Joan Sinar


Joan Collier Sinar, later Ferguson, was an English archivist who set up the county record offices for Devon and Derbyshire.

Career

Sinar was born in Leigh, Lancashire, the daughter of Frank Sinar, a mining surveyor, and his wife Ruth, Collier. She was educated at Leigh Girls' Grammar School and at Somerville College, Oxford University, where she studied Modern History. At Somerville she was a contemporary and friend of Margaret Roberts. She graduated in 1946, and went on to study for an MA at the University of Manchester, awarded in 1949.
She began work in 1948 as an assistant archivist at Staffordshire Record Office. In 1952 she took up an appointment as Assistant Records Officer for Devon, where she established the Devon Record Office. In 1962 she moved to Derbyshire to become County Archivist there, and to establish the Derbyshire Record Office. She retired in 1988, shortly before the office moved into new premises.

Other activities

Throughout her time in Derbyshire, Sinar was active in the work of the Derbyshire Archaeological Society: she edited the Derbyshire Archaeological Journal from 1970 to 1976, and Derbyshire Miscellany, the society's local history magazine, from 1970 to 1982. In 1977, she became a founding committee member of the Derbyshire Record Society. Following her retirement, she helped establish the Derbyshire Historic Gardens Trust in 1989.
She lectured widely to local groups, and was an honorary lecturer in the University of Sheffield extramural department.
She was also active in the Church of England, and was admitted a lay reader in the Diocese of Derby in 1991. She served for about five years on the council of the Modern Churchpeople's Union.

Honours

Sinar was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 1974.

Personal life

Following her retirement, Sinar entered into a relationship with John Ferguson, a retired nurse and a member of her church congregation. The couple lived successively in mid-Derbyshire, in Wiltshire, in southern Spain, and finally near Newtownards, County Down, where Sinar died in 2015. She was survived by her husband.

Publications