- MB1/4
- File
- 1883-1884, 1886
Entries relating to his work as a botanist are also included.
1 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Entries relating to his work as a botanist are also included.
Entries relating to his work as a botanist are also included.
Entries relating to his work as a botanist are also included.
A collection of folk songs recorded by 'Devinos' and apparently sent to an un-named eisteddfod. Most of the songs were apparently recorded in the Llanuwchllyn and Llangower areas.
Davies, R. Humphrey - Graves, Rosaleen
The correspondents include David de Lloyd (1), D. Emlyn Evans (5), T. Hopkin Evans (1), A. G. Gilchrist (14), and A. P. Graves (33).
De Lloyd, David, 1883-1948
Davies, H. Walford - Davies, John
The correspondents include H. Walford Davies (3), J. Breese Davies (2), J. Glyn Davies (3), and J. H. Davies (4).
Lists of Welsh airs and notes, [1900x1940], from William Crotch's Specimens of Music, [?1809].
Correspondence relating to J. Lloyd Williams
Letters of sympathy, 1945-1946, on J. Lloyd Williams's death and letters from the Librarian, National Library of Wales, 1946, relating to his papers and manuscripts.
Correspondence, 1926-1941, relating to the publication and royalties of musical and other works by J. Lloyd Williams, including collections and arrangements of folk songs, and his cantata, Aelwyd Angharad. Most of the letters are from W. S. Gwynn Williams, Music Director of Hughes & Son, Wrexham.
Gwynn Williams, W. S. (William Sidney), 1896-1978
Correspondence, 1912-1934, relating to performances and a second publication of the work. A balance sheet relating to performances at Ruthin in 1938 is also included.
Personal correspondence, including family letters and correspondence with friends, acquaintances and publishers.
Correspondence relating to folk songs and the work of the Welsh Folk-Song Society, Y Cerddor, the National Council of Music, the publication and performance of J. Lloyd Williams's own compositions and also to various aspects of the musical life of Wales. Letters from some correspondents appear in more than one series.
Letters, 1892-1942, many from prominent botanists, mainly covering the period J. Lloyd Williams spent studying at the Royal College of Science, South Kensington, 1893-1897, as an assistant lecturer in the Department of Botany and Agricultural Botany at the University College of North Wales, Bangor, 1897-1915, and as Professor of Botany at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, from 1915 until his retirement in 1925.
Letters, 1937-1945, from publishers, family members and friends, relating to the publication of his memoirs. Copies of a few letters from J. Lloyd Williams, one to Sir Walford Davies, 1940, are also included.
A receipt, 1920, by Llew Tegid relating to the literary rights of Cadifor.
Papers, 1913-1938, relating to the copyright of Aelwyd Angharad.
An unbound copy, [?1944], of Y Tri Thelynor, and two annotated typescript drafts. Correspondence, 1943-1944, relating to the publication of the work, together with photographs and miscellaneous notes, are also included.
Contributions, consisting of folk songs and sacred music, from various individuals to J. Lloyd Williams for publication in Y Cerddor. They include songs and arrangements by David de Lloyd and T. Hopkin Evans. Related letters are also sometimes included.
De Lloyd, David, 1883-1948
A typescript copy of a lecture entitled 'Congregational singing in Nonconformist Wales', delivered by J. Lloyd Williams at Harlech in August 1941; an exercise book containing an address/lecture entitled 'Caniadaeth y Cysegr'; manuscript notes of a lecture on the same topic delivered at Trawsfynydd in 1929, Treherbert, 1940 and Ystradgynlais, 1941; notes of lectures relating to hymn tunes given in 1938 and 1942; and preparatory notes for the president's address at a singing festival in Aberystwyth, April 1917.