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Richard III Society was founded during the summer of 1924 by a Liverpool
surgeon, Saxon Barton, and a small group of friends. They were all
enthusiastic amateur historians with a particular interest in the
life and times of Richard III. Their motivation was a belief that
history had not dealt justly with the King's posthumous reputation
and they wanted to encourage and promote a more balanced view. In
Saxon Barton's own words "in my view historical belief must be
founded on facts where possible and on honest conviction". They
called themselves "The Fellowship of the White Boar" and
remained a relatively small and informal grouping. Their activities
inevitably declined with the onset of the Second World War.
The 1950s saw a number of key events which raised the level of interest
in the controversies surrounding Richard III. Of most significance
was the publication in 1951 of Josephine Tey's classic crime detective
novel The Daughter of Time. This brought the controversy to the attention
of a wide reading public. The mid 1950s saw the release of Lawrence
Olivier's film of Shakespeare's Richard III and the publication of
Paul Murray Kendall's sympathetic biography of the king.
All these events contributed to a growth of potential members for
an organisation whose primary focus was Richard III. |

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individual, introduced to the subject by reading Tey's novel was Isolde
Wigram. She discovered the existence of the Fellowship and tracked
down Saxon Barton. He appointed her secretary and she became the key
driving force in re-activating the Fellowship to meet the new challenges. At a meeting
in London in 1956 the Fellowship was formally reconstituted on a wider
membership basis. Saxon Barton died in 1957, but the Fellowship lived
on and in 1959 was renamed The "Richard III Society".
During the next four decades the Society grew at a steady rate,
helped by events such as the 1973 National Portrait Gallery exhibition
"The Age of Richard III" and the 1983 to 1985 quincentenary
celebrations of Richard III's reign . As membership increased so
did the range of the Society's activities, in particular its contribution
to historical research. In 1980 the Society received the honour
of Royal Patronage when HRH The Duke of Gloucester agreed to become
its patron.
Today the Society is
an international organisation with a membership approaching 3,500.
It has a formidable range of achievements to its name and its contribution
to 15th century scholarship is widely recognised. A comprehensive
review of these achievements is to be found on this website.
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