- NLW MSS 3151-3170C
- File
- [1860 x 1915]
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Sermons by E. Ceredig Jones.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Sermons by E. Ceredig Jones.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Sermons, addresses, and prayers.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Original poems and translations.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Two volumes of lectures on Charles Kingsley, George Eliot, R. W. Emerson, Martin Luther, John Greenleaf Whittier, Samuel Johnson, Alfred Tennyson, Leo Tolstoy, etc.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Original hymns and poems and some translations.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Hymns and a few 'englynion' composed by E. Ceredig Jones and verse and prose extracts made by him from the works of various authors.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Hymns and secular poems, including some 'englynion'.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Addresses given at funeral and communion services.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Three volumes of Welsh hymns.
Sermons, addresses, poems, and other papers of E. Ceredig Jones.
Jones, E. Ceredig (Evan Ceredig), 1850-1915
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Two sermons in Welsh.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Addresses on 'Ymweliad a Chanada a'r Unol Dalaethau ...', 'The Manners and Characteristics of the Welsh People', 'The Disestablishment of the English Church in Wales', etc., written by E. Ceredig Jones, and genealogical particulars concerning his parents and their children compiled by his niece, Mary Evans, Tannerdy, Ciliau Aeron.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Addresses given on various occassions, together with an account of a meeting held to welcome E. Ceredig Jones as minister of Chapel Lane chapel, Bradford.
Part of E. Ceredig Jones Manuscripts
Cuttings of three articles in The Manchester Guardian, August 8, 13, and 15, 1884, entitled 'A Lancashire Village', written by J. McLaren Cobban, Unitarian minister, Blackley, Lancashire, and of rejoinders thereto which appeared in The Middleton Guardian, August 23, 30, and September 6, 1884.