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Contraband No.1 by J.D Strange

R12/1124/4/2.
Contraband No.1 by J.D Strange .
First broadcast: 18 December 1933.
Children's radio programme originally recorded for The Children's Hour.
UID: Unknown.
Typed Script with written annotations.
BBC radio script for Contraband No.1 by J.D Strange .

Consent to the sale of the advowson specified in no. 71/3/7

  1. Rev. Robert William Hippisley, rector of Stow St Edwards, Gloucestershire; 2. Sir John Shelley of Shobrook Park, bart, Robert Taunton Raikes of Lincolns Inn, Middlesex, barrister, Walter John Radcliffe of Warleigh, esq., and Copleston Lopes Radcliffe of Derriford, esq. Consent of 1 to the sale of the advowson specified in no. 71/3/7.

Consent to the sale of the advowson specified in no. 71/3/7

  1. Rev. William Hippisley, clerk; 2. Sir John Shelley of Shobrook Park, bart, Robert Taunton Raikes of Lincolns Inn, Middlesex, barrister, Walter John Radcliffe of Warleigh, esq., and Copleston Lopes Radcliffe of Derriford, esq. Consent of 2 to the sale of the advowson specified in no. 71/3/7 to 2 in no. 71/3/9 for £1,700.

[Company, Welsh Regiment or Pembroke Yeomanry]

Group photograph taken outdoors showing a company of soldiers, either Welsh Regiment or Pembroke Yeomanry. The cap badges of each are similar and not easily discerned on this image. The background of the photo includes a tent suggesting this may date from a Territorial Force summer camp. The presence of Territorial Proficiency Stars visible on the sleeves of some soldiers also gives credence to this theory.

D C Harries, Rhosmaen Street, Llandilo.

Charles Hamblett papers

Papers of Charles Hamblett, [1942], relating to the pamphlet Call Wind to Witness: Poems by John Bayliss, Charles Hamblett, Alun Lewis and Emanuel Litvinoff (London, [1942]), edited by Hamblett, comprising a letter, 26 August 1942 (f. 18), and a note, [?September 1942] (f. 19), from Alun Lewis to Hamblett, concerning the choice of his poems for the volume, at a time when Lewis was on embarkation leave; and three letters, [1942], from Derek Sandford to Hamblett, concerning his prefatory note to the volume (ff. 20-22, 27-28), together with two manuscript drafts of the note, entitled 'Introduction: Notes in approach' (ff. 23-26) and 'Introduction: Notes in approach to four poets' (ff. 29-34). The recipient's name has been blacked out in each of the letters as well as in the first version of the introduction (f. 24).

Hamblett, Charles

Call Wind to Witness

A copy of the poetry anthology pamphlet Call Wind to Witness: Poems by John Bayliss, Charles Hamblett, Alun Lewis and Emanuel Litvinoff (London: Russell Clarke at the sign of the Capriole, [1942]), edited by Hamblett, with a prefatory note by Derek Sandford.
The volume contains the Alun Lewis poems 'Love Letter' and 'Infantry' (pp. 10-11), which likely constitutes his first appearance in book form.

Hamblett, Charles

[Boer War-era Soldiers]

Group portrait of nineteen soldiers in khaki uniforms carrying rifles, wearing puttees and slouch hats. Their Sergeant is also in the group. The letters PIY can be discerned on some of their shoulder titles suggesting they are Pembroke Yeomanry.

D C Harries, Rhosmaen Street, Llandilo.

Alun Lewis lectures on World Affairs

Typescript notes, [?March 1941], by Spr Alun Lewis for three lectures on World Affairs, comprising Lecture I, 'Causes of the Present War' (ff. 1-6), Lecture II (original title 'How trade affects the problems of war and peace' crossed through) (ff. 7-11) and Lecture III (ff. 12-17). The lectures were given while Lewis was assigned to his Brigade's Education Office, and concerned the geopolitical background to the Second World War, the weaponisation of trade and the weaknesses of the League of Nations.
The first lecture appears to be the one infamously interrupted by Lewis's Colonel, accusing him of telling lies (see NLW, Alun Lewis Papers MS 20, ff. 56-58 and John Pikoulis, Alun Lewis: A Life (Bridgend, 1984), pp. 130-131), as suggested by a comment at the start of the second lecture that 'we finished, rather abruptly, last week' (f. 7). The second and third lectures, in particular, contain corrections, deletions and insertions in ink and pencil.

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