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- 20 Sept 1891 (Creation)
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The Grove, Harrow on the Hill. - Will not write to his father or mother today; Robert can tell them anything they want from this letter. Has three photographs from Hills & Saunders, and has given one to Tom [Macaulay Booth?] and one to Moss; Moss has 'already made himself popular in the house' with 'several common-sense reforms which Crooker [J. A. Cruikshank?] was too old to see'. Stow [?] says [Arthur] Bentinck gets along but is 'too retiring'; does not know anything about the new backs yet; Gilmore has grown a beard; has seen Hicks in chapel but nowhere else. Discussion of various reforms; thinks Robert will approve of the replacement of the Greek Test[ament] by Old Test[ament] history from the English Bible. Was surprised to get his remove; there were not many; sits with [Gordon William] Stow at the separate desk for two on Welldon's left and 'swot[s] with [Frank?] Elliott', who has Robert's old room; George may have it next term or soon, as Clive, Booth and Elliott are all leaving, probably also Farquhar, though George does not think 'Mo will let them all go'. The house is much changed this term, he himself is one of the large number of people who 'seem to be much more important', and he thinks he will enjoy the year very much. Sandilands is a 'capital head'; he and Arne [?] are going to join the Corps, but Tom is not. Explains in detail how he comes to be sharing a room with [Arthur Langford] Tregoning; Tregoning does what George likes, and 'does not make himself at all objectionable', but George will 'be most heartily sick of him by the end of the term'. El[liot] is leaving for India in the first week of the holiday; he will 'wander about the country with a tutor' and thinks he will do 'a lot of swot there'; George told him he will not do any at all. Tom [Booth?] is going to try to spend a year or two at Trinity before entering business. A Rothschild [Nathaniel Charles] has joined the house this term, but he 'has to conform, and will be allowed to eat the breakfast cold ham... one of the advantages of Xtianity'. Discusses [rugby] 'footer' and various members of the team; the '"sporting element"' is completely suppressed', with Lefroy 'quite a fish out of water'. Young Sandilands also encountered Haddock at the Balmoral a year or so ago.
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- Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Sir George Otto (1838-1928), 2nd Baronet, statesman and historian (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Caroline (c. 1847-1928), wife of Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet (Subject)
- Harrow School (Subject)
- Bentinck, Arthur Harold Walter (1875-1964) colonial civil servant (Subject)
- Welldon, James Edward Cowell (1854-1937) clergyman and scholar (Subject)
- Stow, Gordon William (1876-1949) solicitor (Subject)
- Booth, Thomas Macaulay (1874-1970) soldier (Subject)
- Clive, Sir George Sidney (1874-1959) Knight, army officer (Subject)
- Elliott, Frank Louis Dumbell (1874-1939), Assistant Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police (Subject)
- Farquhar, Hobart Brooks (1874-1916) civil servant, army officer (Subject)
- Sandilands, James Walter (1874-1959), army officer (Subject)
- Tregoning, Arthur Langford (1874-1929) (Subject)
- Rothschild, Nathaniel Charles (1877-1923), banker and naturalist (Subject)
- Cruikshank, James Alexander (1858–1929), schoolmaster and Church of England clergyman (Subject)