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Dyddiaduron

Dyddiadur, 1901, yn disgrifio taith Ben Bowen a'i gyfnod yn Ne Affrica, ynghyd â dyddiadur 25 Mai-9 Gorff. 1902, yn dwyn y teitl 'Homeward Bound' yn disgrifio ei daith yn ôl.

Dyddiaduron

Mae'r gyfres yn cynnwys 'Dyddlyfr David Bowen', gyda thoriadau papur newydd amdano ef a'i deulu. Sonnir am ddigwyddiadau personol ynghyd â'r cyfarfodydd crefyddol a diwylliannol a fynychai.

Memorandum books and diaries

The group comprises personal diaries, 1793-1839, small pocket notebooks and almanacks, 1701-1853, of the Hughes family of Gwydir, Llwyn Gronw and Cae'r berllan, and of the Griffith family of Garn, containing memoranda and personal notes of social and work engagements, accounts, family life, health problems, snippets of local and national news, poetry, recipes, household and estate management, weather conditions, journeys, hunting, shooting and fishing, useful addresses, sketches. The memorandum books are more sporadic and miscellaneous in nature than the diaries, where the format is comparatively regular. Many of the volumes contain loose enclosures of various types.

Plaid Genedlaethol Cymru

The series comprises lectures, notes and correspondence relating to meetings, the publication of articles by HFJ in Y Ddraig Goch, contributions to a fund on behalf of Saunders Lewis, D J Williams and Lewis Valentine, and towards party finance.

Lewis, Saunders, 1893-1985

Office diary

The file consists of an office diary for 1994 kept by the organiser of the Labour Party Wales containing detailed notes of appointments, activities, etc.

Desk diary

The file comprises a desk diary for 1995 kept by the organiser of the Labour Party Wales containing notes of appointments, activities etc.

Pocket diaries

The file consists of pocket diaries, 1985-2000, containing brief notes of engagements and appointments and a few other general notes.

Diaries

Pocket notebooks and diaries (some unused), comprising Rider's British merlin, 1734, 1736-1737, 1740, 1743, 1747, 1749 (2), 1750 (2), 1755, 1759, 1761, 1763, 1767-1768, 1771, 1773-1774, 1776, 1777-1779 (2 each), 1780, 1786, 1787 (2), 1788, 1789-1790 (2 each), 1791-1794, 1796, 1798, The new memorandum book improv'd: or, the gentleman and tradesman's journal, 1753, The ladies complete pocket-book, 1761-1763, 1768, 1769 ('British ladies'), 1771-1773, 1784, The ladies new and polite pocket and memorandum-book, 1766, Peacock's polite repository or pocket companion, 1781, 1795, 1801, 1802 (2), 1803, 1813, 1814, The polite repository or pocket companion, 1784, 1787, The regent, or royal tablet of memory, 1825, Pettitt's annual diary, 1871, 1883, 1887-1888, and an unnamed diary for 1785. -- The 1743 diary is endorsed 'Jane Morgan's', and one of the 1777 diaries is endorsed 'Jane Gould of the Horse Guards'. -- The diaries include notes and personal and office accounts, including at Oxford. The 1734 diary includes a note that the writer's mother died 4 April 1734, and the 1750 diary includes notes of earthquakes on 8 Feb. and 8 March, and in Feb. that 'all this month Jupiter was so near ye Earth as to be very much magnify'd - even to 2'ce or 3'ce its usual appearance; some pretended to see his Satellites with naked eye'. Several of the diaries include loose notes, newspaper cuttings, scraps of material, a few contain leaves, and one of the 1787 diaries and one of the 1802 diaries both contain locks of hair. One of the 1788 diaires encloses five silhoettes, and the 1813 diary encloses a cutting describing the Tredegar [Christmas?] festivities.

Diaries

Copies of Goldsmith. an almanack for the years 1756-1757, 1760, 1774 (2), 1775, 1776-1784 (2 each), 1785-1790.

Diaries of journeys

Seven pocket books, being diaries of journeys, '177'[sic]-1784, 1782, 1783, 1786-1787, 1788-1790 (2) and 1790-1795.

Almanack

The file comprises a Goldsmith almanack for 1824, with a very few annotations, and enclosing seven newspaper cuttings, mainly of verse.

Nature diaries

The series comprises a complete set of nature diaries which William Condry kept from his late teens, the only significant omission being a deliberate one, during the years of the Second World War. The earlier diaries are almost exclusively concerned with birds, noting the sightings, calls, nests, feeding and courtship habits, and identifying features, with occasional sketches. A gradual progression may be seen, from about 1949 onwards, as Condry developed his interest in other wildlife, and more particularly in plants, recording their habitats, individual sightings and identification, sometimes assisted by drawings. Species of birds, mammals, insects and plants are usually underlined for clarity. Accounts are given of daily events, meetings and places visited in connection with Condry's professional conservation duties and literary work. Several of the diaries contain charts of birds and butterflies recorded at Ynys-hir. Weather conditions are recorded throughout. Relevant enclosures are frequent. Some of the diaries have integral indexes, and it is evident from the other papers in the archive that the entries formed useful points of reference for the preparation of books and articles.

Howell Harris diaries (microfilm copies),

  • Microfilms of Howell Harris Diaries (positive and negative copies)
  • File
  • 2001.

Copïau microffilm o ddyddiaduron Howell Harris (1714-1773) i'w defnyddio gan ddarllenwyr yn lle'r gwreiddiol. = Microfilm copies of the diaries of Howell Harris (1714-1773) to be consulted by readers in place of the originals

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