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Find out how The National Archives handles personal information.
The National Archives is a non-ministerial government department, and the official archive and publisher for the UK Government, and for England and Wales. We are the guardians of over 1,000 years of iconic national documents.
We make our archives and our building available to the widest possible audience. To do this we need to acquire and process some personal information from you.
This privacy notice tells you what to expect when The National Archives collects personal information. This can be anything that identifies a living individual. It applies to information we collect about people who engage with us through:
Find more information on cookies, information we collect online, and user participation.
If you are applying for a job with us, please see the privacy notice for civil service job applicants on the Civil Service Jobs website.
A very small percentage of government records containing personal information are selected for permanent preservation in our collection. They are made available in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act 2000, as amended by the Data Protection Act 2018. This includes records created by The National Archives itself.
In order to collect, create or otherwise process your personal information for all these activities, The National Archives (as data controller) must have a legal basis for doing so under data protection legislation.
Under the direction of the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, the Keeper of Public Records (the Chief Executive of The National Archives) has official authority in the form of a statutory obligation under the Public Records Act 1958 to process personal information, in order to secure and to make accessible The National Archives’ records of the nation’s memory, and to deliver its services as widely as possible.
Depending on the circumstances, we may also process your personal information because you, or your legal representative, have given us your consent (which you can withdraw at any time). By giving us your consent you are agreeing to The National Archives processing your information in accordance with this privacy notice.
Consent is not the only legal basis under which we can acquire and process your personal information. We do not require your consent to process your personal information if
give you access via a reader’s ticket to original archival documents in our reading rooms and to safeguard the integrity of our collection
your name and address your reader’s ticket number a record of the documents you have ordered
This is necessary for the exercise of our official authority by regulating the conditions under which members of the public may inspect public and other records.
send you marketing information we think you might find useful or which you have requested from us and to occasionally inform you of new services we will be providing or we consider will be of interest to you
your contact details your marketing preferences
Consent freely given by you when opting in to receive our regular email updates or other communications from us.
You may withdraw your consent at any time by clicking on ‘unsubscribe’ in the emails that we send, or by contacting us directly at the address below.
conduct research and data analysis and develop statistics to better understand the use made of our building, our car park, and our archival collection, including event attendance and trends
records of your attendance at any events hosted by us, singly or jointly with another organisation
This is necessary to perform our legitimate interest with you to ensure that our audience is targeted and relevant.
Any research undertaken will done in accordance with safeguards in data protection legislation.
promote The National Archives, our courses and events, and for inclusion in educational/training material
images in video and/or photographic form
Where you (including our staff) have given us your explicit consent to do so.
administer your attendance at any workshops, programmes or events you sign up to
contact details transaction and payment information (we do not generally hold bank account or credit card details)
This is necessary under your contract with us to enable us to register you and properly manage and administer your attendance.
If you are signing up via a separate organisation, you will also have a contract with them.
administer your use of our car park
Vehicle Registration Mark (VRM) as captured by Automated Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) camera transaction and payment information (we do not hold bank account or credit card details)
This is necessary under your contract with us to enable us to collect the correct charge for your use of our car park.
arrange and manage any contracts for the provision of any services or products: for example, downloading records from Discovery, purchases from our shop.
contact details transaction and payment information records of your interactions with us
This is necessary to enable us to properly administer and perform any contract for the provision of any services and products you have purchased from us.
manage the security of our building
CCTV footage and any other records of your presence and conduct on our premises
This is necessary for the exercise of our official authority by regulating the conditions under which members of the public may use the facilities of the Public Record Office.
manage the security of our IT systems
records of your usage of our IT systems and online portals
This is necessary for the exercise of our official authority by regulating the conditions under which members of the public may use the facilities of the Public Record Office.
manage your interactions with our website or our public WI-FI
email address; username
This is necessary for the exercise of our official authority to regulate the conditions under which members of the public may use the facilities of the Public Record Office.
comply with health and safety requirements
records of attendance CCTV footage other information obtained through electronic means such as swipe card records, medical information about your health
We have a legal obligation to provide you and everyone who visits or works at our premises with a safe environment.
use information about your physical or mental health (including any injuries) or disability status to ensure your health and safety when partaking in any of our events or activities
health and medical information, provided by you when signing up for events and activities
You have consented to provide us with this information, for your health and safety.
answer your queries or complaints
contact details records of your interactions with us
We have a legitimate interest to provide complaint handling services to you, and official authority to process your requests under the Data Protection and Freedom of Information Acts.
gather evidence for possible grievance or disciplinary hearings
all the personal information we collect
We have a legitimate interest in doing so to provide a safe and fair environment for all staff and members of the public, and to ensure the effective management of any disciplinary hearings, appeals and adjudications.
investigate possible fraudulent use of public money
payroll data including details of salary, bank account and National Insurance Number
We have a legitimate interest in identifying and investigating potentially fraudulent claims and payments.
Third parties will not have access to your personal information unless the law allows them to do so.
Data processors are third parties who provide elements of our services for us. We have contracts in place with our data processors. This means that they cannot do anything with your personal information unless we have instructed them to do it. They will hold it securely and retain it for the period we instruct.
We sometimes need to share your information with third parties. We will do this securely and with a data sharing agreement in place. As a government department, we have a duty to abide by the terms of His Majesty’s Government’s Security Policy Framework, and to cooperate with any law-enforcement bodies, including the police, who have a requirement to see what personal information we may have about you.
We do not sell your information to any other organisations.
We sometimes buy in lists of information from other organisations. We do this as part of our remit to make our services available to as wide an audience as possible. If we have acquired your information from a third party we will have ensured that the organisation obtained your freely-given consent for this.
If we invite you to an event or to take part in a survey, we may use a separate organisation to administer the booking or the survey. You will be giving your information directly to them and they will process it, and pass the necessary details to us. We recommend that you read their Privacy Notice.
We keep your personal information for no longer than is necessary to fulfil the purposes for which it was collected, as described above or in another privacy notice provided to you, taking into account the requirements from the following criteria:
If you unsubscribe from our newsletter, we will keep a record of the fact that you have unsubscribed.
If you would like further information about our information retention practices, please contact us.
Data protection legislation gives you various rights over your information. These may include (as relevant) the right to:
Please see the details in the contact us section below if you wish to exercise any rights. We endeavour to acknowledge requests within three working days and to supply the appropriate response and information promptly and within the relevant statutory timescale (usually one month).
All EU countries, including the UK, process personal information according to the General Data Protection regulations, which requires them to have a legal basis for processing it, and gives you rights over your information. Countries outside the EU, although they may have their own Data Protection legislation, will not be subject to the same EU regulations.
Accordingly, we exercise particular care if we need to send your information outside the EU. This ranges from arranging secure methods of transferring it to ensuring that we have a robust contract in place with any third party. If necessary we may send specialist IT staff abroad to inspect and approve the conditions under which your information would be processed.
We comply with the government’s current policy for off-shoring (processing outside the UK).
We will take all practical steps to make sure your personal information is not sent to a country that is not seen as ‘safe’ either by the UK or EU governments.
If you are accessing our services from outside the EU then any information you send or receive from us will, of necessity, be transferred via a non-EU country.
The National Archives takes the technical and organisational security of all the information it holds very seriously. All our staff receive training in how to handle personal data when they join us and have to take an annual refresher course.
We protect your information using varying levels of encryption. We also make sure that any third parties with which we deal have an obligation to keep all personal information they process on our behalf secure.
The National Archives has a statutory obligation to permanently preserve the archives of the government and certain other public and private historic records, as detailed in our public catalogue, and to make them available for use.
These are documents (including files, maps, pictures, posters, films and sound recordings in analogue and digital form) that have been produced by central offices of the state and the law courts dating back to medieval times.
The National Archives provides advice and guidance to transferring government departments and agencies as to whether these documents are worthy of archival preservation – that is, whether they have lasting value for the research and understanding of history and the present, or for the protection of legitimate interests of citizens or for purposes of legislation, administration and jurisdiction.
We guarantee access to this archival material while observing the protection of private or public interests. In principle, every person has the right to access the documents in The National Archives upon request. We provide information about the archive material on our Discovery research platform.
Some of the more recent archives we hold contain information about living people: personal information that has been acquired by the organisations – usually government departments that have transferred their records to The National Archives. Your information will be handled according to the safeguards in data protection legislation for archiving in the public interest. This means that we apply the same standards to handling this information, except that some of your rights have a limited application – see the Your rights over your personal information section above. The National Archives has co-produced detailed guidance about data protection legislation as applied to archives in the UK.
We allow third party publishers to digitise some of our records for online use. We and our publishers make every effort, taking into account the content and condition of the material, to avoid putting personal information online that may cause damage or distress to living individuals. As data processors, our publishers must comply with data protection legislation; in particular, they have a duty to assist you in exercising your rights over your personal information.
We, or our publishers, may use automated profiling to calculate when personal information that is closed for a person’s lifetime can be made open. To do this we assume a lifespan of 100 years. This may result in information on people who are aged over 100 being made public. If this is the case, please contact The National Archives and we will remove your information from public access.
People who use information about living people from the archives have a duty, under data protection legislation, not to use that information in a way which may cause distress or damage to them. You should also be aware that, just because information is in the public domain, it does not necessarily make it lawful for you to make it public. Personal information is not covered by the Open Government Licence and may also be subject to copyright.
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We welcome comments or queries about this privacy notice and our information handling practices.
If you wish to provide comments, update any of your preferences or exercise any of your rights you can use our form. We will respond to you within ten days of receiving your enquiry. Explore information on our complaints procedure.
For independent advice about data protection, privacy and data-sharing issues you can contact the Information Commissioner.
View The National Archives' Data protection policy statement.