18th April 2017

Historic archives and artefacts dating back to the very origins of the Paralympic movement will be catalogued and conserved by the Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies.

The archives department of Buckinghamshire County Council, in partnership with the National Paralympic Heritage Trust (NPHT), has been awarded a major grant of £175,566 by the Wellcome Trust for cataloguing and conservation work on the vital records which track the origins of the Paralympic movement.  These will include patient records dating back to 1944, when Dr Ludwig Guttmann first set up the spinal injuries unit at Stoke Mandeville Hospital.

In addition to those patient files, the archives of the International Wheelchair and Amputee Sports Federation and WheelPower will come into the scope of this exciting ‘Spinal to Sport’ project.

The award will fund three new members of staff to help complete the work, which will take two years.

County Archivist Laura Cotton who was instrumental in obtaining the funding said: “It is really exciting to be widening access to these records by cataloguing them and making them available to the public.  The Paralympic Games and the work done by Sir Ludwig Guttmann is extremely important to Buckinghamshire and we are immensely proud of the recognition this gets internationally.”

Paul Mainds, Chair of the NPHT, who were partners in the application, said “Not only will the records be treasured locally, but they will be the cornerstone of our nationwide exhibition and public engagement work going forward.  We are delighted to be working with Laura and her team at the Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies.”

Laura added “What is really exciting about this is the importance of these records to the heritage of Buckinghamshire and the potential they have to be used internationally in academic and medical research into spinal injuries and Paralympic sport in general.”