Rhagolwg argraffu Cau

Dangos 1924 canlyniad

Disgrifiad archifol
Is-is-fonds
Dewisiadau chwilio manwl
Rhagolwg argraffu Gweld:

Instruction books,

Volumes of notes of instructions, mainly relating to conveyances, probates and wills, but also including annulments, contracts, divorces, family disputes, leases, maintenance etc. There are clearly several series of books, eg SB 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, probably relating to the various partners.

Military Education Committee Records

Minutes of the Military Education committee, 1935-1937, and of its predecessor, the Nomination Board, 1929-1934, Registrar's papers and correspondence relating to committee meetings, 1935-1939, Registrar's correspondence with the War Office, 1907-1945, and Registrar's general correspondence, 1929-1934.

Heb deitl

University Advisory Board papers

Papers of the University Advisory Board and of its sub-committee comprising correspondence, memoranda, and submissions to the Royal Commission on the Despatch of Common Law, and to the Lord Chancellor's Committee on Legal Education, 1932-1935.

Heb deitl

University Council records

Annual Reports of the Council as presented to the University Court, 1922-1957, minutes of Council, 1920-1987, indexes to minutes, 1949-1982, and agendas and papers for meetings, 1921-1992.

Civil administration of Bengal,

Official papers which, although not extensive, reflect Clive’s involvement in the civil administration of Bengal. They include papers relating to revenue collection, population statistics, currency reform and trade. They derive, for the most part, from Clive’s two periods as governor of Bengal, 1758-1760 and 1765-1767, but relate almost exclusively to the latter.

Calcutta government records,

Records of the Calcutta council and its committees, 1757-1768, and of the mayor' s court (one of its courts of justice), [c. 1765]-1766, dating from Clive' s first and second periods as governor of Bengal (1758-1760 and 1765-1767) although his first term is only very sparsely represented. The papers for 1768 refer to matters that occupied Clive before he resigned office in 1767.

Heb deitl

The Anathemata

The group contains manuscript drafts, typescript drafts, proofs, broadcasts and commentaries, reviews and correspondence.
David Jones, The Anathemata: Fragments of An Attempted Writing (Faber and Faber, 1952) is a long prose poem with illustrations, which Jones began writing in 1937 or 1938, and was first typed in 1949. David Jones suffered another breakdown in 1947. In 1953 it won the Russel Loines award for poetry from the Institute of Art and Letters, New York.
The manuscripts came to the Library via Harman Grisewood who sorted the manuscripts before they came to the Library, marking the pages on the bottom left. The worksheets which have survived are incomplete and possibly less than half of the manuscripts survive. The Anathemata grew in the middle as it developed, the first complete text being 7 pages only, the second 75 pages and the third 166 pages. Early drafts are in pencil and later drafts are in ink, with exceptions. The division into eight sections did not occur until the typescript, although implicit in earlier stages. Pre-typing David Jones had three sequences of numbers, referred to as the first, second and third foliation.
A detailed explanation of the arrangement process, of the foliations, and of the watermarks, was prepared by Daniel Huws and P.W. Davies for the proposed NLW printed catalogue of David Jones' manuscripts in [1981] which was never published. The notes are crucial to understanding the complexity of the development of the text and are available as NLW ex 2393. Some of these notes have been incorporated into the descriptions where possible.

Grisewood, Harman, 1906-1997

Phyllis Playter papers

Personal and literary papers of Phyllis Playter, comprising correspondence, diaries, commonplace books, address books, passports and savings book, and early fragmentary/draft pieces of prose and poetry, together with material relating to the sale of John Cowper Powys's manuscripts.

Playter, Phyllis

Family and personal,

This class consists of material directly related to Thomas Jones's personal and family life. The largest single item consists of correspondence between Thomas Jones and his wife, some of which is of political interest. There are also letters from his daughter and a little material on his son Elphin. There is, in addition, a mass of miscellaneous material relating to his career, to some turning-points in his life, to his family background and to movements with which he was associated in his early days. This material has been broadly classified in terms of his career up to 1919, when it loses coherence. Family correspondence follows, and the class is completed by a volume of miscellanea, relating to his honours, to newspaper comments upon him, to mementoes which he preserved, and to his death. The early material, which stretches back sometimes a couple of generations and includes family trees, etc., is of historical value and may be usefully collated with class U (Sir Henry Jones collection). Arranged into: Background and Career, 1866-1903 (X 1); Socialism and Suffragettes, 1895-1914 (X 2); Career, 1904-1919 (X 3); Cardiff Principalship, 1917-1919 (X 4); Aberystwyth Principalship, 1919 (X 5); Wife: Eirene T. Jones, 1896-1903 (X 6); Wife: Eirene T. Jones, 1903-1935 (X 7); Wife: Letters of condolence, 1935 (X 8); Daughter: Eirene Lloyd Jones, 1921-1932 (X 9); Daughter: Eirene Lloyd Jones, 1933-1955 (X 10); Son, Elphin Lloyd Jones, 1928-1939 (X 11); Honours, 1901-1955; mementoes, 1928-1950, comments on Thomas Jones, 1920-1952, death of Thomas Jones and Memorial Fund, 1955-1956 (X 12).

General correspondence,

This class consists of such correspondence with individuals as Thomas Jones thought worth preserving. Letters from individuals listed here may also be found throughout the collection, under institutional classes, but these 'individual' letters tended to be filed separately, and, apart from the re-classification of some letters which were clearly more 'institutional' than 'personal', the integrity of Thomas Jones's original classification has been preserved. The larger individual collections have been grouped into separate classes of their own (classes Q, R, S, T, U, V). There are 4,673 enumerated documents in this class and 151 correspondents. The material is arranged by correspondent, in alphabetical order. Under each correspondent the order is, where possible, chronological. Arranged into: Aaron - Bickersteth (W 1); Buller - Collins (W 2); Cornford - Davies G. M. Ll. (W 3); Davies, Huws - Davies, Walford (W 4); Dawson - Ellis (W 5); Esher - Evans (W 6); Fisher - Fry (W 7); Garnett - Griffith (W 8); Grigg - Hetherington (W 9); Houghton - Jones, Enoch (W 10); Jones, E. H. - Jones, Herbert (W 11); Jones, Jack - Leys, N. (W 12); Lindsay - Madariaga (W 13); Mallon - Murrell (W 14); Nightingale - Ratcliffe (W 15); Rathbone - Rhys (W 16); Richards - Snowden (W 17); Stevenson - Thomas (W 18); Thompson - Urquhart (W 19); Waddell - Zimmern (W 20).

Dai Greatcoat

The group comprises material collected by René Hague while editing Dai Greatcoat : a self-portrait of David Jones in his letters, (London : Faber and Faber, 1980), a collection of letters to H. S. (Jim) Ede, Harman Grisewood, T. F. (Tom) Burns, and René Hague. There are copies of letters from David Jones to them and others, and also biographical material, setting copies, and other material relating to the publication. They have been arranged into two groups and listed by Harman Grisewood.

Lectures,

Manuscript and typescript drafts and printed copies of lectures.

Canlyniadau 1681 i 1700 o 1924