Preparations for move to Acton
Joseph B Mayor's intellectual interests, Victoria History, RBM tutoring John E B and Joseph B Mayor
To move to Dame's Farm in Acton, difficulties of Robert Mayor in finding a curate, Robert B Mayor's scholarship examination, alterations to Acton vicarage, harvest, Robert Mayor's work harder at Acton
Edward [Bickersteth] gone to Rugby, Mr Dibdin leaving Middlewich, Latin studies, illness of Marianna Cooper
Robert Mayor stronger but still in pain
Visit with John Cooper to the Jessops at Papworth, expectations from the Classical Tripos
Supporting Hope in the election for [ ], advantages of Hope over Selwyn, talks of a position in Norwich: St John's
Information on Robert Cooper Ready and his activities in copying the seals of the Cambridge colleges: [55 Rathbone Place, London]
Proposes to retire as Master of Emmanuel: 12 The Lees, Folkestone
Thanks Mayor for his account of his housekeeper, Munby knows of a woman who reads to her fellows and reads his own Happy Ned at village gatherings, Munby’s "heresy" is the right of women to work as they choose, "Women's Rights" women would not care for his views where hardworking women are concerned, encloses Dorothy, mundanity of the epitaphs in Faithful Servants due to the servants' masters: [Northleigh Rectory, Honiton]
Thanks for revising proofs: The Castle, Durham
Grieved that Sidgwick was not a Christian, thanks for portrait [Well Walk, Hampstead]
[? Forwarded to John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor], inquiry as to Mayor’s Admissions: 13 Burgley Lane, Stamford
Congratulations to CM on his result in the Classical Tripos: Rugby.
The papers consist primarily of writings and notes, with a few printed items and letters documenting Frederick Field's studies at Cambridge as a student in the 1820s and his later work as a biblical scholar. The student notes include essays and notebooks on various subjects, including the Greek dramatic poets, mechanics, and a 'Syllabus of Newton'. Later work includes extensive notes on the books of the Bible in notebooks and in folded fascicles, notes on Chrysostom's Homilies, holograph manuscripts of his 'Origenis Hexaplorum quae supersunt' and 'Otium Norvicensi' part 3, which is also represented by printed sheets with manuscript annotations. Amongst the many other miscellaneous items are indexing slips and a notebook containing a list of subscribers to a unidentified volume.
Sin títuloThe archive comprises Jebb's 'Servanda': scrapbooks of material 'to be kept'. Press clippings, correspondence, printed parliamentary and academic material, ephemera and so on are pasted in to numbered pages, sometimes with MS annotations by Jebb; loose material, such as correspondence, is interleaved. The first volumes are disbound and have been weeded, with remaining pages preserved in paper wrappings within 'transfer cases'.
Transfer case 1 contains papers from 'Servanda' scrapbooks I (Jul 1876-Nov 1879, with loose letter from 1874), II (Jan 1880–Nov 1881) and III (Nov 1881-Apr 1883); separate gatherings in paper covers also seem to have come from this volume: Nov 1881, ‘Mahuffy v R.C.J. (scant contents)’, ‘R.C.J.’s Life of Bentley’, 1882; ‘Controversy with Sayce, 1881-1882’; Transfer case 2 contains papers from 'Servanda' scrapbooks IV (Nov 1883-Jun 1884) and V; Transfer case 3 contains much loose material and scrapbook pages, presumably from 'Servanda' VI and VII, as well as papers from 'Servanda' VIII (1889).
The intact 'Servanda' volumes cover the following dates: IX, Mar 1890-Oct 1891; X, Oct 1891-Oct 1893; XI, Oct 1893-Aug 1894; XIA, 1894-Jun 1896; XII, Sept 1894-Nov 1896; XIII, Nov 1896-Jul 1898; XIV, Jul 1898-Jul 1899; XV, Jul 1899-May 1900; XVI, Jun 1900-Mar 1902; XVII, Mar 1902-Jul 1903.
There are also two bound volumes both labelled 'Newspaper Cuttings', one containing similar material to that contained in the 'Servanda' scrapbooks from 1903-1905, the other containing press cuttings relating to Jebb's death, letters regarding this mainly to Lady Jebb, material relating to Jebb's funeral service, and reviews of his edition of Bacchylides (1905-1906).
Sin títuloNos. 1, 3, 4, 7, 12, 16, 18, 23-26.
Layton's election address as Liberal candidate for London University with addresses of E. Graham Little and A. F. Pollard. 1924-1928.
Including an account of Layton's editorship of The Economist by Albert Chapman.