…those words in THAT voice are part of the soundtrack of my life. Watching the television news from the 1980s through to the 2000s, I would see Kate Adie reporting from around the world, her presence underlining the seriousness of a situation and her words helping to make sense of it. Now I am engaging with Kate Adie’s work afresh, as I begin the process of cataloguing her archive, which is held in her hometown at the University of Sunderland.
If you haven’t encountered her work, Kate Adie is a British journalist who was the Chief News Correspondent of BBC TV news from 1989 to 2003. She is particularly known for her reports from disasters and conflicts, including the 1980 Iranian Embassy siege and the Tiananmen Square student protests in 1989, as well as wars in the Gulf and the former Yugoslavia. Her reputation for reporting from areas of conflict also permeated broader public consciousness, evidenced in the collection by a number of newspaper cartoons riffing on the idea that having Kate Adie turn up was a signal that a situation was a serious one.
The first thing that struck me about the Kate Adie collection is its breadth. There are over 180 boxes of analogue and digital recordings, photographs, correspondence, souvenirs, objects, and news cuttings; all with a global span, from China to Libya, India to Bosnia, and Sunderland, always back to Sunderland. Through the records of one person’s career, we observe not only worldwide events, but the changing role of women in journalism and the evolution of news coverage, from a radio car in Durham to a mobile satellite dish delivering live links in a 24/7 news cycle.
This isn’t a neat institutional archive with ordered series, but a personal collection that reflects a life being lived: a ticket for a Sunderland football game might sit alongside a BBC assignment, notes for a speech at a charity event with the proceedings of a conference on journalism in conflict. That’s part of the joy of this particular archive, but also a professional challenge as I work to make it navigable by others.
The starting point, and my main focus for the year ahead, is to produce a catalogue that makes the collection accessible. It’s a piece of work made possible through Archives Revealed, a partnership funding programme between The National Archives, the Pilgrim Trust and the Wolfson Foundation to ensure that significant archive collections, representing the lives and perspectives of all people across the UK, are made accessible to the public for research and enjoyment. Two months into the project and I can already see that there is a wealth of material that will be of interest to students and staff here in the University, as well as to local communities in Sunderland, and to groups, such as veterans’ associations, further afield.
We’re also planning digital packages of material that support engagement with the richness of the collection. Drawing upon Kate Adie’s reporting from Libya, for example, we have the opportunity to draw together recordings of her news reports and the handwritten notes on which they were based, together with souvenirs and artefacts collected during her time on assignment. We have the contemporary reaction to that reporting from the Government, newspapers and public, as well as Kate Adie’s later reflections in speeches and public lectures on the experience of reporting conflict, ideas of impartiality, and the practice of journalism.
I am really excited about the challenge ahead. Do check back over the coming months for updates on the progress of the project and as I share a few of my personal highlights. If you are interested in knowing more about the Kate Adie collection or would like to discuss a future visit, please contact us: specialcollections@sunderland.ac.uk.