The prospect of selecting a master’s dissertation subject can be a daunting one, particularly if, like me, you’ve had a 22-year hiatus since your last foray into higher education. I must admit I was in something of a quandary; it had been so long since I had undertaken any form of historical study that I […]
April 2019
History Dissertations: Top Tips for Students – History at Northampton
We’ve finished our most recent dissertation cycle here at Northampton. The marking is done and the results have been released. It seems a useful time to reflect as I prepare meetings to discuss projects with students for next year. We’ve had some great results, some fascinating dissertations, some of them first class. As the convenor […]
Ten Tips for a Successful Seminar – History at Northampton
Starting university can be a bit overwhelming, and the last thing you want to do is worry that you are not getting the most out of the seminars, or that you are completing the prep in the wrong manner. Seminars can be a wonderful environment for debates that are enlightening, and the preparatory work is […]
Remembering a war after ‘The War’ – History at Northampton
Jim Beach of the University of Northampton reflects on a visit to the Czech Republic. Speaking neither Czech nor Polish, it was with some trepidation that I accepted an invitation to speak at a workshop on the Seven Days’ War between the Czechs and Poles in 1919. The initial invite came from Tomáš Rusek, a […]
Heritage on CBeebies – History at Northampton
This is another instalment in my occasional series on history and children’s TV, following blogs on Thomas the Tank Engine and Teacup Travels. Which may give the reader an insight into what is mostly on our screen at the moment… Our five year old is currently obsessed with Go Jetters on CBeebies. (His older brother […]
I’m not sure I want THIS country back… – History at Northampton
In seems appropriate to be writing about racism and xenophobia this winter, appropriate but quite disturbing. I was prompted to write this blog post by one of my third year History students who had read my book London’s Shadows over the summer in preparation for his studies. In Chapter three I look at the mixed communities […]
Exhibition Launch: James Parkes and the Age of Intolerance – History at Northampton
Starting on Wednesday 13 March 2019, the University of Northampton will be hosting an exhibition about the life of Reverend Dr James Parkes (1896 – 1981). Parkes was one of the most remarkable figures within twentieth-century Christianity. Yet since his death in 1981, he has largely been forgotten by the church, by Jews, and by […]
DIY Digitisation and Ownership of the Past – History at Northampton
Whatever new fads and fashions there are in the study of history (and believe it or not there are many happening all the time) one thing has remained in place since the revolutionary work of Leopold Von Ranke and the German school of history in the late nineteenth century: the use of primary sources dating […]
‘f****** untouchable’?: the downfall of the Kray Twins in May 1968 – History at Northampton
On the 8 May 1968 a series of dawn raids were carried out by ‘more than 100’ Metropolitan Police detectives, led by DS Leonard ‘Nipper’ Read. The target of these raids was organized criminal gang that surrounded two East End gangsters that have passed into London folklore and garnered more column inches, True Crime books […]
“Let’s Baroque!” The University of Northampton Student History Society visits Vienna – History at Northampton
Immediately after their exams, seven members of the University of Northampton History Society travelled to Vienna. A self-organised culmination to their studies, the visit focused upon the history and culture of what is now Austria from the Renaissance through to the end of the Second World War. They were accompanied by Jim Beach, one of […]
Aristotle’s Masterpiece, the “banned Georgian sex manual” – History at Northampton
As a historian who works on the eighteenth century, I am always interested when Georgian stories appear in the news. And right on cue for Valentine’s Day, various news outlets were covering the sale of a “banned Georgian sex manual” at an auction in Derbyshire. The book in question was an edition of a book […]
Research Seminars 2018-19 – History at Northampton
Here are the History contributions to the Education and Humanities Research Seminars at the University of Northampton. All papers are at Learning Hub LH017, Waterside Campus at 6pm. 25 October: Dr Toby Purser (UoN), ‘The dog that didn’t bark: Sir John Sandys, social mobility and the community of knights and esquires in late medieval Hampshire’ […]
Holocaust Memorial Day 2019 at the University of Northampton – History at Northampton
Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD) was remembered at the University of Northampton on Wednesday 23 January. Traditionally it is on 27 January, which was a Sunday this year. The afternoon began with the ceremonial laying of the stones outside of the Bird of Transformation monument in front of the Senate Building at the new Waterside Campus. […]



Signals Intelligence under Fire – History at Northampton
Dr Jim Beach recently contributed an article for the GCHQ blog, which begins: At five in the morning on 21 March 1918, Vince Schürhoff woke to the thunderous sound of a bombardment. After many false alarms, the much-anticipated German offensive had begun. Vince was a twenty-six year-old corporal in the British army’s Royal Engineers (Signal […]