45 Hans Place, S.W.1. - Has enjoyed reading the speech on receiving the freedom of Glasgow; states his belief that science should be studied as well; would enjoy more detail of his later career.
Crindau, Dumfries, N.B. - Has received her letter and sympathises with the need for rooms for Sir James' work, has written to Sir William Bragg to ask about rooms in the Davy Faraday Laboratory.
28: enclosure of letter from Crichton Browne's uncle J. H. Balfour
Crindau, Dumfries - Thanks them for the birthday greetings
On embossed House of Commons notepaper. - Glad to find that Houghton supports Dr Crichton-Browne's claim for recognition.
Crindau, Dumfries, N.B. - Congratulates Frazer.
On embossed notepaper for West Riding Asylum, Wakefield. - His father [William A. F. Browne] has become blind and has had to resign as a Commissioner in Lunacy; anxious to obtain a pension for him; asks Houghton if he will present the case to the Lords of the Treasury.
On embossed notepaper, West Riding Asylum, Wakefield. - Encloses the sketch by [Richard] Dadd, also encloses a letter from Dr [William] Orange, a letter from Carr who murdered a girl near Gateshead in 1865 [the preceding enclosures are all now missing] and a letter from Hughes who killed Dr Meyer in the Asylum Chapel. End of letter missing.
Enclosed, John Hughes 'To the Council of Supervision': 'New Moon' [Broadmoor?]. - doctors, judges and the Royal Family are madder than himself; describes murder of Dr Meyer; 'he was Insane, like the spooney Mad Parson also, and not fit to Judge my stout heart & sound mind'; incarceration here; fellow inmates include a mad American doctor and 'Dalmas, the Frenchman... whose life the Government spared, on condition, that, he revealed a Scientific secret, which he kept possession of'; Hughes has own secret method of ensuring safety in coalmines but those in power are too busy pursuing their own interests to care; personal campaign against insane establisment; religious justification; will sell secret; concludes 'I remain a Prisoner still at a German bred Lunatic's pleasure'.
Enclosed, 'John Petrie alias Hughes... To the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Read & Understand'. Describes detention in 1859 'for destroying a Lunatic King's Picture in a Place of Worship'; rails against the establishment and the monarchy.
7, Cumberland Terrace, Regents Park, N. W.