Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 28 Aug 1943 (Creation)
Level of description
Extent and medium
1 item
Context area
Name of creator
Repository
Archival history
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Robin Ghyll, Langdale, Ambleside [on headed notepaper from the Master's Lodge, Trinity College, Cambridge]. - News about Bessie's grandson is 'really glorious'; expects that if he is dark he will be like his mother [Ursula], with 'just a general background perhaps of Trevelyan blackness'. She and George think the name 'splendid'; wonder why 'Philip' was chosen, and whether it is a 'general reminiscence' of the Philips inheritance which would 'amuse Aunt Annie'. The Trevelyans are 'doing well' for grandchildren at the moment, with Thomas Arnold [Humphry and Molly's son] and also Marjorie and Patricia's children; thinks there are currently 'a round dozen', counting Kitty's three, then Patricia's next is expected at Christmas. Thinks young mothers are very 'brave' now, to come out of hospital after only ten days, then only have a nurse for three weeks; she herself 'recovered so slowly' after Mary was born that she cannot imagine how she would have coped with the baby on her own. True that the child is 'much more neglected nowadays... popped in the pram and left to sleep out for hours in all weathers'. Thinks that 'Humphry's Molly's' two eldest 'did suffer from it' but are recovering now, though the second still has trouble with consonants at over three and a half; Janet suspects this may be 'a result of early shock from cold', and remembers having to speak privately to the doctor to 'make him speak to Molly'. She and George are spending time Robin Ghyll; have not been there together since June 1939; it is 'wonderful, as always' but though the weather in the south has been 'scorching', they have had heavy rain. George went back to Cambridge on college business a fortnight ago and brought their cook with him on his return; she is a 'nice adventurous person, and loves coming out on the fells' with them, but even George is 'content with short walks now' and they 'feel quite proud' when they walk over to take tea with Nelly Rawnsley.
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
System of arrangement
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Conditions governing reproduction
Language of material
Script of material
Language and script notes
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Finding aids
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Related units of description
Notes area
Alternative identifier(s)
Access points
Subject access points
Place access points
Name access points
- Trevelyan, Janet Penrose (1879-1956), author (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Elizabeth (1875-1957), musician (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Philip Erasmus (b. 1943) farmer, writer, and film and television director (Subject)
- Mommens, Ursula Frances Elinor (1908-2010) potter (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Julian Otto (1910-1988), painter and printmaker (Subject)
- Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist (Subject)
- Philips, Anna Maria (1857-1946) philanthropist, daughter of Robert Needham Philips (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Thomas Arnold (b 1942) son of Molly and Charles Humphry Trevelyan (Subject)
- Weaver, Marjorie (1913-2003), wife of Sir Tobias Rushton Weaver (Subject)
- Jennings, Florence Patricia (1915-2013), daughter of Sir Charles Philips Trevelyan and Mary Trevelyan (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Katharine (1908-1990), writer (Subject)
- Moorman, Mary Caroline (1905-1994), historian and biographer (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Charles Humphry (1909-1964), lecturer in German and author (Subject)
- Trevelyan, Mary Trumbull (1912-2002) wife of Charles Humphry Trevelyan, known as Molly (Subject)
- Rawnsley, Eleanor Foster (1873-1959) known as Nellie, wife of Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley (Subject)