Includes letters from T. Huws Davies and D. A. Thomas, Viscount Rhondda. Many of the letters from 1917 and 1918 discuss various aspects of the war effort. Some later letters refer to demobilisation and reconstruction, and there are a few references to the coal industry. There is also a group of letters, 1917-18, from George M. Ll. Davies to David Davies, together with a few letters from David Davies to George M. Ll. Davies. These letters discuss the war effort, George Davies's contributions to the Welsh Outlook, and conditions in prison. There are detailed comments on contemporary political life and world events.
There are copies of several letters and notes from David Davies amonst the correspondence. The correspondents include Lord Plymouth and Professor Harold Temperley.
Plymouth, Robert George Windsor-Clive, Earl of, 1857-1923.
Some of the letters relate to the purchase of an estate at Coulin in Scotland by David Davies. Includes letters from Rev. Gwilym Davies, Principal J. H. Davies, Cwrt Mawr, Mrs Annie J. Hughes-Griffiths, Colonel D. Watts Morgan MP, and Frances Stevenson (writing on behalf of D. Lloyd George).
Includes letters from Gareth Vaughan Jones, together with a typescript article by him entitled 'The Dresden Congress on the Revision of Treaties', dated 22 June 1931; and from Wickham Steed.
Includes letters from Gareth Vaughan Jones and Sir John Herbert Lewis. There is also a group of letters, November 1931-January 1932, between David Davies and Sir John Herbert Lewis concerning the former's campaign to secure a peerage.
Correspondence to, from and about Vyrnwy J. Lewis of Caradog Road, Aberystwyth, whom David Davies employed as a research assistant and aide, especially in connection with his own researches and publications and preparations of issues of The New Commonwealth and other journal publications. Some concern articles written by Vyrnwy Lewis himself. The letters refer mainly to international politics and international relations.
Includes letters from C. R. Chapple, Gareth Vaughan Jones, Sir John Herbert Lewis (together with a reply from Lord Davies), and Professor Charles Webster.
A number of the letters sympathise with Lord Davies on the long illness which he suffered during the early months of 1933. Includes letters from Mrs Jano Clement Davies, Garbett Edwards and Lord Gladstone of Hawarden.
Many of the correspondents sympathise with Lord Davies on his recent illness. Includes letters from Clement Davies, and a letter from Lord Davies to Clement Davies, dated 28 October 1933.