Catalogue description Department of Trade and Industry: Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel (EPCAP) Secretariat; Database of Seized Property

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Details of NK 1
Reference: NK 1
Title: Department of Trade and Industry: Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel (EPCAP) Secretariat; Database of Seized Property
Description:

The Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel (EPCAP) dataset is a resource of compiled information. It contains the names and addresses of people who had their assets seized by the UK Government during the Second World War. The dataset is also a record of the value of assets that were later released, and the names of those they were released to. The summary details of confiscated assets were compiled from records held at The National Archives relating to property in the United Kingdom seized between 1939 and 1945 from commercial organisations and individuals resident in countries with which the United Kingdom was at war.

The datasets in this series are available to download. Links to individual datasets can be found at piece level.

Date: 1999-2008
Arrangement:

Operating system: Microsoft Windows 98.

Application software: Developed in Microsoft Access version 2.0 in March 1998, by Cap Gemini UK plc.

User interface: The original database had a query facility. The database was also able to produce a number of reports. Data from the database was made available to the public via the DTI's Enemy Property website, http://www.enemyproperty.gov.uk.

Logical structure and schema: The database as transferred comprises three tables. The main table contains the name and personal details of the property owner, and detail of the assets in question. According to the original system documentation, this table was indexed by BatchNumber, Country, NameofOwner and TWEReference No. The second table was a lookup table and contained names of countries. The third table is a systems table containing only one record.

How data was originally captured and validated: The dataset is based on data found in the Trading With the Enemy (TWE) record series held at The National Archives. The Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel undertook a series of systematic loans to process data from this record series. Selected details from these raw data were keyed into the database by external data entry staff. It is not known how the data was validated.

Constraints on the reliability of the data: Many of the original individual TWE case files have been destroyed, and the Panel found from its research that it was not obvious which of the assets had been returned. For these reasons the database cannot be seen as a comprehensive or complete record of confiscated assets, although it is a thorough account of those assets which were returned.

Related material:

The National Archives holds 33 volumes of the Trading with the Enemy Branch of the Treasury and the Board of Trade, containing a history of the administration of enemy property during and after the Second World War, in Series BT 216. Also related are the large series of Account cards in Series BT 273, and the handwritten register Series BT 271. These records bear the original department file reference TWE.

Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Former reference in The National Archives: CRDA/42
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator:

Department of Trade and Industry, Finance and Resource Management Division, 1985-2007

Physical description: 3 datasets and documentation
Restrictions on use: Data from the Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel Database of Seized Property and its related dataset documentation are subject to Crown Copyright; copies may be made for private study and research purposes only.
Access conditions: Open
Immediate source of acquisition:

In 2010 the United Kingdom National Digital Archive of Datasets

Custodial history: The Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel dataset was originally transferred in 2005. The United Kingdom National Digital Archive of Datasets (NDAD) then held the dataset until 2010 when it was transferred to The National Archives (TNA).
Accumulation dates: 1999-2001
Selection and destruction information: The database, which details the research undertaken and the decisions made by the Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel Secretariat, was selected in accordance with sections 2.2.1.1 (management of public resources by the core executive) and 2.2.2 (interaction of the state with its citizens) of the PRO's Acquisition Policy.
Accruals: No further accruals are expected.
Publication note:

Data from the database itself was published, in the sense that it was made available to the public via the DTI's Enemy Property website (http://www.enemyproperty.gov.uk/). Due to the way data was originally entered into the system, the contents of the online version and the dataset as transferred to NDAD do not match; for further information on this, see the dataset catalogues.

Unpublished finding aids:

Extent of documentation: 11 electronic documents; 6 documents, Dates of creation of documentation: 1998-2005

Administrative / biographical background:

Under wartime legislation, the UK Government confiscated assets in British territory owned by residents of enemy countries. This took under the provisions of the Trading with the Enemy Act 1939 (c89), an Act intended to prohibit commercial or financial dealings with the enemy, and to preserve enemy assets in the UK in order to prevent the enemy from benefiting from them. The enemy countries included Nazi Germany and its allies, as well as countries under Nazi occupation. After the war, the assets of the occupied countries were released from British Government control, but the assets of the 'belligerent' countries were distributed to British creditors whose assets had been confiscated by the enemy countries. An exception was made for victims of Nazi persecution and soon after the war; Nazi victims or their heirs could claim the return of their assets.

In Spring 1997, following public concern that there were still many assets belonging to victims that had not been returned, the British Government conducted research into the history of the administration of Enemy Property. Searches were made in the surviving records in the TWE (Trading With the Enemy) series, originally created by the Treasury and the Board of Trade. One result of this research was the compilation of a database of the assets seized from residents of belligerent enemy countries.

The UK Government saw the situation as an injustice that had to be addressed and, in June 1998, commissioned Lord Archer of Sandwell to advise on the design of a suitable compensation scheme. In December 1998, the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry announced the compensation scheme administered by an independent Enemy Property Compensation Advisory Panel. Shortly after its formation, this Panel was known as the Enemy Property Claims Assessment Panel (EPCAP).

EPCAP launched the Enemy Property Payments Scheme in April 1999 under the Chairmanship of Lord Archer of Sandwell, sitting with two teams of assessors who were expert in finance and ethnic minority issues. The initial period for submission of claims ended on 30th September 1999. Each claim was then considered by EPCAP. Claims could be made in respect of any property in the UK confiscated by Her Majesty's Government under British legislation on enemy property or trading with the enemy if not already returned, and compensation not already been paid to cover its full value. The Government undertook to pay compensation on the basis of wartime values increased by the change in the retail prices index. Compensation was to be paid to victims of Nazi persecution who owned such property when it was confiscated, and to others who could demonstrate that they were likely to have been the beneficial owner of such property if it had not been confiscated, if they or the original owner suffered Nazi persecution.

On 8th July 2004, the Minister Patricia Hewitt announced the closure of the Enemy Property Payment Scheme. At that time, the Panel reported that 220,000 separate items were confiscated and either sold or returned to the original owners. They had received a total of 1,121 claims, of which 377 were successful. Payments made under the Scheme amounted to £16.2 million. There remained but 22 cases outstanding; and only one item (a gilt bracelet and diamond tie-pin) unclaimed. Following continued interest in the scheme it became clear that its formal closure would have to be deferred and claims will still be considered in exceptional circumstances.

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