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ONSL/3/19 · File · May 1915- Oct 1916
Part of Papers of Huia Onslow

Letters, drafts, and copy-letters, largely relating to Huia Onslow's role as Secretary of the Soldiers and Sailor's Families Association, London North West District, particularly the numerous donations to the Anaesthetics Emergency Fund from New Zealand. Correspondents include: Elizabeth A. Sharp, the other Secretary of the Fund: George Frederick Copus of the New Zealand High Commission: William Edward Collins, doctor, on board the New Zealand Hospital Ship 'Maheno' (one letter encloses a printed diet table for a hospital ship or carrier); Duncan Flockhart & Co., Manufacturing Chemists.

O./11.30 · Item · 1713-1845 [?]
Part of Manuscripts in Wren Class O

Two copies of printed map, 'Plan of the Town and Fortification of Montreal or Ville Marie in Canada' [London 1759?] used as endpapers at front and back. List of 'Books Lent to Mr Tempest', dated 7 Jan. 1816, on verso of front flyleaf. List of 'Books Lent to Mr Dardis 1804' on verso of following folio.

Alphabetical index of recipes at front of volume. f. 1 headed 'A Collection of Medicinal Receipts. 1713'; another heading, 'S. N. October the 2d 1713 Anno Domini' is on f. 79. The recipes are mostly in the same [18th century] hand, but additional recipes in at least three other hands have been added (on the verso of folios, or on additional sheets bound in, pasted in or loose). One of these, on f. 149v., is headed 'Extract from the Bristol Gazette, November 3rd 1825', showing that the book was used and added to for over 100 years.

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/160 · Item · 15 Mar. 1849
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Thanks Whewell for his present. 'I am persuaded that you will be gratified to hear - that your volumes have been my constant companions'. Turner grew up on such compositions: 'The whole of the contents of your smaller volume are, with very few exceptions indeed, familiar to me in the original, and sufficiently so to enable me to appreciate the fidelity of the versions. Here too the notes give quite additional value ['Verse Translations from the German, including Lenore, Schiller's Song of the Bell', 1847]. In the larger volume I am less at home; its principal piece, Goethe's Herman and Dorothea, I never read before' [Whewell, 'Goethe's Herman and Dorothea', Fraser's Magazine, 1850].

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/159 · Item · 19 Jan. 1837
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Turner is sorry they could not meet when Whewell was in Norwich. If Whewell needs any help in writing the history of botany, he would be very willing to help.

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/158 · Item · 22 Feb. 1836
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Thanks Whewell for his pamphlet on the Newton and Flamsteed controversy ['Newton and Flamsteed: Remarks on an Article in Number 109 of the Quarterly Review', 1836]: 'I am not sure that I do not wish that you had rather been content to let the whole matter rest, and not combat a review, which is in reality very much like combatting the air, and where our opponent must always be on unfair terms, inasmuch as the poison, if such be, will penetrate in numberless directions when the antidote cannot follow it. The fact appears to be, that Newton, great as he was, was not exempt from the common set of humanity; that Mr Baily's [Francis Baily] publication necessarily brought forth the weakness of his character in a strong light'.

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/157 · Item · 18 Dec. 1835
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Adam Sedgwick informed Turner that Whewell would be coming up to visit, 'and that I might then look to see both of you in Yarmouth'. He went to a couple of Sedgwick's lectures: 'The fulness of his mind, the ardour of his spirit, the comprehensiveness of his views, depth of his knowledge, and the fluency of his diction are all wonderful'. Turner is pleased Whewell is working on something 'worthy of your mind, your knowledge and your name' ['The History of the Inductive Sciences, from the Earliest to the Present Time', 3 vols., 1837].

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/156 · Item · 9 May 1835
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Turner is pleased to say that Whewell's portrait has arrived safely at Charlotte Jones's [wife of Richard Jones]. He thanks Whewell for the present of his 'Bridgewater Treatise I had read before' ['Astronomy and General Physics Considered with Reference to Natural Theology', 2nd edition 1834] and the 'other book' ['Architectural Notes on German Churches', new edition, 1835].

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/155 · Item · 5 Sept. 1834
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Whewell's company gave a great deal of pleasure to him, his wife and his daughter. Whewell should return from Edinburgh via Yarmouth - 'it is but little out of your way: the Newark coach will carry you direct to Norwich'. Turner will not let Whewell leave Yarmouth this time 'without seeing all the most curious specimens of architectural antiquity'.

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/154 · Item · 28 July 1834
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Turner had hoped Whewell would return to Yarmouth on his way to the North. Further to Francis Baily's publication ['An Account of the Rev. John Flamsteed...compiled from his own Manuscripts and other authentic Documents, never before published', 1835] 'I can throw no light upon the document relating to Flamsteed which my daughter copied for you'.

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/153 · Item · 24 July 1830
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Turner would like Whewell to spend some time with him during the summer: 'Whatever time it might suit you to come...I should be delighted to talk to you about ancient architecture, and to accompany you over Norwich Cathedral and Castle, unquestionably among the finest specimen of Norman buildings in existence'. Turner has looked at Whewell's book with great pleasure ['Architectural Notes on German Churches']: 'You have studied the subject profoundly and gone into the causes of things, while I have neither had the time, nor the knowledge, nor perhaps the abilities to do more than examine the surface'.

Letter from Dawson Turner
Add. MS a/213/152 · Item · 25 Dec. 1835
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Turner will be very pleased to see Whewell and Adam Sedgwick on Tuesday - 'could not you stay till at least the next morning?'

O./11.27 · File · 1733-1734
Part of Manuscripts in Wren Class O

Letters largely concerned with family matters. Relatives mentioned include 'your Aunt Orkney' [Elizabeth Hamilton, Countess of Orkney]; Grace's half-brother Thomas Thynne, 2nd Viscount Weymouth and his wife Louisa, née Carteret, whom he married in the span of these letters; Grace's 'sister [Mary] Graham', 'Lady Granville' [Grace Carteret, 1st Countess Granville], her godmother; her mother Mary, née Villiers, 'unkle' Henry Villiers, and mother's cousin William O'Brien, 4th Earl of Inchiquin; Lord Carteret [later 2nd Earl Granville] and his wife Frances.

Topics of interest in the letters include April Fools (letter 6, 31 Mar. 1733), pick-pocketing at Bartholomew Fair (letter 13, 28 Aug. 1733), and an attack of smallpox suffered by Grace's sister Betty (letter 17, 8 Dec. 1833, and following).

Granville, George (1666-1735), 1st Baron Lansdowne and Jacobite duke of Albemarle, politician and writer
HOUG/E/B/8/1 · Item · 9 May 1881
Part of Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

61 Hercules Buildings, Lambeth Road, London S.E. - Graham was formerly a railway engineer at Leeds; has suffered in the trade conflicts and seeking work. Postscript: Graham's dignified demeanour caused jealousy. Enclosure: printed address to James Graham from fellow workmen at the North Eastern Railway Locomotive Department, Leeds, 'on his leaving to partake of a better situation'.

Add. MS a/775 · Item · [c 1925]
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A note clarifying Macaulay's quote about women of noble families marrying the divines of the time, in response to a claim in Churchill Babington's Mr Macaulay's Character of the Clergy in the Latter Part of the Seventeenth Century Considered.

Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist