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Prisoners -- England -- London.
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Judge Jenkins of Hensol

Transcripts made in 1647 by John Richardson, Llewenie Grene, Denbighshire, of 'A Declaration of Mr: David Jenkins now prisoner in the To[wer] one of his Maiesties judges in wales, for Tryalls, Murth[ers] & all other Capitall crimes that they ought only to be by Jurie[s] not otherwise vnless it be by acte of Parliamente', [17] March 1647; 'Judge Jenkins' Treatise or Discourse made & [ ] To the honourable Societies of Gray's Inne & of the rest of the Innes of Cort ...', [2]8 April 1647; 'An Apologie for the Army, Touchinge the eight quaeres upon the later declaration ... By David Jenkins Prisoner in the Tower of London', 1647; and 'A discourse touchinge the inconveniences of a long continued Parliament'.

Richardson, John, of Lleweni Green.

Letters to Abraham Howell,

Seventy-one holograph letters addressed to Abraham Howell at Welshpool and Rhyl (1), by his brother Evan Howell from London, 1836-1845 and undated (personal and family matters including the writer's own career in business in London, the sending of [their sister] Ellen to school at Minsterley [co. Salop], the finding of employment for younger brothers, news in 1836 of their brother Lewis who was in America, the mental illness and the delusions suffered by [their brother] Edward in London in 1841, the birth of recipient's first child in 1841, and the physical and subsequent mental illness of [their brother] Samuel in 1843, the purchasing of books and other articles for recipient in London and arrangements for having books bound for him, the sending of newspapers from London to recipient and others including [their cousin] S[amuel] Roberts, with comments on some papers such as the Observer, Sunday Times, Bells [New Weekly Messenger], the Examiner and the Spectator (1836), the imprisonment of Jack Jones of Llanbrynmair in Newgate for theft, visits to London by the writer's cousin John Roberts in 1836 and 1841, and a sermon preached by him on the first occasion, lectures by a clergyman called Denham [? the Reverend Joshua Frederick Denham, rector of St. Mary's le Strand, London, 1839-1861] at St. Bride's, Fleet Street, in 1838, comments on the Tories in 1838 and on Sir John Conroy's friendliness with ministers and all around the court, enquiries at the Herald's Office in 1838 with regard to a grant of arms [? on behalf of recipient], the choice made by the Montgomery boroughs in the [parliamentary election of June 1841], provisions made in the will of [Charles] Maddison, father of the Rev[eren]d John George Maddison [rector of West Monkton, co. Somerset, 1825-1847], and mention of the Coalport Porcelain works in connection therewith, news of acquaintances) (the writer occasionally writes a few sentences of a letter in shorthand).

Evan Howell.

Llythyrau at Saunders Lewis,

Seventeen letters, mostly in Welsh, to Saunders Lewis from Lascelles Abercrombie (2) 1926 and n.d., W. R. P. George (1) 1978, David Howell ('Llawdden') (1) 1901, R. S. Thomas (1) ?1970s, and Lewis Valentine (12) 1972-83; together with three letters, 1936-7, to Margaret Lewis from P. Mansell Jones, J. E. Jones, and Siân Williams, written during Saunders Lewis's imprisonment.