Scope and content
Seventy-five sound recordings of oral history interviews covering the experiences
of the British men and women who lived and worked in India during British rule in
the Indian subcontinent. The interviews were conducted between 1972 and 1974 for the
BBC Radio 4 documentary series 'Plain tales from the Raj' (1974). Interviews were
primarily undertaken by the historian Charles Allen, with additional recordings by
Prakash Mirchandani and Mark Tully. Full typescript transcripts (including inaccuracies
in some cases) exist for the majority, but not all, of the sound recordings.
Interviewees primarily include British civilian and military personnel who resided
in India from the late nineteenth century up until the end of British rule in 1947.
These include military figures such as Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck, Commander-in-Chief
of the Indian Army, other senior officers, and a number of low ranking British soldiers.
There are also interviews with civil servants and administrators who worked at various
levels within the Indian Civil Service (ICS) and Indian Political Service, ranging
from private secretaries to the British Viceroy to ICS District Officers. The business
and commercial sectors are also represented, including interviews with British tea
planters, industrial executives and journalists. The women interviewed include the
wives and daughters of British military and civilian personnel, but also include those
employed in India as nurses and missionaries. The radio series focused on the experiences
of the British in India and, while interviews touch upon the effect of British rule
in the Indian subcontinent on its indigenous inhabitants, the collection includes
only a small number of interviews with Indians and 'Eurasians' [dual-heritage individuals].
Interviews cover a broad range of subjects including: accommodation and living conditions;
daily routine; social life and recreation; health and sanitation; the effects of India
postings on family life; relations between the British, other Europeans, Indians and
'Eurasians' in social and work environments; events such as riots and earthquakes;
the fauna and landscape of India; and political events, including the Raj and nature
of British rule in India, Independence, and the Partition of the Indian subcontinent
in 1947.
Record creators history
'Plain Tales from the Raj' was a radio documentary series, written and produced by
Michael Mason, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1974. The series explored the history
of British rule in the Indian subcontinent though the experiences and daily lives
of those British men and women, who lived and worked in India from the early 1900s
up until Independence in 1947. The broadcast programme of 'Plain Tales from the Raj'
was based upon a series of oral history research interviews conducted with British
military and civilian figures, as well as a smaller number of Indian contributors.
Interviews were primarily conducted from 1972 to 1974 by the historian Charles Allen,
with further interviews undertaken in India by Prakash Mirchandani and Mark Tully.
Source of acquisition
Donated to SOAS Library by the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1981
System of arrangement
Administrative files then alphabetical by surname of interviewee - Geoffrey Allen;
Joan Allen; Claude Auchinleck; Vere Birdwood; Ed Brown; Olaf Caroe; George Carroll;
Thomas Herbert Cashmore; Marjorie Cashmore; Raj Chatterjee; Conrad Corfield; Sylvia
Corfield; John Cotton; Mary Cotton; Dorothy Crichton; F. J. Dillon; Edith Dixon; John
Dring; Deborah Dring; Irene Edwards; Kathleen Griffiths; Percival Griffiths; R. P.
Gupta; E. S. Humphries; Gilbert Laithwaite; Rosamund Lawrence; A. Lee; Lewis P. Le
Marchand; Philip Mason; Christopher Masterman; Lakshmi Mazumdar; Spike Milligan; Penderel
Moon; John Morris; D. K. Palit; Iris Portal; Edwin B. Pratt; Arfon and Rosalie Roberts;
John and Dorothy Rowe; Reginald Savory; Frances Smyth; John Smyth; Ian Melville Stephens;
David and Anne Ellen Symington; Nancy Vernede; Raymond Vernede; Dharma Vira; Kenneth
Warren; Norman C. Watney; H. T. Wickham; George Neville and Mary Wood; B. H. Zaidi.
Conditions governing access
Currently only transcripts of interviews are available to consult at SOAS Library.
Researchers can access copies of the sound recordings at the British Library Listening
& Viewing Service [Reference: C1510] For more details see www.bl.uk/listening or contact
listening@bl.uk / 020 7412 7418.
Restrictions Apply
Conditions governing reproduction
Rights to access and re-use digital objects:
Unknown
Private study only. For publication or broadcast please refer to Archivist
Copyright held by British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
Other finding aids
Published guide: India Office Library and Records & Imperial War Museum, 'Plain Tales
from the Raj: A Catalogue of the BBC Recordings', London: IOLR, 1981 [available in
the SOAS Special Collections Reading Room]. More detailed and comprehensive card index
available at the Imperial War Museum.
Related material
SOAS Library also holds 'British in India Oral Archive Project' collection [ref. OA2].
The 'British in India Oral Archive Project sought to build upon the recordings conducted
for 'Plan Tales from the Raj'. This collection includes 61 additional oral history
interviews with British and indigenous inhabitants of India, covering the pre-Independence
and post-Independence periods, conducted between 1975 and 1976. Includes interviews
with a wide cross-section of people, including key figures such as Earl Mountbatten
and B.K. Nehru, as well as civil servants, army officers, and railway clerks.
SOAS Library also holds 'India: A People Partitioned' collection [ref. OA3]. 205 oral
history interview recordings conducted for the BBC radio series 'India: A People Partitioned',
first broadcast in 1997. The interviews document the social history of the Partition
of India and its effect on people across South Asia. Interviewees include prominent
political and cultural figures in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, but the majority
of the interviews are with 'ordinary' people of Muslim, Sikh and Hindu heritage whose
lives were affected by the events surrounding Independence and the Partition of India
in 1947.
SOAS Library also holds 'Memories of the British in India' collection [ref. OA4].
Twenty-eight oral history interviews with British individuals who lived in India during
British rule, conducted by the British Library; India Office Library & Records division.
Existence and location of copies
Copies of sound recordings are available at British Library Listening & Viewing Service.
Reference: C1510. Copies of transcripts are available at British Library India Office
Library & Records. [ref: MSS EUR T1-MSS EUR T75].
Publication note
'Plain Tales from the Raj', Writ. Michael Mason. Prod. Michael Mason. BBC Radio 4,
1974.
Charles Allen (ed.), 'Plain Tales from the Raj', London: Deutsch, 1975..
Extent
76 oral history interviews and 3 administrative files
Keywords
Subjects:
Accommodation
Agricultural land
Armed forces
Asian peoples
Broadcasting programmes
Colonial administration
Colonial countries
Colonial forces
Cultural conditions
Cultural life
Decolonization
Natural disasters
Ethnic groups
Family
Fauna
Food
Health
Housing
Indians
Life styles
Interviews
Nurses
Politics
Radio programmes
Riots
Sanitation
Tea
Teachers
Oral history
Geographic names:
Middle East
Southern Asia
Europe
India, Asia
Pakistan, Asia
Bangladesh, Asia
Corporate names: British Broadcasting Corporation; Radio 4; Plain Tales from the Raj; radio series
Language of the material
English
Record creator
BBC; British Broadcasting Corporation; Radio 4; Plain Tales from the Raj; radio series
Content provider
School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) Archives, University of London