestry Villages and Cambridge, and thanking Rachel Sharp for her comments on her thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning improvements to her thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning improvements to her thesis. Enclosed; some corrections.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some quotations from Sharp's writting for inclusio in the thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90369_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Stansfield's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp about the quotations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning improvements to her thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a visit to Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90373_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Kathryn Stansfield's thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90370_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Kathryn Stansfield's thesis and about what Sharp wrote to Kantorowich.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a visit to Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82325_actor">Kantorowich, Roy, 1917-1996, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Kathryn Stansfield's thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90371_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of recommendation for Kathryn Stansfield.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Sharp for his letter of recommendation.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82326_actor">Kantorowich, Roy, 1917-1996, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the examination of Kathryn Stansfield's thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90372_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Kantorowich concerning the publication of the thesis by Kathryn Stansfield.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90377_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Kantorowich concerning the publication of the thesis by Kathryn Stansfield.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the thesis exam and its future publication.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90374_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Stansfield concerning the publication of the thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90375_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of Stansfield's thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield’s staying in Manchester following her Masters.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield’s staying in Manchester following her Masters.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.49a</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90376_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield’s publication of the thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield’s publication of the thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking Sharp for providing the name of the publisher.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of Stansfield’s thesis.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82327_actor">Kantorowich, Roy, 1917-1996, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in which Kantorowich asks Sharp to apply for a Leverhulme grant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90378_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Kantorowich concerning the Leverhulme grant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stansfield's review of the text for the publication.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield's plans.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82328_actor">Kantorowich, Roy, 1917-1996, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the improvements to the planning series publications.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from Professor Roy Kantorowich, Department of Town and Country Planning, University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment and memorandum, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82329_actor">Kantorowich, Roy, 1917-1996, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Memorandum to the University of Manchester Press on a proposal to commission and publish a series of Historical Studies in Town and Country Planning.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield's visit to Oxford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Kathryn Stansfield.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 34.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Stanfield's experiences in her job and life in London.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Oxford Replanned.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 35</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1945/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945-1955</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90379_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Notebook of Press cutting about Oxford and the book:<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 19.3.45.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 20.3.45.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 15.3.46.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 15.5.46.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 19.7.46<lb/><lb/>Publicity leaflet for Oxford Replanned by Thomas Sharp.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Architects Journal, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Daily Telegraph, 19.2.48. <lb/><lb/>News Chronicle, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Daily Grapich, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Daily Mail, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford magazine, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Architects Journal, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>News Chronicle, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Journal, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Birmingham Gazette, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Daily Mirror, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Start, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Daily Herald, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 19.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 20.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 20.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 21.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 21.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Times Educational Supplement, 21.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Reading Mercury, 21.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Cambridge Daily News, 21.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Sunday Times, 22.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Observer, 22.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 23.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Times 24.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 26.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Birmingham Mail, 25.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Isis, 25.2.48.<lb/><lb/>News Review, 26.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 26.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 26.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Architect's Journal, 26.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Builder, 27.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 27.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Country Life, 27.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Estates Gazette, 28.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Time and Tide, 28.2.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 28.2.48.<lb/><lb/>The Cherwell, 1.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Municipal Engineering and Sanitary record, 5.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Sphere, 6.3.48.<lb/><lb/>The Illustrated London news, 6.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 4.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Christian World, 4.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 5.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Municipal Journal, 5.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 5.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Local Government Record, 9.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Daily Worker, 11.3.48.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 9.3.48.<lb/><lb/>The Listener, 4.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Magazine, 11.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 11.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Surveyor, 12.3.48.<lb/><lb/>The Observer, 14.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Baptist Times, 11.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Architect's journal, 18.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Illustrated Carpenter and Builder, 26.3.48.<lb/><lb/>Architect and Building News, 26.3.48.<lb/><lb/>The Oxford Citizen, March 1948.<lb/><lb/>Official Architect, April 1948.<lb/><lb/>National builder, April 1948.<lb/><lb/>The Oxford Citizen, May 1948.<lb/><lb/>Queen, 26.5.48.<lb/><lb/>Official Architect, June 1948.<lb/><lb/>The Oxford citizen, June 1948.<lb/><lb/>Journal of the Town Planning Institute, May-June 1948.<lb/><lb/>The Financial Times, 31.8.48.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 10.12.48.<lb/><lb/>The Oxford Magazine, 3.2.49.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 8.4.49.<lb/><lb/>Town Planning Review, April 1949<lb/><lb/>Oxford Special number, 1949.<lb/><lb/>Cambridge Daily News, 18.2.50.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Guardian, 4.3.50.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 1950.<lb/><lb/>Britain Today, 1950.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 1955.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notebook with Press cutting: Exeter, Chichester, King’s Lynn, Kielder and Comb.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 36</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1945/1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1945-1953</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90380_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Notebook with Press cutting: Exeter, Chichester, King’s Lynn, Kielder and Comb.<lb/><lb/>Exeter:<lb/><lb/>Exeter Phoenix publicity leaflet, 1945.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 16.5.45.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 28.12.45.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 29.12.45.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 29.12.45.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 31.12.45.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 31.12.45.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 1.1.46. <lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 1.1.46.<lb/><lb/>The Manchester Guardian, 2.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 2.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 2.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 3.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 3.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 4.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 4.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Devon and Exeter Gazette, 4.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Times, 4.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 5.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Municipal Journal, 4.1.46.<lb/><lb/>The Builder, 4.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 9.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Devon and Exeter Gazatte, 11.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 11.1.46.<lb/><lb/>Bookseller, 21.2.46.<lb/><lb/>Scotsman, 25.2.46.<lb/><lb/>North Devon Journal and Herald, 28.2.46.<lb/><lb/>Wells Journal, 1.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning, 24.2.46.<lb/><lb/>The Builder, 1.3.46.<lb/><lb/>The Suveyor, 1.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Exmouth Journal, 2.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Daily telegraph, 2.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Sidmouth Observer, 6.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Bath chronicle and Herald, 6.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Sunderland Echo, 6.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Northern Echo, 6.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Daily Sketch, 7.3.46.<lb/><lb/>The Architect's Journal, 7.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Western Morning News, 12.3.46.<lb/><lb/>The Architect's Journal, 14.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Bristol observed, 16.3.46.<lb/><lb/>National Newsagent, 16.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Sphere, 16.3.46.<lb/><lb/>Oxford mail, 4.4.46.<lb/><lb/>The Architect and Building News, 5.4.46.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 11.4.46.<lb/><lb/>New Statesman and Nation, 20.4.46.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, April 1946.<lb/><lb/>The Oxford Magazine, 9.5.46.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 4.5.46.<lb/><lb/>The Listener, 30.5.46.<lb/><lb/>Local Government and officials' Gazette, June 1946.<lb/><lb/>Geographical Journal, 1947.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 24.9.47.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 18.6.48.<lb/><lb/>Time and Tide, 10.7.48.<lb/><lb/>Municipal Journal, 11.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Architect's Journal, 10.11.49.<lb/><lb/>Express and Echo, 11.5.63<lb/><lb/>Town Planning Review, 1946.<lb/><lb/>Chichester:<lb/><lb/>Chichester Observer, 9.10.48.<lb/><lb/>West Sussex Gazette, 6.1.49.<lb/><lb/>Chichester Observer, 9.10.49.<lb/><lb/>West Sussex Gazette, 17.3.49.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 18.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Sussex Daily News, 18.3.49.<lb/><lb/>News Chronicle, 18.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Chichester Observer, 19.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Sussex Daily News, 19.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Journal, 23.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Architect's Journal, 24.3.49.<lb/><lb/>The Builder, 25.3.49.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 25.3.49.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, April 1949.<lb/><lb/>Chichester Quaterly, march 1949.<lb/><lb/>Chichester Observer, 26.3.49.<lb/><lb/>The Sphere, 9.4.49.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 1.4.49.<lb/><lb/>Country Life, 1.4.49.<lb/><lb/>Architect and Building News, 15.4.49.<lb/><lb/>The Listener, June 1949.<lb/><lb/>Town Planning Institute Journal, June 1949.<lb/><lb/>Town Planning Review, July, 1949.<lb/><lb/>Official Architect, May 1949.<lb/><lb/>King's Lynn:<lb/><lb/>The Times, 22.12.48.<lb/><lb/>Country Life, 7.1.49.<lb/><lb/>World's Fair, 8.1.49.<lb/><lb/>Lynn News and Advertiser, 11.3.49.<lb/><lb/>The Architect's Journal, 30.12.48<lb/><lb/>Forestry Villages:<lb/><lb/>The Architect's Journal, 28.4.49.<lb/><lb/>Newcastle Journal, 20.7.54.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notebook with Press cutting entitled: Oxford roads.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 37</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1956/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956-1968</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90381_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Notebook with Press cutting entitled: Oxford roads.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Roads:<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 22.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 22.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Observer, 23.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Sunday Times, 23.09.56.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 24.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Sunday Times, 09.10.56.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Guardian, 24.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Daily Telegraph 24.09.56.<lb/><lb/>News Chronicle, 24.09.56.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 25.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 24.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times 28.09.56.<lb/><lb/>New Stateman, 29.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Spectator, 25.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Time and Tide, 28.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Economist, 29.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Sunday Times, 30.09.56.<lb/><lb/>Architects Journal, 04.10.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail. 15.10.56.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 12.10.56.<lb/><lb/>The Architect and Building News, 27.09.56.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 17.10.56.<lb/><lb/>Spectator, 12.10.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Magazine, 18.10.56.<lb/><lb/>Cambridge Magazine, 18.10.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail. 01.11.56.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail. 05.11.56.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Guardian, 14.11.56.<lb/><lb/>Spectator, 08.02.57.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 14.02.57.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 30.04.57.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 07.05.57.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 06.05.57.<lb/><lb/>The Illustrated London News, 06.10.56.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 06.02.68.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 05.12.68.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Forestry Villages.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1946/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1955</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90382_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence: re. Kielder village planning for Forestry Commission. Invitation to official opening of village, 27 May 1952. Photographs.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence: re Kielder village planning for Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90383_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Correspondence: re. Kielder village planning for Forestry Commission.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mrs. Ruth Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90384_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry villages in Wales.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mrs. Ruth Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning Forestry villages in Wales.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sir Roy L. Robinson, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91835_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Forestry villages in Wales and England, and Sharp's interest in being a Planning Consultant.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Sir Roy L. Robinson, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90385_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Robinson concerning Forestry villages in Wales and England.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91836_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91837_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter offering a planning appointment for Kielder, Redesdale and Wark housing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from the Secretary to Sir Roy L. Robinson, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91838_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Acknowledgement of Sharp's letter.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90386_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90387_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Commission's possible villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90388_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90389_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90390_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Edwards.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90391_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an appointment with the Director of the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91839_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an appointment with the Director of the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.O. Sangler, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90392_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90393_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Bristol's meeting.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.O. Sangler, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91840_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the fees attached to the appointment with the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.O. Sangler, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90394_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.E. Fossey, Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90395_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's visit to Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to R.E. Fossey, Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90396_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning maps for Sharp's visit to Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from R.E. Fossey, Conservator, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91842_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the arrangements for Sharp's visit to Kielder Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Conservator of the Forestry Commission to the Director.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91841_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder- Permanent Housing Programme.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90397_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the preliminary report on the Forestry Villages planning.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90398_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the layout plans of the possible siting of the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91843_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90399_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Housing in Kielder, Redesdale and Wark.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mauchlen and Weightman, Chartered Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82505_actor">Mauchlen and Weightman, Chartered Architects.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Forestry Commission Housing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91844_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder Village hall.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.29</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90400_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder, Redesdale and Wark Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Robert Mauchlaen, Chartered Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.30</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90401_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder lay-out Plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">New zoning in Kielder, Redesdale and Wark forest.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.31</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Table.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90402_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>New zoning in Kielder, Redesdale and Wark forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.32</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90403_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the settlement of the new villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.33</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82655_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Kielder Layout Plan.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Kielder, Redesdale and Wark forest water supplies.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.34</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84318_actor">Waterhouse, Alfred, 1830-1905, architect</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Kielder, Redesdale and Wark forest water supplies.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.35</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90404_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the draft layout for the Forestry Commission housing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.36</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90405_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Forestry Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Conservator of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.37</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91845_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the Rev. James Fairlie of Falstone.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.38</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90406_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Stonehaugh village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.39</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90407_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the forestry villages: Kielder, Comb and Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.40</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91846_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder, Redesdale and Wark Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.41</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90408_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the sewerers and drainage for Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.42</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90409_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder Castle, Comb and Stonehaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.43</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91847_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Kielder Castle and station, Comb and Byrness.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.44</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90410_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the report on the sewering of the Comb site.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.45</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91848_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Kielder, Redesdale and Wark Forest.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.46</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91849_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Forestry Commission Housing in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.47</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91850_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's letter of 5th February.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.48</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1947" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1947</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91851_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp's letter of 5th February.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.49</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90411_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the plans for building in Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.50</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90412_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the correspondence with Mr. G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.51</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82656_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Forestry Commission Housing.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.52</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82657_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Forestry Commission Housing-Comb.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. G.H. Shepherd, Ministry of Works.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.53</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82658_actor">Ministry of Works, UK Government.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Forestry Commission Housing- Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.54</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90413_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the layouts for the first four villages in Northumberland now finished. And about starting the next three: Mounces, Bower and Plashetts.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.55</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91852_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from C.A. Connell, Conservator of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.56</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91853_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Comb village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to C.A. Connell, Conservator of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.57</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90414_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Connell concerning Comb village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from D. Wyn Roberts, Architect.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.58</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83198_actor">Roberts, David Wyn, 1911-1982, Architect.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from D. Wyn Roberts, Architect. Receipt in connection with Comb housing, fees amounting to £148.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.59</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_83199_actor">Roberts, David Wyn, 1911-1982, Architect.</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's appointment with the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the office of The Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.60</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91854_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's appointment with the Forestry Commission.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the office of The Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.61</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91855_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Chalk &amp; Wood, Chartered Architects.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.62</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Depot for Forestry Commission, Kielder.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.63</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91856_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the houses in Stonehaugh and Butteryhaugh.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.64</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90415_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: Northumberland Forest Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.W. Edwards, Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.65</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90416_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the review of the terms on Sharp's appointment.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.66</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91857_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: North Tyne Forest Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Director of the Forestry Commission.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.67</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91858_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter entitled: North Tyne Forest Villages.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Booklet of the Official opening of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.1.68</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Booklet.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91859_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Booklet of the Official opening of Kielder Forest village: including program and photographs.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">File of photographs of Forestry villages: Kielder, Byrness and Stonehaugh.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photographs, 3 subfiles.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_91860_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>File of photographs of Forestry villages: Kielder, Byrness and Stonehaugh.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photographs of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 Photographs.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91861_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photographs of Kielder Forest village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 11 X 6.5 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91862_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 14 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91863_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 14 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91864_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91865_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.5</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91866_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.6</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91867_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.7</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91868_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.1.8</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91869_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Kielder Forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photographs of Byrness forest village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 Photographs.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91870_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photographs of Byrness forest village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Byrness forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.2.1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91871_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Byrness forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Byrness forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.2.2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91872_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Byrness forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Byrness forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.2.3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91873_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Byrness forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Byrness forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.2.4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91874_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Byrness forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photographs of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 Photographs.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_91875_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photographs of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3.1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91876_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3.2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91877_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3.3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91878_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3.4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91879_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3.5</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91880_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 38.2.3.6</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1952/1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-1955</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Photograph; 21 X 16 cm. black and white.    </physdesc>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <corpname id="atom_91881_actor">Forestry Commission, 1919 -</corpname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photograph of Stonehaugh forest village.</p>
              </scopecontent>
            </c>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notebook with Press cutting of publications: The Anatomy of the Village, (Jun 1946-Mar 1947), Oxford observed, (Nov 1952-Nov 1967), Dreaming spires and teeming towers, (Jan-May 1963) and Town and townscape, (Oct 1968-Aug 1969).</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 39</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1946/1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946-1969</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90417_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Notebook with Press cutting of publications: The Anatomy of the Village, (Jun 1946-Mar 1947), Oxford observed, (Nov 1952-Nov 1967), Dreaming spires and teeming towers, (Jan-May 1963) and Town and townscape, (Oct 1968-Aug 1969).<lb/><lb/>The Anatomy of the Village, (Jun 1946-Mar 1947):<lb/><lb/>Punch, 12.06.46.<lb/><lb/>The Scotsman, 13.06.46.<lb/><lb/>Estates Gazette, 29.06.46.<lb/><lb/>The Times Literary Supplement, 29.06.46.<lb/><lb/>Cooperative News, 06.07.46.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 11.07.46.<lb/><lb/>Truth 12.07.46.<lb/><lb/>The Times Literary Supplement, 19.07.46.<lb/><lb/>Builder, 19.07.46.<lb/><lb/>Books of the Month, July 1946.<lb/><lb/>Lady, 25.07.46.<lb/><lb/>Illustrated Carpenter and Builder 02.08.46.<lb/><lb/>Books of Today, August 1946.<lb/><lb/>Architects Journal, 29.08.46.<lb/><lb/>Irish Times, 07.09.46.<lb/><lb/>New Statesman and Nation, 14.09.46.<lb/><lb/>Evening Herald, 14.09.46.<lb/><lb/>Countryman, Autum 1946.<lb/><lb/>Blackfriars, October, 1946.<lb/><lb/>Journal of the Town Planning Institute, Sept-Oct. 1946.<lb/><lb/>Life and Letters today, October 1946.<lb/><lb/>Official Architect, October 1946.<lb/><lb/>The Listener, 26.12.46.<lb/><lb/>Town Planning Review, Autum 1946.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, Feb. 1947.<lb/><lb/>Housing Centre Bulletin, March 1947.<lb/><lb/>Town and Country Planning, 1947.<lb/><lb/>Oxford observed, (Nov 1952-Nov 1967):<lb/><lb/>Three letters about "Oxford Observed" between the Lord Mayor of Oxford City Council and Thomas Sharp.<lb/><lb/>Daily Telegraph, 01.10.62.<lb/><lb/>Cambridge Review, 15.11.52.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 20.11.52.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Times, 21.11.52.<lb/><lb/>Country Life, 28.11.52.<lb/><lb/>Birmingham Post, 02.12.52.<lb/><lb/>Irish Independent, 08.12.52.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 12.12.52.<lb/><lb/>Builder, 05.12.52.<lb/><lb/>Daily Dispatch, 29.12.52.<lb/><lb/>Architect and Building News, 08.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Scotsman, 15.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, January, 1953.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, January, 1953.<lb/><lb/>Journal of Education, March, 1953.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Magazine, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Britannia and Eve, March, 1953.<lb/><lb/>Architects Journal, 12.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Irish Times, 07.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Time and Tide, 21.03.53.<lb/><lb/>Journal of Institute of Landscape Architects, March, 1953.<lb/><lb/>The Listener, 30.04.53.<lb/><lb/>Journal of the Town Planning Institute, June, 1953.<lb/><lb/>The Town Planning Review, July, 1953.<lb/><lb/>RIBA Journal, December, 1953.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, November, 1953.<lb/><lb/>Dreaming Spires and Teeming Towers, (Jan-May 1963):<lb/><lb/>The Times, 25.01.63.<lb/><lb/>Town Planning Institute Journal, 1963.<lb/><lb/>The Oxford Magazine, 25.05.63.<lb/><lb/>Town and Townscape, (Oct 1968-Aug 1969):<lb/><lb/>Daily Telegraph, 17.10.68.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 1968.<lb/><lb/>Radio Times, BBC.<lb/><lb/>Kenlish Gazette, 27.12.68.<lb/><lb/>Municipal Journal, 10.01.69.<lb/><lb/>RIBA Journal, Dec. 1968.<lb/><lb/>Sussex Life, February, 1969.<lb/><lb/>Country Life, 02.01.69.<lb/><lb/>Eastern Daily Press, 31.01.69.<lb/><lb/>Birmingham Post, 04.01.69.<lb/><lb/>Cambridge News, 19.11.68.<lb/><lb/>Press and Journal, 16.11.68.<lb/><lb/>Eastern Daily Press, 31.01.69.<lb/><lb/>Church Times, 28.02.69.<lb/><lb/>The Times Literary Supplement, 20.02.69.<lb/><lb/>Durham Advertiser, 11.04.69.<lb/><lb/>Architects and Surveyor, Feb.1969.<lb/><lb/>RIBA Journal, April, 1969.<lb/><lb/>Journal of the Austrian Institute of Planning, April 1969.<lb/><lb/>External Broadcasting: Current affairs talks, 10. 03.69.<lb/><lb/>British Books News, March 1969.<lb/><lb/>BBC The World of Books, 14.11.68.<lb/><lb/>Northern Architect, July, 1969.<lb/><lb/>Journal of the Town planning Institute, July-August 1969.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notebook of Press cutting:</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 40</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1950/1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950-1954</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 notebook.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90418_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Volume of Press cutting: St Andrews, Design in Town and Village, Stockport, Minehead, Cambridge.<lb/><lb/>St Andrews:<lb/><lb/>The Scotsman, 08.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Scotsman, 12.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Citizen, 08.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Citizen, 15.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Citizen, 15.04.50.<lb/><lb/>Dundee Courier, 15.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Scotsman, 18.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Citizen, 22.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Citizen, 29.04.50.<lb/><lb/>Courier &amp; Advertiser, 24.05.50.<lb/><lb/>Courier &amp; Advertiser, 07.06.50.<lb/><lb/>St. Andrews Citizen, 22.04.50.<lb/><lb/>The Scotsman, 26.09.51.<lb/><lb/>Design in Town and Village:<lb/><lb/>The Times, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 31.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Guardian, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>News Chronicle, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Express &amp; Star, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Daily Herald, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Evening Chronicle, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Daily Scketch, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Evening Chronicle, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Evening News, 02.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Time and Tide, 31.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Economist, 31.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Glasgow Herald, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Yorkshire post, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Northern Despatch, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Oxford Mail, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Yorkshire Evening News, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Northern Despatch, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>The Northern Whig, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Irish News, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Halifax Daily Courier &amp; Guardian, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Liverpool Evening Express, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>The Morning Advertiser, 03.01.53.<lb/><lb/>North Western Evening Mail, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Birmingham Post, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Architect and Building News, 08.01.53.<lb/><lb/>The Municipal Journal, 30.01.53.<lb/><lb/>The Builder, 30.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Surveyor, 31.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Yorkshire Evening Post, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Newcastle Journal, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Country Life, 06.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Picture Post, 14.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Architects' Journal, 26.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Architects' Journal, 05.02.53.<lb/><lb/>Estates Gazette, 31.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Northern Echo, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Eastern Daily Press, 29.01.53.<lb/><lb/>South Wales Echo &amp; Evening Express, 28.01.53.<lb/><lb/>Builder, 06.02.53.<lb/><lb/>The Spectator, 13.03.53.<lb/><lb/>Building, March 1953.<lb/><lb/>Journal of the Town Planning Institute, April 1953.<lb/><lb/>The Master Builder, April 1953.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 07.07.64.<lb/><lb/>Stockport:<lb/><lb/>Stockport Express, 09.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Stockport Advertiser, 10.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Stockport Express, 09.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Stockport Advertiser, 10.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Stockport Express, 16.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Stockport Express, 28.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Evening Chronicle, 29.06.50.<lb/><lb/>Manchester Evening News, 20.06.50.<lb/><lb/>The Times, 29.06.50.<lb/><lb/>The Manchester Guardian, 29.06.50.<lb/><lb/>Stockport Advertiser, 30.03.50.<lb/><lb/>Surveyor, 21.07.50.<lb/><lb/>Architect's Journal, 07.09.50.<lb/><lb/>Architect and Building News, 10.12.50.<lb/><lb/>Minehead:<lb/><lb/>West Somerset Free Press, 13.05.50.<lb/><lb/>West Somerset Free Press, 20.05.50.<lb/><lb/>West Somerset Free Press, 24.05.50.<lb/><lb/>Architect &amp; Building news, 14.07.50.<lb/><lb/>Architect's Journal, 24.08.50.<lb/><lb/>West Somerset Free Press, 26.08.50.<lb/><lb/>Municipal Engineeering &amp; Sanitary Record, 07.12.50.<lb/><lb/>Town &amp; Country Planning, August 1950.<lb/><lb/>Cambridge:<lb/><lb/>The Architect's Journal, 12.08.54.<lb/><lb/>Architectural Review, September, 1951.</p>
        </scopecontent>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence, 1930-1937.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1930/1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930-1937</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file; 3 subfiles.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90419_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence, 1930-1937: 1. General correspondence re. Southport. Lancashire and regional report. 2. Correspondence: Britain and the beast. 3. Correspondence: A derelict area.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">General correspondence re. Southport Lancashire and regional report.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1930/1935" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930-1935</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90420_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>General correspondence re. Southport. Lancashire and regional report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note on the requested acknowledgment of the authorship of the report.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1930" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90421_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note on the requested acknowledgment of the authorship of the report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Preface of the report on Lancashire regional report.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1930" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Report, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90422_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Preface of the report on Lancashire regional report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Members of the Publication Sub-committee of the Lancashire Regional Planning Committee.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1930" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90423_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the acknowledgement of the Lancashire report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a letter from the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1930" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83716_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the acknowledgement of the Lancashire report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Society of Authors.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1930" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_83717_actor">Society of Authors (Great Britain), 1884 -</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the acknowledgement of the Lancashire report.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the H. de C. Hastings, Editor, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1935" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1935</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84013_actor">The Architectural Review.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an article for the journal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the H. de C. Hastings, Editor, The Architectural Review.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.1.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1935" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1935</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84014_actor">The Architectural Review.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning an article for the journal.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence: Britain and the Beast.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1930/1935" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930-1935</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90424_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>General correspondence re. Southport Lancashire and regional report.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfielf, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.2.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90425_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the press reviews of Sharp's chapter in the book: Britain and the Beast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfielf, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.2.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_82089_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the press reviews of Sharp's chapter in the book: Britain and the Beast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough Williams - Ellis.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.2.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84374_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter of thanks for Sharp's chapter in the book: Britain and the Beast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Clough Williams- Ellis.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.2.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90426_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Cover letter to accompany Sharp's chapter for the book: Britain and the Beast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Clough Williams - Ellis.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.2.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_84375_actor">Williams-Ellis, Sir Bertram Clough, 1883 - 1978, architect</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning Sharp's chapter for the book: Britain and the Beast.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Correspondence: A Derelict Area.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1930/1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930-1944</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Correspondence.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90427_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>General correspondence regarding A Derelict Area.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1944 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1944" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1944</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84052_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt from the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1944 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1943 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1943</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84053_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1943 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1942 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84054_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1942 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1941 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1941" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1941</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84055_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1941 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1940 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84056_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1940 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1939 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84057_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1939 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1937 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84058_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1937 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1936 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84059_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1936 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1935 The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1935" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1935</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84060_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Receipt for the sales for the year ending 31st March, 1935 The Hogarth Press.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Contract between The Hogarth Press and Thomas Sharp for the publication of: A Derelict Area.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84061_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Contract between The Hogarth Press and Thomas Sharp for the publication of: A Derelict Area.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Hugh Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter enclosing the introduction to the publication of: A Derelict Area.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M. West, Manager of The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84062_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning "A Derelict Area".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Leonard Woolf, The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90428_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the agreement for the publication of: A Derelict Area.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leonard Woolf, The Hogarth Press.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84063_actor">The Hogarth Press.</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the details for the publication of: A Derelict Area.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Hugh Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            </did>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the introduction to "A Derelict Area".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Hugh Dalton.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <persname id="atom_90429_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the introduction to "A Derelict Area".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Victor Gollanz, Ltd.</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 41.3.17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1934" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1934</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <corpname id="atom_84262_actor">Victor Gollancz Ltd</corpname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-48b10feca994c037db67e10c88d22962" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>Publishing House</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter concerning the publication to "A Derelict Area".</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Shell Guide to Northumberland (&amp; Durham).</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1936/1977" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936-1977</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90430_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence with Faber &amp; Faber and Shell Guides’ editor, John Betjeman.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83635_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning S.P.B. Mais' Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90431_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83636_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning S.P.B. Mais' Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90432_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83637_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter inviting Sharp to contribute to the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90433_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to the Editor accepting the work to contribute to the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83638_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the terms for working on the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83639_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Mr Burdus Redford, photographer, to work with Sharp in the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90434_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Redford's collaboration with Sharp on the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Maurice Beck, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_80664_actor">Beck, Maurice, 1886-1960, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90435_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographers for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Maurice Beck, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_80665_actor">Beck, Maurice, 1886-1960, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks regarding the trip with Sharp and concerning prints of the photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Maurice Beck, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_80666_actor">Beck, Maurice, 1886-1960, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing the prints of the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83640_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographers for the Shell guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90437_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in responses to Betjeman concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90438_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an appointment to review the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note from W.P. Collier, Photographer, Picture Framer and Postcard Publisher.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Note.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_80934_actor">Collier, Walter Percy, b.1875, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Note enclosing some prints of photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83641_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter asking for the MS of the Shell Guide by the end of November.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to A.J. Parrott, Secretary to Hardy Bros Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90439_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter asking about an article on fishing and shooting in Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.R. Hardy, Hardy Bros Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reply to Sharp concerning an article on fishing and shooting in Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.R. Hardy, Hardy Bros Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90440_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reply to Hardy concerning an article on fishing in Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russel Goddar, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90441_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting a picture of Farne Islands for an article on nature of Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russel Goddar, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81782_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning a picture of Farne Islands for an article on nature of Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90442_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs, illustrations and map for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs, illustrations for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90443_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reply to Redford.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.A. Bramwell.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90444_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bramwell acknowledging receipt of photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.R. Bainbridge, photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.R. Bainbridge, photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90445_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bainbridge concerning some photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russel Goddar, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81783_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs and article for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russel Goddar, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90446_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Goddar.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.F. Maitland, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90447_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting for a couple of photographs to use in the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to H. L. Honeyman, Secretary to the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90448_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting for a photograph for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L.R. Hardy, Hardy Bros Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning an article on fishing for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to L.R. Hardy, Hardy Bros Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90449_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Hardy.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83642_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an appointment in London to discuss further details of the Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90450_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an article on fishing for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning an article on fishing for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning an article on fishing, shooting and hunting for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90451_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail concerning an article on fishing, shooting and hunting for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Herbert L. Honeyman, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84158_actor">The Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Herbert L. Honeyman, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90452_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Honeyman thanking him for permission to use one of the illustrations requested for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing some slides for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90453_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Redford thanking him for slides received for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Maitland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.P. Collier, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90454_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90455_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning two Bewick engravings for the Shell Guide to Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the engravings and a photograph.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90456_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the engravings and a photograph.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90457_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting to select the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Publicity Manager, LNER.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90458_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Request to borrow photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Publicity Manager, LNER.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82444_actor">London and North Eastern Railway.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford, Photographer.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83643_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an appointment to discuss the photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the article on fishing, shooting and hunting for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90459_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail thanking him for the photographs enclosed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.P. Collier, Photographer, Picture Framer and Postcard Publisher.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_80935_actor">Collier, Walter Percy, b.1875, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a photographic print for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.P. Collier, Photographer, Picture framer and Postcard Publisher.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90460_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Collier thanking him for the photograph enclosed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Publicity Manager, LNER.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82445_actor">London and North Eastern Railway.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs of Newcastle and Monkwearmouth stations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.G. Marsden, Information Agent, LNER.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82446_actor">London and North Eastern Railway.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Marsden.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning information on fishing for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the article on fishing and sports of Northumberland and enclosing the typescript.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90461_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail thanking him for the article received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.66</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the article for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.67</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90462_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.68</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90463_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the article on the fauna and flora for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Herbert L. Honeyman, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.69</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90464_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.70</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81784_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp enclosing the article for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.71</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90465_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the collaborators’ fees for the Shell Guide for Northumberland and Durham. Enclosed, the first proof of the typescript.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.72</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81785_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp thanking him for the photographs received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.73</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83644_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.74</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83645_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's, enclosing the cheque for expenses in connection with the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.75</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the typescript of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Burdus Redford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.76</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90466_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Redford thanking him for his review of the typescript of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.77</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90467_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the typescript of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from William Maitland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.78</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the reprint of "Surtees House".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.79</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Grey Street slide for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Burdus Redford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.80</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90468_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reply to Redford thanking him for the slide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.81</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83646_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Sharp's typescript for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.82</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90471_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in asnwer to Betjeman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.83</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90469_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter with corrections to the first proofs of the typescript for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.84</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83647_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter with further proofs of the Northumberland and Durham Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.85</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90470_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Northumberland and Durham Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.86</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90472_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Northumberland and Durham Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.87</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90473_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Northumberland and Durham Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.88</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81786_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Northumberland and Durham Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.89</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90474_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Goddard concerning the text proofs and publicity for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.90</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Northumberland and Durham Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.91</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90476_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.92</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90475_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the date for the publication of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.93</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83648_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Teague, Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.94</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84159_actor">The Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning a photograph for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L. Maitland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.95</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the collaboration on the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.96</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83649_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a visit to London to see the improvements to the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.97</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83650_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.98</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90477_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some corrections to the typescript of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.99</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83651_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.100</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83652_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.101</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90478_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Betjeman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.102</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81787_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.103</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90479_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Goddard.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.104</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter thanking the copy of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.105</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90480_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.106</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81788_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Goddard's dissapointment with the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.107</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90481_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Goddard.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.108</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90482_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Goddard's letter.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Burdus Redford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.109</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B.T. Batsford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.110</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90483_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: "Shell Guide: Northumberland and Durham".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.111</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83653_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.112</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90484_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Betjeman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from T. Russell Goddard, Curator, Hancock Museum.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.113</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81789_actor">Great North Museum: Hancock</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from B.T. Batsford, Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.114</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80540_actor">B.T. Batsford Ltd Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.L. Beddington.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.115</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90485_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Beddington thanking him for the copies received of the Shell Guides.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.L. Beddington.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.116</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.L. Beddington.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.117</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90486_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Beddington.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.L. Beddington.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.118</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to B. T. Batsford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.119</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgement of a cheque.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.A. Bramwell.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.120</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from W. A. Bramwell.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.121</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90487_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bramwell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.122</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">typescript copy of a letter to W. Percy Mail.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.123</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90488_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mail.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.124</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90489_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issuing of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.125</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83654_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issuing of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.126</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90490_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Betjeman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.127</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83655_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issuing of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.128</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90491_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.129</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83656_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.130</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83657_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp enclosing a copy of a Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.131</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90492_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.132</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83658_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the existence of the original blocks for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.133</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90493_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.134</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83659_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.135</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90494_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.136</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83660_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.137</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90495_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell thanking him for the photographs received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to V. Blankenburgs.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.138</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90496_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph of Kielder Forest to be included in the revised Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from V. Blankenburgs.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.139</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to V. Blankenburgs.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.140</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90498_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Blankenburgs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.J. Garton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.141</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90497_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning listed buildings in Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Walter Scott, Photographers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.142</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90499_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some photographs for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Walter Scott, Photographers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.143</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_83289_actor">Scott, Walter, 1878-1848, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Walter Scott, Photographers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.144</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90500_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Scott.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from S. J. Garton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.145</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the listed buildings.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S. J. Garton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.146</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90501_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Garton.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from D. Moore.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.147</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the listed buildings.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D. Moore.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.148</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90502_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Moore.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to D. Moore.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.149</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90503_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Moore concerning the listed buildings in Northumberland and Durham.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.150</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83661_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.151</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90504_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Photographic Librarian, Country Life.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.152</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90505_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph for the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from The Photographic Librarian, Country Life.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.153</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_80985_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.154</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90506_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor of Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.155</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83662_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.156</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90507_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.157</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83663_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Jill Menzies, Secretary to Mr. John Betjeman.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.158</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Betjeman's letter to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript of a letter to W.S. Mitchell.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.159</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90508_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to S.J. Carton.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.160</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90509_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the listed buildings in Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.161</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83664_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the review and correction of the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.162</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90510_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in asnwer to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.163</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83665_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in asnwer to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.164</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83666_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a lot of photographs from the Mustograph firm.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.165</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90511_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the photographs received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.166</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83667_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs to check for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.167</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83668_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an appointment with John Betjeman.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.168</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90512_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.169</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81304_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the existing blocks from the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Betjeman, General Editor, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.170</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83669_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a lunch with Mitchell in London.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.171</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90513_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.172</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90514_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Northumberland Shell Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Production Dept., Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.173</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81305_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter entitled: Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.174</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81306_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an introduction to the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.175</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90515_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the introduction for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.176</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83670_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.177</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81307_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.178</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90516_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.179</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83671_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp thanking him for the photographs received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.180</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81308_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photograph of the Roman Wall in Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.181</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90517_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photograph of the Roman Wall in Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.182</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90518_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys of the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.183</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81309_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys of the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.184</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81310_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.185</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90519_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning the galleys of the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.C.A. Herrmann, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.186</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81311_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from F.C.A. Herrmann, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.187</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81312_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp thanking him for the corrected galleys received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.188</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83672_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the postal addresses of the photographers.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.189</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83673_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Mitchell.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.190</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83674_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.191</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81313_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.191a</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90520_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.192</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90521_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.193</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90522_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.194</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83675_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.195</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81314_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph of the Farne Islands.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.196</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81315_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Photographic Library, Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.197</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90523_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning one photograph for the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.198</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90524_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.199</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81316_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.200</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90525_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.201</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81317_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.202</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81318_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's, about the corrections of the text for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.203</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90526_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Photographic Library, Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.204</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90527_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the reproduction fees for a photograph for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.205</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90528_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland and the publication date.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.206</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81319_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.207</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90529_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.208</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81320_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the copy of the Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.209</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90530_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the copy of the Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Messrs Faber and Faber.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.210</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81321_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter with advanced copies of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Messrs Faber and Faber.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.211</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90531_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the advanced copies of the Shell Guide to Northumberland and requesting further copies.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.212</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83676_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning the photographs used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.213</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90532_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.214</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83677_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning photographs used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.215</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81322_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning 3 photographs used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Mitchell, Shell Guides.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.216</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83678_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the photographs.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Annette Seale, Production Department, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.217</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81323_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting a photograph for a review of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.218</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90533_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Editor, the Ramblers' Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.219</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90534_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph for a review of the book.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.220</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81324_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the revision of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.221</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90535_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the revision of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.222</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81325_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the revision of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.223</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90536_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the revision of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.224</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81326_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Shell Guide to Northumberland and the timetable for revision.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.225</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90538_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the Shell Guide to Northumberland and the timetable for revision.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.226</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90539_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the timetable for revising the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Peter du Sautoy, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.227</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81327_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing the contract for the third revision the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Peter du Sautoy, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.228</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90540_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sautoy enclosing the signed contract for the third revision of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Contract between Thomas Sharp and Faber &amp; Faber Ltd. for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.229</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81328_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Contract between Thomas Sharp and Faber &amp; Faber Ltd. for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.230</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90541_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the fees for the revision of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.231</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81329_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.232</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90542_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.233</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81330_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Butler, Director, Northumberland &amp; Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.234</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90543_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.S. Butler, Director, Northumberland &amp; Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.235</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90544_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mrs. Joan Newman to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.236</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81331_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter from Mrs. Joan Newman to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.P. Gaudin to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.237</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81332_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter from J.P. Gaudin to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.238</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90545_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Piper concerning illustrations for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Susan Goodridge, Secretary to Mr. du Sautoy, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.239</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81333_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard from John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.240</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Postcard.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81334_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Postcard: replay to Sharp thanking him for the list received.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.H. Cartwright, Senior Administrative Assistant, Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.241</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82721_actor">Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs requested for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L. Noble, Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.242</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82722_actor">Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs requested for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.243</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90546_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Piper concerning the corrections on the text of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Roy Gazzard, Editor, The Northern Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.244</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84084_actor">The Northern Architect Magazine.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the commemoration of 25 years since Sharp's Durham plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Roy Gazzard, Editor, The Northern Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.245</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90547_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Gazzard.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Roy Gazzard, Editor, The Northern Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.246</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84085_actor">The Northern Architect Magazine.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.247</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90548_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.248</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81335_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a text on Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Postcard from John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.249</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81336_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.250</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81337_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Leslie Noble.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.251</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90549_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Noble.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Noble.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.252</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Leslie Noble.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.253</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Noble.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Magda Phipps, Secretary to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.254</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81338_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a proof of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Magda Phipps, Secretary to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.255</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81339_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing a proof of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.256</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81340_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Magda Phipps, Secretary to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.257</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81341_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp asking for his addresses during his holidays.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.258</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90550_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.259</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81342_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing the cheque for expenses.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Roy Gazzard, Editor, The Northern Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.260</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84086_actor">The Northern Architect Magazine.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the listed buildings in Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Roy Gazzard, Editor, the Northern Architect.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.261</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84087_actor">The Northern Architect Magazine.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the interview about the Durham plan.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Oliver R. Spence.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.262</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90551_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Piper.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.263</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90552_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to William S. Butler, Director of Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.264</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90553_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from L. Noble, Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.265</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82723_actor">Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Piper.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.266</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rosemary Goad, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.267</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81343_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Goad including a copy of the list.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Sarah Gleadell, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.268</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81344_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.269</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81345_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Nothumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.270</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90554_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.271</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81346_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.272</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90555_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.273</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81347_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.274</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90556_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Joan Newman, Production Department, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.275</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81348_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Joan Newman, Production Department, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.276</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90557_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Newman concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.277</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81349_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.278</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81350_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.279</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90558_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the proofs of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.280</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81351_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning postponing the publication until Autumn.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to G.D. Holmes, Director of Research, Forest Research Station.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.281</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90559_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.282</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81352_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.283</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90560_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning illustrations for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Bruce Allsopp, Oriel Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.284</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90561_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs of Newcastle for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Bruce Allsopp, Oriel Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.285</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90562_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.286</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90563_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the text of the disclaimer for the illustrations used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.287</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90564_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the text of the disclaimer for the illustrations used in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.288</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81353_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the disclaimer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.289</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90565_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Bland concerning the disclaimer.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.290</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81354_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning illustrations and additions to the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten letter to John Piper, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.300</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90566_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Piper concerning illustrations and additions to the Northumberland Guide.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to P.D. Jacques, Public Services Division, Shell Mex and BP Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.301</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Jacques.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.D. Jacques, Public Services Division, Shell Mex and BP Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.302</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83679_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the production of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to P.D. Jacques, Public Services Division, Shell Mex and BP Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.303</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90567_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Jacques.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.H. Cartwright, Senior Administrative Assistant, Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.304</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82724_actor">Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.H. Cartwright, Senior Administrative Assistant, Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.305</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82725_actor">Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Leslie Noble, County Planning Office, Newcastle upon Tyne.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.306</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90572_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.H. Cartwright, Senior Administrative Assistant, Northumberland and Durham Travel Association.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.307</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90568_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from P.D. Jaques, Publicity Services Division, Shell-Mx and B. P. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.308</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83680_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for Sharp's hospitality.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to P.D. Jaques, Publicity Services Division, Shell-Mx and B. P. Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.309</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90569_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Jaques.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.310</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90570_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.311</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81355_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.312</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90571_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication of the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from David Bland, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.313</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81356_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in asnwer to Sharp's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the royalties of the Shell Guide to Northumberland from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.314</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81357_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for the royalties of the Shell Guide to Northumberland from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for copies of the Shell Guide to Northumberland from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.315</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81358_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for copies of the Shell Guide to Northumberland from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt for the royalties of the Shell Guide to Northumberland from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.316</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81359_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for the royalties of the Shell Guide to Northumberland from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.317</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90573_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.318</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90574_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Susan Kennedy, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.319</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81360_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning some inaccuracies in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J. Josiffe, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.320</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90575_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties from the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J. Josiffe, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.321</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81361_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties from the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.322</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81366_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for royalties from the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Mr. Barnard Orna.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.323</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Mr. Barnard Orna.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.324</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90576_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Barnard concerning the photographs in the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.325</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81362_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt for the royalties of the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.D.F. Nichols, Secretary, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.326</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81363_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.327</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81364_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning royalties from the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. Winwright, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.328</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81365_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning royalties for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. Winwright, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.329</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81367_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland. Receipt enclosed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.330</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81368_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Arthur L. Brierley.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.331</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83681_actor">Shell Guides</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-a61599497e2d5a6182aabd7c77e8bf46" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>20th Century series of guidebooks on the counties of Britain.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.332</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81369_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.333</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81370_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.334</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81371_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.335</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81372_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.336</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81373_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.337</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81374_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.338</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1975" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81375_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.339</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81376_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Receipt from Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.340</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1976" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1976</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81377_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Receipt with the royalty statement for the book: Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.D.F. Nichols, Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.341</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1977" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1977</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_81378_actor">Faber and Faber Ltd.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalty payment system in Faber &amp; Faber Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Map of routes of Northumberland.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.342</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1977" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1977</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90577_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Map of routes of Northumberland for the Shell Guide to Northumberland.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cutting from the Times Supplement on the North-East Region, Monday November 16, 1964.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 42.343</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1977" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1977</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Map.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_84171_actor">The Times Newspaper.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Press cutting from the Times Supplement on the North-East Region, Monday November 16, 1964.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">English Panorama.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1936/1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936-1974</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90578_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence with Architectural Press and J.M. Dent Publishers, including the contract for a book provisionally titled: “The English scene”.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Handwritten copy of a letter to J.M. Dent and Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90579_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the typescript of the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82090_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgment of the typescript of the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82095_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for a typescript of The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82091_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning typescript of the book: The English Scene, with notes.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.F. Bozman, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90580_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Response to notes regarding Sharp's typescript of The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82092_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the title of the book: The English Scene, already used for another publication.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgement.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82093_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgement of a typescript of The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to E.F. Bozman, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90581_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning the typescript of the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W.G. Taylor, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82099_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the Howard's Garden City issue in the typescript of the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to W.G. Taylor, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 5 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90582_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to W.G. Taylor concerning the Howard's Garden City issue in the typescript of the book: The English Scene. Enclosed, a list of the possible illustrations for the book.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82094_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90583_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Hadfield concerning the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82096_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the new title of the book: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90584_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Hadfield concerning the new title of the book: The English Pattern.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. Publishers.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blocks for the book: The English Pattern.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter enclosing a contract between Thomas Sharp and J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract and letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
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              <corpname id="atom_82097_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Contract between Thomas Sharp and J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd. for the book provisionally entitled: The English Scene.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82098_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the quality of blocks received for the book: The English Pattern.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90586_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Ross concerning illustrations for the book: The English Pattern.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82100_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the title for the book: The English Pattern.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90587_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the new title for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.21</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82101_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the new title for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.22</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82102_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the blocks for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.23</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90588_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Ross concerning illustrations for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.24</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82103_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blocks for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.25</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82104_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.26</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90589_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.27</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82105_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.28</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82106_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgment of the photographs received for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.29</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90590_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the title of the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.30</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82107_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.31</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82108_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgment of the photograph received for the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.32</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82109_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.33</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82110_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: The English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of the acknowledgments of the book: English Panorama.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.34</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90591_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgments in the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Martin Dent, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.35</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <corpname id="atom_82116_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.36</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82111_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.37</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 3 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82112_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.38</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90592_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Hadfield concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.39</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82113_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the ink for the illustrations in the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.40</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82114_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.41</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82115_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.42</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82117_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.43</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82118_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.44</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82119_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.45</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82120_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the colour proofs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.46</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90593_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.47</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82121_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.48</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90594_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.49</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82122_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the colour cases for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.50</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82124_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.51</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82123_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Acknowledgment from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.52</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Acknowledgment.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82125_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Acknowledgment of the index for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.53</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90595_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.54</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82126_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.55</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82127_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.56</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90596_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.57</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82128_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.58</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82129_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.59</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82130_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.60</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90597_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.61</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82131_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication date of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Publicity Department, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.62</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90598_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a list of journals to approach the review of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.63</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82132_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a list of journals to approach the review of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.64</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82133_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.65</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82134_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.66</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90599_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for illustrations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.67</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82135_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter returning the illustrations used in the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.68</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82136_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter "Open field cultivation illustration" used in the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.69</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82137_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter "Open field cultivation illustration" used in the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.70</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82138_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a list of journals to approach the review of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.71</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90600_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Hadfield.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty Statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.72</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82139_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty Statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.73</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90601_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning "Britain and the Beast" and an advertisement for "English Panorama".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.74</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82140_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the advertisement for "English Panorama".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Donald Ross, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.75</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82141_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a photograph requested by "Country Life".</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.76</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1937" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1937</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82142_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.77</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82143_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.78</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90602_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.80</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82145_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1938" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1938</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90603_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.82</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
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        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82146_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1939" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1939</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82147_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.84</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1940" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1940</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82148_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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            <p>Published</p>
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            <p>Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.85</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82149_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement from J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.86</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90604_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from John Hadfield, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.87</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
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              <corpname id="atom_82150_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Noel Carrington, Country Life Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.88</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1942" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1942</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <corpname id="atom_80986_actor">Country Life Magazine</corpname>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.89</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90605_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Architectural Press.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.90</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Cronin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.91</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <persname id="atom_90607_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.92</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <corpname id="atom_83830_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from E.F. Bozman, J.M. Dent &amp; Sons Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.93</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <corpname id="atom_82151_actor">J.M. Dent and Sons Publishers.</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.94</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90608_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.95</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1946" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1946</unitdate>
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              <corpname id="atom_83831_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.96</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90609_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.97</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
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            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.98</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90610_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Regan concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.99</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83833_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.100</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90611_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Regan concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.101</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1948" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1948</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83834_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning in answer to Sharp's.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.102</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90612_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.103</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83835_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.104</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90613_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Regan concerning the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director of The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.105</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83836_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Regan concerning the publication of the Salisbury Report and the re-issue of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.106</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90614_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.107</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83837_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.108</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83838_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.109</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 4 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90615_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the text for the re-issue of the book: English Panorama. Enclosed, a revised index for the book.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.110</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83839_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.112</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90616_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.113</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83840_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-issue the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.114</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90617_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.115</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90618_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.116</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83841_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.117</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90619_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.118</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83842_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.119</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83843_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.120</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83844_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the contract for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.121</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83845_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blocks for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.122</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90620_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Philp concerning the contract for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.123</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83846_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the contract for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.124</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83847_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the new contract for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.125</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90621_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the revised contract for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Contract between Thomas Sharp and The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.126</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Contract, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83848_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Contract between Thomas Sharp and The Architectural Press Ltd. for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.127</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83849_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Contract between Thomas Sharp and The Architectural Press Ltd. for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.128</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83850_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.129</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90622_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.130</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90623_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the last chapter of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.131</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83851_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the final chapter of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.132</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90624_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.133</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90625_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the photographs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Daisy Edis, The Studio.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.134</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90626_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.135</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90627_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.136</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83852_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.137</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83853_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.138</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90628_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.139</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the illustration entitled the "Open fields” requested for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.140</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90629_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Orwin concerning the illustration entitled the "Open fields” requested for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.141</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83854_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Miss Daisy Edis, The Studio.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.142</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81256_actor">Edis, Daisy E., c. 1887-1964, Photographer.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Miss Daisy Edis, The Studio.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.143</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90630_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Ewart Skuce, City Librarian, Oxford.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.144</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90631_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter accompanying a portfolio of maps which have been loaned by Mowat.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.145</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82768_actor">Orwin, Dr Charles Stewart, 1876-1955, Agricultural Economist and Historian.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.146</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90632_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.147</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90633_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.148</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83855_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.149</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83856_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.150</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90634_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the illustration borrowed for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.151</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83857_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.152</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90635_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.153</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83858_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the last chapter of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.154</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83859_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys for the last chapter of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.155</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90636_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys for the last chapter of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.156</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83860_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the galleys for the last chapter of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.157</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90637_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Dr. C.S. Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.158</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90639_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.159</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90640_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.160</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83861_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the layout of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.161</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90641_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the layout of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.162</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83862_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-scheduling of a meeting.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.163</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90642_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the re-scheduling of a meeting.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.164</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90643_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning one illustration for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.165</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83863_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.166</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90644_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.167</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90645_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.168</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83864_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the parcel sent.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.169</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90646_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blocks of illustrations for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.170</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83865_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the blocks of illustrations.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.171</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83866_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.172</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90647_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the "Open field" map for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.173</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83867_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning illustrations for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.174</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83868_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photograph of the "Land Settlement" for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.175</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1949" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1949</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90648_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning photographs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.176</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90649_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the page proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.177</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83869_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the page proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.178</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90650_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the page proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.179</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83870_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the page proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.180</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83871_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the page proofs of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.181</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90651_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.182</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90652_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.183</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83872_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.184</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83873_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the art sections for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.185</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90653_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs of the art sections for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.186</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83874_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.187</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90654_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
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          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket, blurb and acknowledgements for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.188</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83875_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket, blurb and acknowledgements for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.189</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90655_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blurb for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.190</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83876_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blurb for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.191</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90656_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the blurb for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Secretary to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.192</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83877_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the blurb for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.193</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83878_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.194</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90657_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.195</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83879_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for English Panorama. For which Gordon Cullen is working on some ideas.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.196</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90658_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the dust jacket for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.197</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83880_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.198</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90659_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proofs for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.199</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83881_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.200</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90660_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the corrections to the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.201</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83882_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.202</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83883_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning Cullen's dust jacket for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.203</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90661_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Cullen concerning the dust jacket for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.204</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90662_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.205</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90663_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.206</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83884_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the publication date for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.207</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83885_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.208</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90664_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the final layout and Cullen's dust jacket for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.209</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83886_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.210</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90665_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the copies of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.211</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83887_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning copies of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Dr.C.S.Orwin.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.212</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_82769_actor">Orwin, Dr Charles Stewart, 1876-1955, Agricultural Economist and Historian.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for a copy of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.213</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90666_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting that the royalties for English Panorama be sent directly to the Institute of Landscape Architects.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.214</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83888_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp concerning the royalties for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to the Secretary to the Books Department, The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.215</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90667_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for the royalty statement for English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.216</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83890_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter enclosing the royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the The Architectural Press, Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.217</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83889_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.218</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90668_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the review of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Accounts Department, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.219</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90669_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the royalties from the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from O. J. V. Moret, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.220</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83891_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp, enclosing the royalties for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.221</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83892_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.222</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83893_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.223</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1952" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83894_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.224</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83895_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.225</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1953" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1953</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83896_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.226</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83897_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
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          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Prof. A.C. Holliday, Department of Town and Country Planning of the University of Manchester.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
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        Letter.    </physdesc>
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              <persname id="atom_81906_actor">Holliday, Albert Clifford, 1897-1960, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
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          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting copies of the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Prof. A.C. Holliday, Department of Town and Country Planning of the University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.228</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90670_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning copies of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.229</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90671_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Prof. A.C. Holliday, Department of Town and Country Planning of the University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.230</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_81907_actor">Holliday, Albert Clifford, 1897-1960, Architect and Town Planner.</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Request for copies of the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Prof. A.C. Holliday, Department of Town and Country Planning of the University of Manchester.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.231</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90672_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: Town and Countryside.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.232</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83898_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.233</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90673_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.234</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1954" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1954</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83899_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.235</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83900_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.236</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1955" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83901_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.237</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83902_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.238</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83903_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.239</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83904_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.240</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83905_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.241</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83906_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.242</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1958" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83907_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.243</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90674_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an extract from English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.244</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83909_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an extract from English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.245</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83908_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.246</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90675_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an extract from English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.247</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83910_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning an extract from the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.248</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83911_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.249</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83912_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.250</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83913_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90676_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter requesting eight copies of the book: English Panorama.</p>
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        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from the Sales Manager, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.252</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83914_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning copies of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.253</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90677_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning copies of English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.254</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83915_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.255</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83916_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.256</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83917_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.257</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83918_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.258</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83919_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.259</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1964" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83920_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.260</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83921_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.261</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1965" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1965</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83922_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.262</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83923_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.263</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1966" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1966</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83924_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.264</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83925_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.265</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83926_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.266</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83927_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.267</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1968</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83928_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.268</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83929_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.269</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83930_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.270</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1969" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1969</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83931_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.271</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83932_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.272</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83933_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.273</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83934_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.274</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83935_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.275</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83936_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.276</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1972" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83937_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.277</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83938_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.278</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1973" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83939_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.279</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83940_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Royalty statement from The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 43.280</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Receipt.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83941_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Royalty statement for the book: English Panorama.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subfonds">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">An Oxford townscape or Oxford observed.</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1950/1968" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950-1968</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file.    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_90678_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Correspondence with publishers. Agreement contracts. Royalty statments etc.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83942_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the new edition of Oxford Replanned.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90679_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the new edition of Oxford Replanned.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Miss Jean E. Horner, Secretary to M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83943_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter in response to Sharp.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Jean E. Horner, Secretary to M.A. Regan, Director, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90680_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter of thanks for unbound pages of Oxford Replanned.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90681_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90682_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83944_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harry Plowman, Town Clerk, Oxford City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.8</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90683_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Harry Plowman, Town Clerk, Oxford City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.9</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82803_actor">Oxford City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d3c5d74d13a6b2d03ba3e71e2e1e26c9" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford City Council.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Harry Plowman, Town Clerk, Oxford City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.10</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90684_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.11</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83945_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.12</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90685_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Harry Plowman, Town Clerk, Oxford City Council.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.13</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_82804_actor">Oxford City Council, 1974 -</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-d3c5d74d13a6b2d03ba3e71e2e1e26c9" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Oxford City Council.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.14</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83946_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.15</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90686_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. R. Woolly.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.16</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter, 2 pages.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from A. R. Woolly.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.17</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1950</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning illustrations for the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.18</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90687_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and architecture of the mid-twentieth century as a distinctive period in planning and design, particularly focused around reconstruction plans and their partial implementation.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning a meeting to discuss the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.19</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <corpname id="atom_83947_actor">The Architectural Press</corpname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter concerning the proposed book: Oxford Observed.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Typescript copy of a letter to Raymond Philp, The Architectural Press Ltd.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1">THS 44.20</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1951" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1951</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Letter.    </physdesc>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <persname id="atom_90688_actor">Sharp, Thomas, 1901 - 1978, town planner</persname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-27e93dc6c0d34aab326338b4278c0a99" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>Thomas Sharp was a key figure in town planning in the mid-twentieth century. The concepts he developed in his writings and plans have been of enduring significance and influence on thinking about planning and design for both practitioners and academics in the UK and beyond. He was a major influence on the development of ideas of townscape and the significance of his thinking on historic cities stands comparison with, for example, Camillo Sitte.<lb/><lb/>The mid-twentieth century was a period when public and professional interest in planning was at an all-time high. Sharp was a key figure in defining thinking about the forms that town and countryside should take; in reconciling existing and valued character with modernity, and; in making these arguments accessible. His book Town Planning (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940) is the most widely-read ever on the subject and followed earlier influential polemical works. The plans he produced in the 1940s, primarily for historic cities such as Oxford, Exeter and Durham, were also hugely influential and are significant aesthetic artefacts in the history of plan-making, all the more remarkable for being produced in a period of austerity.<lb/><lb/>Interest in Sharp and his ideas has grown markedly in recent years with, for example, the rise of 'New Urbanism' in the USA and of the significance of design issues in UK planning. Furthermore, there is a new-wave of scholarly interest in the post-war reconstruction planning and