- Joseph Burtt
Joseph Burtt (17th November 1818- 17th December 1876) was an archivist and an Assistant Keeper of the Public Records. He began working in the public service in 1832 at the
Chapter House inWestminster Abbey underSir Francis Palgrave , and in 1840 became a member of staff at thePublic Record Office . Having been appointed an Assistant Keeper of the Records of the Second Class in 1851, Burtt was appointed a first-class status in 1859, and held this position until his death. Burtt oversaw the moving of the Public Records from theChapter House to a newly designated repository in Fetter Lane, and organised their cataloguing.Burtt was appointed to oversee the transport and safety of the
Domesday Book on its journeys to Southampton between 1861 and 1864 to be photozincographed by Colonel Sir Henry James at the offices of theOrdnance Survey , and assisted James in some aspects of the task.Later in life Burtt became a notable figure in British archaeology, becoming secretary of the
Royal Archaeological Institute in 1862, also contributing to amongst others theGentleman’s Magazine and The Athenaeum.Burtt died as a result of illness at his home in Tulse Hill, London on 17th December 1876. [Edmund Venables, ‘Burtt, Joseph (1818–1876)’, rev. G. H. Martin, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/4145] Joseph Burtt (1818–1876): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4145]References
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