Correspondence.
Found in 7214 Collections and/or Records:
Correspondence of Marion Coleman with friends: Rothschild, C-Val., Mid 19th century.
Correspondence of Marion Coleman with friends: Unidentified., Mid 19th century.
Correspondence of Marion Coleman with friends: Unidentified., Mid 19th century.
Correspondence of Marion Coleman with friends: Vat-Z., Mid 19th century.
Correspondence of Marion Lochead., 1928-1971, undated.
From 1929 to 1932, Marion Lochhead wrote a series of articles on 'Scottish Women Writers of Today', which was published in the ‘Bulletin and Scots Pictorial’. Much of this correspondence consists of letters from the women about whom she wrote, often giving biographical details. It also includes material on the International PEN Club congress in 1949, and letters about her poetry from Walter de la Mare.
Correspondence of Mark Sprot on family and business matters., 1841-1870, undated.
Correspondence of Mark Sprot on family and business matters., 1841-1862.
Correspondence of Mark Sprot on family and business matters., 1863-1870, undated.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1833-1849.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1850-1853.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1854-1856.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1857-1858.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1859-1860.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1861-1925.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1833-1925, undated.
The correspondence is largely concerned with family events and personal matters, many of which are connected with evangelical religion, in which both the Haldane and Burdon-Sanderson families were influential.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1827, 1836-1862.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1863-1864.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1865.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1866-1879.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane., 1880-1881.
Correspondence of Mary E Haldane consisting almost entirely of letters written to her by relatives, both of the Haldane and the Burdon-Sanderson families, and friends., 1836-1881, undated.
Most of the correspondence is concerned with family matters, and with the cause of evangelical religion. A few letters, of various dates, written to others, are also included.
Correspondence of Mary Elizabeth, Baroness Dunfermline, eldest daughter of the 2nd Earl of Minto, and of her husband Ralph Abercromby, 2nd Baron., 1828-1859.
Lord Dunfermline was successively Secretary of Legation at Berlin (1831-1835), Minister at Florence (1835-1838) and Frankfurt (1839-1840), and Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Turin (1840-1851) and The Hague (1851-1858), the letters describe diplomatic and political events in Germany, Holland and Belgium, and, particularly, Italy.