We are thrilled to share the news Eleanor Bell has been awarded a Catalyst Award grant by the AHRC to deliver the Archie Hind Centenary Project!
This grant will be supporting the cataloguing, digitisation, research into, and engagement with the Archie Hind papers as well as new oral history interviews with those who knew Archie. Detailed cataloguing and digitisation will open up this collection that was previously thought lost. Eleanor will study the papers and discover more about Archie Hind’s creative process, uncover his unpublished writings, and trace his wider literary and social networks. This ground-breaking project will add new knowledge to the field of Scottish Literature and make the collection available for generations of researchers to come.
We are very excited to begin the project, with Eleanor, in 2026. The activities will lead us into the centenary of Archie Hind’s birth in 2028 where the outcomes can all be celebrated in style.
Eleanor reflected:
‘I’m delighted to have received this AHRC Catalyst funding and very much look forward to collaborating with Archives & Special Collections over the next few years in order to fully explore and unlock the potential of the Archie Hind Papers.’
Congratulations to Eleanor on securing one of the most prestigious and competitive funding awards in the in the UK!
Find out more about the Archie Hind Centenary project:
[image credits: Eleanor Bell and the collection]


The latest collection to join our unique corpus of asbestos-related materials is the Michael Brazier papers on asbestos and the asbestos industry.
Our asbestos collections provide first-hand evidence of the fight to gain scientific acceptance of the lethal effects of exposure to asbestos, the international campaigns to ban the substance, and efforts to get compensation for the victims of asbestos-related disease.
These papers, gifted to the University by the son of Michael Brazier this year, are fascinating in that they document the asbestos debate from the point of view of an asbestos company.
Michael Brazier was the grandson of Albert Alfred Brazier, the founder of A.A. Brazier & Co. This company was started in the 1920s as a UK distribution arm of the Johnsons Asbestos Company, which was based in Thetford Mines, Quebec. Michael started in the late 1940s learning the asbestos trade, became a company director and then eventually took over as managing director from his father, Wilfred Sydney Brazier.
Michael was passionate in his interest in all the aspects of the asbestos debate, and he was part of the industry delegation to the parliamentary Advisory Committee on Asbestos in 1976-77. Over decades, he carefully collected reports, documents, and publications relating to the asbestos health debate, from the perspective of the asbestos industry. He was particularly interested in whether all forms of asbestos were as dangerous to health.
A collection-level description is available on our online catalogue, including the option to download a detailed box-list for the collection.
Further information
(Image credit: Letterhead from A.A. Brazier, Acc 2065: Box 6)