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HOUG/DC/3/2/10 · Item · 31 Aug. 1845
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Balgonie, Fifeshire. - £100 granted to David Booth came from Queen’s Bounty Fund; he has never received a pension; encloses his memorial; he lived in London until December last, about which time her son-in-law petitioned Sir Robert Peel for continuation of existing payment which he believed to be £50; money now exhausted; her husband ill and in danger of starving; will furnish any other details required by Milnes. Enclosed: printed memorial describing work of David Booth, seeking assistance with living expenses [1 f.].

HOUG/DC/3/10/10 · Item · 15 Jun. 1848
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

6 Alfred Place, Blackfriars. - Knows the Howitts, W. S. Landor, Macready and Freiligrath; has no means to support his invalid wife, though has been helped by Disraeli and Peel; gave up tutorship in classics last year to edit a 'new London Weekly Newspaper' which made him ill with over-work and failed; is ineligible for Literary Fund aid as he has not yet published anything independently; poems contributed to Howitt's Journal have been published in America but are delayed here owing to depression of the times; will resume teaching but needs funds; encloses letters [return requested]. Mr Howitt has been ruined by a literary speculation.

Add. MS c/52/114 · Item · [15 Mar. 1847?]
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

WW's 'doings at Cambridge seem to have gone off well in spite of your rebellion against the 4th estate'. Did WW have anything to do with putting Charles Ewan Law in? RJ has 'nothing to say for Peel's conduct and less for that of those who first testified against it and then without any real change of circumstances adopted it ' and subsequently retained office. They are 'just now to help the Whigs the only practically conservative body and on public grounds I really feel it a duty to give said Whigs all the aid I can to press their ground and so as against Law and Fielding I vote unhesitatingly for Goulburn. Johnny has been throwing too much of his equipment overboard in clearing for electioneering action and has raised a strong feeling about his want of rigor - so much for overdone craft - he is in part as resolute as ever'. There are signs that 'a section of his party falling from him almost all are grumbling and a favourite speculation is that the government will fall to pieces - that Peel will yield to necessity and come in calling the more liberal and some of the venal Whigs round him and exclude the Whig aristocracy. This I think I told you the Duke said would happen as soon as Peel went out - and his liberal friends, that are to be, are quite impatient for the event - I doubt his getting a majority by any such move - but if he lives he is the very man to try it. His clique say he has not the least intention of handing them over to the Whigs and staying out himself which is what I expected and hoped would happen and they wait in patient confidence in their administrative merits and his - good people'. As usual RJ has two bills before Parliament which he thinks are now safe.

Papers of Lord Lyndhurst
O./16.38 · Item · 1794-1864
Part of Manuscripts in Wren Class O

Volume with the title page "The Lyndhurst Papers used by Sir Theodore Martin, K.C.B. in writing The Life of Lord Lyndhurst published in 1884." The letters and writings have been tipped in and pasted in with cutouts to show both sides. The letters include those from Queen Victoria (to Lady Lyndhurst), Earl Grey, George Washington (to J. S. Copley senior), George Canning, the Duke of Wellington, T. B. Macaulay, the Earl of Aberdeen, Sir Robert Peel, King William (1835), Prince Albert, Maria Edgeworth, Lord Brougham, the Earl of Derby, and W. E. Gladstone.

Martin, Sir Theodore (1816-1909) Knight, lawyer and biographer
Add. MS c/51/239 · Item · 27 June 1845
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

Cliff Cottage, Lowestoft - With 'the passing of the Corn Bill I suppose the existence of our Conservative Ministry must be drawing rapidly to a close, and I suppose with that the days of the present Parliament and this I suppose will set you at liberty'. RJ should therefore come and visit them in Lowestoft. Robert Peel's popularity is such that not one newspaper (except perhaps the Globe) supports him: 'I suppose we shall have the election soon'.

Add. MS c/51/248 · Item · 13 Dec. 1845
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

Trinity Lodge - What does RJ think of the 'sudden move of Peel's [Robert Peel]. It seems to me like the sinking of the Royal George[:] it was not in the battle'. WW would like RJ to help him find some account of the ecclesiastical constitution (the relation of Church and State) in all the kingdoms of Europe. I must modify that part of my Morality ['The Elements of Morality, Including Polity', 2 vols., 1845]'. WW thinks it likely that some of his suggestions from his book will be carried into effect soon ['Of a Liberal Education in General, and with Particular Reference to the Leading Studies of the University of Cambridge', 1845].

Add. MS c/51/249 · Item · 18 Feb. 1846
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

Trinity Lodge - WW agrees with RJ's gloomy analysis of Robert Peel: 'I think now, the sooner Peel is out the better. He has neither political wisdom nor good faith. A man who placed at the head of party combined for preserving the greatest objects of human and national action, civil and religious institutions, turns round upon them and says I have done that which I know will destroy you, can have no power, nor any feeling of the value of the objects'. Peel 'shews a previously settled determination to which the fear of famine is only a pretext I have little doubt that he has an equally settled determination to destroy the Irish church...I cannot think he can stay in long; and then I suppose we shall have the Whigs. For though he had not broken up the Conservative party enough for this when he resigned before he has done so now. - I am glad you are going to write about the effect of commuted Tithes on prices of corn; for Stanley's views appear to me very mischievous, and likely to work much harm to the clergy; especially if we come to times of scrambling for spoil which seems likely enough. - Dr Arnold's judgement of Peel, that he cared about nothing really but finance, is obviously quite correct'.

Add. MS c/51/250 · Item · 11 June 1846
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

Cliff Cottage, Lowestoft - WW and Cordelia Whewell are settled in their new house [Cliff Cottage]. WW is now printing a second edition of his History ['The History of the Inductive Sciences, from the Earliest to the Present Time', 3 vls., 1837]. He has 'come to the conviction that to alter a book very much in the second edition, spoils it. You may avoid some error, but you lose the vitality and meaning of the work'. Who is going to put out the fire Robert Peel started in the House of Commons?

Letter from William Buckland
Add. MS a/55/35 · Item · 22 July 1842
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Oxford - WB replies to WW's queries in strict confidence: Lord Melbourne appointed Dr [Thomas] Arnold. Sir Robert Peel will appoint his successor [as Regius Professor of History at Oxford University] - [Henry] Hallam would not accept the office if offered to him. [James] Prichard is thinking of the matter, and should write to Sir R P announcing his wishes to possess the vacant office. He should also send copies of all his works and 'state his views in wishing for the Office to be the carrying out the subject of Ethnography; which has occupied so much of his attention'.

HOUG/BO/1/40 · Item · [c 1843?]
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Fryston. - Notes that Fanny 'boast[s]' of her handwriting and writes a paragraph in imitation of it: 'I don't know whether you admire this new style better than my accustomed, but I am keen [?] it is bitter than your ordinary scrawl'. Doesn't expect he will hear from London until Richard appears; Fanny has the 'merit of having drawn him down. I am sure he would not have come her, & faced the Pontefractians in the humour they are in just now''.

The sheep are being sheared today; 'it is the custom always to feed these people'. Mr Waddington will be in Harriet's good books, as he has been voting against Sir Robert Peel. Galway write to him that Lady Ber? is 'so furious against Sir Rob', & so are all the Suffolk farmers, that I suppose it was necessary - indeed Newton told me he would be turned out for the County if he did not. Looks as if there 'has to be fighting in Ireland'.

Add. MS b/49 · Item · Aug. 1874
Part of Additional Manuscripts b

Album containing over 250 letters, notes, documents, unaccompanied envelopes, printed items, and photographic prints carrying the handwriting and/or autographs of sovereigns, prelates, government ministers, peers, authors, and Trinity College masters and professors, with a few unusual items in addition. The material appears to have been largely culled from the correspondence of George Peacock, his wife Frances Peacock, her father William Selwyn, and her second husband William Hepworth Thompson, with a few unrelated items. Most date from the 19th century but there are a few items from the 18th century.

Among those represented are King George III, Charles Babbage, E.W. Benson, the 15th Earl of Derby, the 7th Duke of Devonshire, W. E. Gladstone, Lord Houghton, Charles Kingsley, H. W. Longfellow, Lord Macaulay, Sir Robert Peel, John Ruskin, Adam Sedgwick, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Anthony Trollope, and William Whewell; there are in addition a miniature handwritten Lord's Prayer in a circle no larger than 15mm across, a carte-de-visite photograph souvenir 'balloon letter' from the Paris siege of 1870 with an image of the newspaper 'La Cloche', and a photographic print of Lane's portrait of George Peacock.

Ellis, Mary Viner (1857-1928) great-niece of George Peacock
HOUG/EM/13/51 · Item · 13 [?] Nov. 1843 [postmark]
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

The National Gallery appointment is in the gift of Milnes' 'despotic master, 'orange' Peel, & could you soften his obdurate heart, [Morris] Moore would be pretty sure of the post; Milnes will perceive Moore's suitability if he calls; 'Mere picture dealing sagacity does not go far, & public taste needs direction, & has already too many purveyors to its pampered & gross appetite'.

HOUG/36/51 · Item · 2 Aug. [1844?]
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Harrogate. - Agreeable day with the Stephensons at Serlby: the elder [George] talked not of railways but of Biblical creation, he showed little admiration for Sir Robert Peel and had never heard him express any opinion. Robert Stephenson's opinion of Bawtry railway scheme; his foreign projects; opinion of his former pupil Locke; the York-London line. Threat to the Badsworth Hunt; railway dinner at Serlby; crops; Harrogate business depressed by foreign railways; Mrs Thackray's property.

HOUG/36/52 · Item · [1846, after 9 Feb.?]
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

B[awtr]y. - Proposed Lord Henry Bentinck for the county at his request, despite own illness: speech well reported in the Times. Lincoln's expenses are thought to be paid by Peel, Buccleugh and others. Retford poll prospects. Postscript: the Duke of Portland's oak plantations from Worksop to Mansfield; Retford poll 580 to 15, many did not vote; Granville Vernon on attendance at Henry Gally Knight's funeral.

TRER/22/66 · Item · 26 Apr 1888
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Deanery, Gloucester. - Agrees it is 'pleasant' that their two boys [Arthur and Robert] 'would have been close together' [in the scholarship examination for Harrow?]: hopes it is a 'happy augury of future friendship'. His son has another year at Elstree then hopes to try again next year: he was only twelve last November, and is still 'very weak in translation' though his composition is 'promising'. Trevelyan's son came top of all the scholars in the two translation papers: hopes he will have a 'bright & happy time' at the Grove [Harrow house]. Is going with his sons and two daughters for an expedition in the 'Forest of Ardennes [Arden]', as they call the neighbouring Forest of Dean, starting tomorrow; they should reach Tintern on Saturday. When the time for Trevelyan 's speeches comes, will think about him: quotes the lines from [Addison's] Cato which 'brought down thunders at the speeches in 1835', when 'Peel was... the hero of the ovation!'.

HOUG/DC/3/2/7 · Item · 4 May [1845?]
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Cowes. - Ill health; returning to Pimlico shortly; previous Government allowed [David] Booth £100 but Sir Robert Peel has mistakenly granted only £50. £40 from Literary Fund gives some ease but will soon run out; will Milnes seek early payment of deficit from Peel. Dickens, Blewitt and others secured original sum from Melbourne.