Bagnold was educated at Malvern College and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, and was commissioned in the Royal Engineers with the rank of 2nd Lieutenant in 1915. After First World War service he returned to England in 1919 to study at Gonville and Caius College for the Cambridge Engineering Tripos, resuming his army career in 1921. A posting in Egypt, 1926-1928, instilled in him a fascination with desert exploration. He went on expeditions with fellow officers into Sinai, Transjordan and the Libyan Desert and returned to North Africa to lead expeditions in 1929, 1930 and 1932. In 1934 Bagnold received the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society and in 1935 recounted his desert expeditions in
The papers document Bagnold's career as a desert explorer, soldier and scientist. There is good documentation of Bagnold's early explorations in the Middle East and North Africa, 1926-1932. Scientific research is less well documented; most of the surviving material dates from after the Second World War and the later research on random distributions is the best represented. The Long Range Desert Group papers were assembled by Bagnold for a projected history of the Group and include original instructions for and reports of many operations and draft chapters of a 'war diary and narrative'. There are many maps relating to First World War service, desert exploration and the LRDG. The papers also include Bagnold's autobiography (posthumously published by the University of Arizona Press), childhood letters to his family from school and, of special interest, a 1928 letter to Bagnold from T.E. Lawrence ('Lawrence of Arabia').
By section as follows: Biographical, Expeditions and research, Long Range Desert Group, Maps, Photographs. Index of correspondents.
Received for cataloguing in 1991-1992 by the National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists from Mr S.C. Bagnold, son. Deposited in Churchill Archives Centre in 1992.
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Printed catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Brigadier Ralph Alger Bagnold: NCUACS catalogue no. 35/3/92, 61pp. Copies available from NCUACS, University of Bath.
Bagnold's family retain a First World War narrative and photograph albums and the papers of Bagnold's grandfather Major General Michael Edward Bagnold (1787-1857), his great uncle Captain Thomas Maxwell Bagnold RN (1780-1848) and his father Colonel Arthur Henry Bagnold (1854-1943).
Bagnold's scientific correspondence with L.B. Leopold forms part of the Leopold papers in the American Philosophical Society Library, Philadelphia.
Bagnold's observations of positions, routes, heights in Egypt, 1929 are in the Archives of the Royal Geographical Society, London. Observations file no.123.