Pamphlets.
Found in 288 Collections and/or Records:
A collection of pamphlets, off-prints and other printed ephemera relating to Robert Bontine Cunninghame Graham or to his family and friends., 1888-1983.
Access Forum Reports and pamphlets on the access to Scotland’s hills and mountains., 1995-1996.
For SNH.
Album of newspaper cuttings collected by Alexander Hutcheson concerning the haunted tower of St Andrews, the cathedral, the castle, and the abbey wall.
Also pasted into the album are two pamphlets by David Henry about the cathedral and the castle, 1910, and three letters, 1894, 1911, of David Hay Fleming.
Albums containing specimens of printing and engraving., 1856, undated.
Albums of letters and documents, almost entirely of Scottish interest, written by or relating to historical celebrities, and dealing with public and private affairs.
'Alpina': a collection of papers chiefly connected with the Alpine Club in London., 1865-1947.
Annotated copy of "Meet the Members", a Women`s Land Army publication.
Anonymous and undated pamphlet titled ‘Proposal For a Regular and useful Militia’, apparently copied from a printed work and connected with the agitation for a militia in 1759-1760., [?1759-?1760.]
Anonymous manuscripts and proofs of works offered to William Blackwood and Sons, publishers, for publication., 1789-1821.
Assorted pamphlets, leaflets, postcards, fliers and press cuttings relating to the visual arts, named artists, cultural institutions and cultural events., [1990-1996].
Assorted papers of the Women's National Commission, including directory of women's organisations, Annual Report 2003-2004, and 40th anniversary history of the commission with covering letter to Esther Breitenbach from Joyce Gould., 2003-2009.
Assorted reports and pamphlets relating to gender equality in Scotland., 1976-1984.
Assorted reports and pamphlets relating to the women's movement and gender equality in Scotland., 1987-1989.
The file contains: 'Working Against Violence Against Women', Scottish Women's Liberation Conference (September 1987); Aileen Christianson, 'Making Choices: Scotland and the Women's Movement' (c late 1980s-early 1990s); Sue Lieberman, 'Women's Committees in Scotand', Scottish Government Yarbook (1989); Scottish Women's Aid newsletter (Spring 1989); Scottish Convention of Women, 'Convention Notes', no. 23 (Autumn 1989).
Assorted reports and pamphlets relating to women's representation in the new Scottish Parliament and the 1997 Scottish Devolution Referendum., 1997.
Autobiography of Thomas Mitchell addressed to Thomas Boston, minister of the Gospel at Jedburgh. With a 'History of Thomas Mitchell, born and educated among the Gypsies; afterwards a soldier in the 21sts Regiment of Foot or North British Fusiliers', published by the Edinburgh Religious Tract Society, 1816.
Bound papers and pamphlets on the forfeited estates of Alexander Forbes., 1746-1749.
Bound volume of papers and pamphlets relating to the York Building Company, especially their involvement with forfeited estates., 1732-1753.
Box labelled 'DATA. Books', containing assorted books, pamphlets and exhibition catalogues, with some artworks, collected as part of The Attic Archive., ?1972, 1975, 1989-1999.
Box of Reverend William Matheson, containing papers of Reverend Dr Duncan M Campbell and collections of Gaelic songs and verse., circa 1878-1912, 1927, circa 1935, undated.
Campaign materials, correspondence, press cuttings and other papers concerning Scottish devolution., 1958-1979.
Collected pamphlets and newspaper cuttings on places in Iceland., 1975-2003.
Collections of Tales for the ‘Popular Tales of the West Highlands’ project, with related correspondence and other papers.
Composite volume made up by Robert Graham, being the record of a tour, 1849, in the Lake District, North Wales, the Wye Valley Bristol, Cheddar, Glastonbury and Wells, Longleat, Stonehenge and Salisbury, the New Forest and Southampton., 1849.
Contemporary manuscript draft or copy of a pamphlet concerning the Darien scheme., [?1699.]
The manuscript begins: 'Sir, you were pleased by your last to tell me, that the face of things being so much changed in England by yor late Revolution you thought there might now be opportunity to promote that affair which wee have been see long upon'.