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Lloyd George Manuscripts Churchill, Winston, 1874-1965
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Letters to David Lloyd George,

General correspondence, 1914-41, of David Lloyd George, including letters to him from Herbert Henry Asquith (1) 1915, Winston Churchill (1) 1941, Rufus Isaacs (1) 1914, Sir John Herbert Lewis (4) 1915, William Llewelyn Williams (1) 1915, and Basil Wilberforce, archdeacon of Westminster (1) ?1915. There are also four personal letters, 1922, from Frances Stevenson, later countess Lloyd-George of Dwyfor.

Letters to David Lloyd George,

Letters, 1890-1942, to Lloyd George, mainly from political figures, the main correspondents being A. J. Balfour (1) [1917x1918], H. N. Brailsford (1) ?1908, Winston S. Churchill (1) 1910, Edward, Prince of Wales (1) 1911, Millicent Fawcett (1) 1911, Andrew Bonar Law (1) 1911, and Sir Herbert Samuel (1) 1921.

Letters to Gwilym Lloyd-George,

Letters, 1914-64, to Gwilym Lloyd-George from various correspondents, including Brendan Bracken (3) 1939-57, Neville Chamberlain (1) 1939, Winston Churchill (6) 1942-56, Jacob Epstein (1) 1957, Will Hay (1) 1945, Quintin Hogg (1) 1954, Alec Douglas-Home (1) 1957, Selwyn Lloyd (1) 1957, Iain Macleod (1) 1957, Harold Macmillan (2) 1941-7, Peter Thorneycroft (1) 1957, and Harold Wilson (4) 1944-5, together with a letter, 1968, to Lady Edna Lloyd-George from Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st viscount Montgomery of Alamein.

Lloyd George family papers,

Miscellaneous papers, 1863-1950s, of the Lloyd George family, including rent and other receipts, 1863-92, of Richard Owen, father of Margaret Lloyd George (ff. 1-48); autographs, 1917, of political figures including Herbert Henry Asquith, Sir Winston Churchill and Sir Edward Grey (f. 50 recto-verso); and typescript verse in Welsh and English composed, 1919, by Eliseus Williams ('Eifion Wyn') in praise of Margaret Lloyd George (ff. 51-2).

Miscellaneous papers,

Miscellaneous papers, c. 1890s-1939, relating to David Lloyd George, arranged in roughly chronological order, including The Labour Standard, no. 2, 18 February 1902, containing an article on Lloyd George (ff. 10-11); copy of a memorandum, 1910, by Winston Churchill to the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith, proposing the abolition of the House of Lords (ff. 17-23); note of the Committee on War Indemnity's recommendations, 1918 (ff. 48-9); and a typescript article, 1927, by Dame Margaret Lloyd George, Petticoats behind Politics (ff. 61-70).