- Ridley 2136.
- Eitem
- [ca.1905].
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
Flower beds and well kept lawns in Victoria Park.
4156 canlyniad gyda gwrthrychau digidol Dangos canlyniadau gyda gwrthrychau digidol
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
Flower beds and well kept lawns in Victoria Park.
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
Rail sidings, chimneys and pithead gear at Victoria Colliery, Ebbw Vale.
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
A gently sloping straight street lined with terraced houses on each side.
[Vicarage, Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant]
A large house with a small conservatory and immaculate grounds. St Dogfan's church can be seen in the distance.
John Peris Jones
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
Copy of a postcard showing two new looking detached houses on a cul de sac facing each other.
Rhan oKyffin Williams Archive
A young man with dark hair and spectacles in a dark suit and clerical collar.
Rhan oMartin Ridley Collection
On the left of the picture is a viaduct under construction, on the left three arches of a converging viaduct can be seen. A railway engine is approaching this viaduct. Location unknown. Houses are visible in the foreground.
Rhan oKyffin Williams Archive
A commercially produced slide showing the facade and entrance to Vezelay Abbey in France. Presumably this slide was purchased by Kyffin Williams on one of his trips abroad
Diapositive Veronese.
Vezelay : Christe en majeste /
Rhan oKyffin Williams Archive
A commercially produced slide of an ornate semi-circular carving of a sculpture, probably in plaster, of Jesus surrounded by his eleven disciples.
Diapositive Veronese.
Rhan oKyffin Williams Archive
Commercially produced slide of arched cloisters.
Diapositives Veronese.
Studio portrait of a veteran with facial scarring wearing his Silver War Badge. The Badge was awarded to all of those military personnel who had served at home or overseas during the war, and who had been discharged from the army under King’s Regulations, ie . no longer physically fit for war service or were surplus to military requirements having suffered impairment since entry into the service.
D C Harries, Rhosmaen Street, Llandilo.
Half-length studio portrait of a smartly dressed veteran. On his left breast he sports two medals. Reference to the medal ribbons suggests they may be the India Medal and the Ashanti Medal, both late C19th.
D C Harries, Rhosmaen Street, Llandilo.
Rhan oIolo Morganwg and Taliesin ab Iolo manuscripts and papers
Verses entitled 'Song', 'Delia Lost. (Celia lost)'. 'Epigram', 'Glamorgan Triplets, 1772' and 'The sigh. A song.' (Some crossed out).
Verses said by Iolo Morganwg to be in the handwriting of the late Whitelock Nicol of Ham.
Rhan oIolo Morganwg and Taliesin ab Iolo manuscripts and papers
Verses said by Iolo Morganwg to be in the handwriting of the late Whitelock Nicol of Ham, beginning 'Tho' Neptune's Waves and Boreas' Blasts ...'.
Verses 'On the Death of the Revd Thomas Spencer of Liverpool...',
Rhan oIolo Morganwg and Taliesin ab Iolo manuscripts and papers
Verses 'On the Death of the Revd Thomas Spencer of Liverpool who was drowned while bathing in the Tide in August 1811 ...', beginning, 'I will not sing in mortal's praise ...', by [James] Montgomery.
Rhan oIolo Morganwg and Taliesin ab Iolo manuscripts and papers
Verses including the first two of 'On first hearing the cuckoo', ('Hail lovely harbinger of spring!'). On the reverse side are ten stanzas 'Written in Avondale. Ith. Gm.', beginning 'Now vivid hues the skies adorn ...'.
Verses in the autograph of Iolo Morganwg.
Rhan oIolo Morganwg and Taliesin ab Iolo manuscripts and papers
A sheet in the autograph of Iolo Morganwg containing verses beginning, 'cyn gweled wyneb gwen fy nghalon oedd yn rydd', and 'Y Seren fwyn syw clyw alar clau yw', together with some Welsh words and their meanings, and 'Mem. to make a vocabulary of rejected words in my collection to turn to it to see whether any word be rejected'.
Verses in the autograph of Francis John.
Rhan oIolo Morganwg and Taliesin ab Iolo manuscripts and papers
Verses in the autograph of Francis John beginning, 'Through Bushis and Briars as I took my way'. There are three English verses, of which two have been translated into Welsh.