After the war, Mingay worked for the Kent Education Department and studied part-time at
Chatham Technical College. In 1949, he entered the
University of Nottingham and was regarded by Professor
J. D. Chambers as a hard-working and talented student. Chambers, who became Mingay's mentor, encouraged him to study
agrarian history and his BA dissertation was an examination of the estates of the
Duke of Kingston. He was awarded a BA first class degree in 1952 and the external examiner,
H. J. Habakkuk, said Mingay's dissertation could have earned him a B.Litt. at
Oxford University. Mingay was appointed Chair of Agrarian History at the
University of Kent in 1968. He edited the
Agricultural History Review from part 2 of 1972 to part 2 of 1983. He also edited the sixth volume of
The Agrarian History of England and Wales, which was published in 1989. ==Works==