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Letter to G. H. Hardy from G. M Trevelyan
Add. MS a/49/12 · Item · 14 June 1898
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8 Grosvenor Crescent, S.W. - Congratulates him on his exams, notes that given what he told him about the problem paper he expected a greater difference between Hardy and J. H. Jeans.

Add. MS a/727/14 · Item · 1941, 1965
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Trevelyan notes that Geoffrey Winthrop Young told him the first time he saw Trinity as a boy with his father Sir George Young, he was told that his father saw William Whewell jump up the hall steps in cap and gown. Lord Adrian notes that he saw an undergraduate jump the steps in a gown after hall in summer in 1955 or so.

Letters from G. M. Trevelyan to G. S. R. Kitson Clark
Add. MS a/199/23-25 · Item · 8 Feb. 1965
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Three letters, dated 7 Oct. 1940, 2 Feb. 1943, 2 Feb. 1946. The first letter thanks Kitson Clark for his letter on his appointment as Master; notes that "it seems a poor affair writing history books during the war so that I am sure that there is something that people want me to do, when everybody ought to be doing something. In the second letter he congratulates Kitson Clark for his election to something unspecified; in the third letter he thanks Kitson Clark for his kind letter for an honour bestowed upon him by the fellowship.

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Letter from A. E. Housman to G. M. Trevelyan
Add. MS a/556 · Item · 18 Oct. 1929
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Trinity College. - Your ignorance must be shared by the world, except privileged audiences at University College and Eton. I have always refused to let my parody [of Erasmus Darwin, beginning 'See on the cliff fair Adjectiva stand...'] be printed, because it is no rival to the Anti-Jacobin's, which is not merely amusing but subtle and profound. Still, here it is, and may divert you for a minute or two'.

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Letter from Elizabeth Thomas to Dr Robson
Add. MS a/301/57-58 · Item · 23 Feb. 1976
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Letter sharing information about G. M. Trevelyan's last words and her reaction to Veronica Wedgwood's story of falling into a stream while on a walk with Trevelyan. A covering note by Dr Robson describes Sister Thomas' position in the Trevelyan household.

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Letter from T. J. J. See to G. M. Trevelyan
Add. MS a/667 · Item · 3 Oct. 1949
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614 Ohio St., Vallejo, Calif.; addressed to 'Sir George Trevelyan' as Master of Trinity College. - Is sending Trevelyan a copy of his Wave-Theory Book IX, Part I. 'As you are Master of Newton's College, that alone would make this book of deep interest to you: but there is another reason - namely Newton's Letters to Bentley, 1692, which deal with Cosmogony since the time of Plato...' The book will have 'an appeal to the Historian of Modern Nations'. The cover page 'appeals to Master of Trinity, like Dr Whewell, and therefore is worthy of your careful study'. Asks to hear from Trevelyan when he has read it.

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Add. MS a/675 · Item · 1946
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The Master and his wife invite married undergraduates of Trinity to attend an 'at home' in the Lodge from 4 to 6 p.m. on the Saturdays from 10 to 31 May inclusive. 'Babies most welcome on the last two dates.'

(A printed card filled up by hand. Directed at the head to 'Mr. & Mrs. R. P. E. F. Hirsch.' The year is not stated on the card, but is clear from the days referred to.)

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Letter from G. M. Trevelyan to A. W. Baldwin
Add. MS a/687 · Item · 23 Apr. 1948
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Master's Lodge, Trinity College, Cambridge. - The College is pleased to accept the bequest of a silver flagon left by Baldwin's father (Stanley Baldwin); 'His connection with the College and his love for it is one of the things for which we are proud'. Hears that Baldwin may bring the flagon himself; if so, would give them 'great pleasure' to put him up in the College. MS postscript: has just heard from the Senior Bursar that Baldwin is coming down on 5 May.

(Typed, except the signature and the postscript. Note in top left corner in another hand: '29/4. S. Bursar may tell me if I can call on Trevelyan after'.)

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Add. MS a/773/7 · Item · 1948
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MS annotation at top of first sheet: 'note found in copy of GWY's Roof Climber's Guide to Trinity Feb. 1986'. Text records that this copy was given by Young to Prof. Norman Collie, 'scientist, artist and sometime President of the Alpine Club' on its appearance, returning to him after Collie' s death.

Written as a 'May week joke, to appear during the festival days at Cambridge at the end of the summer Term', along the lines of G. O. Trevelyan's Horace at Athens etc. Written 'from memory' when Young was studying at Jena; the MS was sent to his friend A. M. Mackay, who 'drew the illustrations but did not alter the text'. Mackay checked the routes with Young's brother Hilton, who was 'so fascinated by the traverse over the ivy-clad arch into St. John's that he crossed it three times, outward'; arousing suspicion from the porters by returning after midnight via the locked Trinity Gate; subsequent enquiries led to Hilton Young and Mackay being sent down for the Long Vac.

Comments on the history of climbing in college: Edward Bowen 'broke out of the turret stairs' onto Chapel, and Byron 'got on to the Library roof, and decorated the statues', but again Young found he had not climbed up but broken onto a staircase.

Young's own explorations were between 1895 and 1899, with companions including F. M. Levi, Young's 'close friend' Christopher Wordsworth, Cyril Clague, W. W. Greg, [J.] F. Dobson, A. Wedgwood, and G. M. Trevelyan. Further climbs were carried out in 1901 and 1902.

In the autumn of 1901, the Vice-Master W. Aldis Wright determined 'that the College must take cognisance of Roof-climbing, and decide whether or not it should be made illegal'; two junior Fellows, G. M. Trevelyan and Gilbert Walker, were appointed to report on the matter, with power to co-opt Young as a non-resident member of committee; they 'did the climbs and circuits in full daylight, with two of our former enemies, the College Porters, carrying the fire-ropes behind us through the Courts, in procession! As a result of the official Report, the practice was made (officially) illegal'.

Comments on Roof-Climber's Guide to St John's, by 'two "Blues"', including Hartley, and the second edition of the Roof-Climber's Guide to Trinity which appeared in the 1930s