Liverpool (England)

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Liverpool (England)

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Liverpool (England)

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Liverpool (England)

6 Archival description results for Liverpool (England)

6 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Album

A scrap album containing holograph letters from E. O. Davies, Bangor, 1930, and J. Glyn Davies, Llandudno, 1930, and a circular letter from Nichol Grieve, secretary, Liverpool Free Church Centre, 1932; notes of an address on congregational singing; a 'final copy' of a resolution by the Liverpool Welsh Presbytery, [1932], and draft resolutions of condolence passed by the [North Wales C.M.] Association, [1937]; a typescript summary of sermons delivered at [Calvinistic Methodist] preaching services ('Cymanfa') at Chester, 1852; press cuttings of Liverpool interest; printed matter; etc.

Davies, E. O. (Edward Owen), 1864-1936

Cofnodion am Frynaman

  • NLW MS 22127B
  • File
  • 1897-1932

Journals, January 1897 - June 1908, April 1920 - October 1932, of Samuel D. Williams, Pen-y-graig, Brynaman, Carmarthenshire, written in Welsh and containing a record of deaths in the district and of various, mainly local, events. MS 22127B, ff. 1-38v is a draft copy of MS 22126B, ff. 5v-36v. Genealogical memoranda, 1828-1894, copied from the family Bible, are contained on f. iii of MS 22126B.

Cofnodion am Frynaman

  • NLW MS 22126B
  • File
  • 1897-1932

Journals, January 1897 - June 1908, April 1920 - October 1932, of Samuel D. Williams, Pen-y-graig, Brynaman, Carmarthenshire, written in Welsh and containing a record of deaths in the district and of various, mainly local, events. MS 22127B, ff. 1-38v is a draft copy of MS 22126B, ff. 5v-36v. Genealogical memoranda, 1828-1894, copied from the family Bible, are contained on f. iii of this manuscript.

Journal of a tour of England and Wales

Journal of a tour of North East Wales and the North of England, 24 July-13 August 1800, by the Rev. Thomas Prior, travelling with his friend Ja[me]s Bessonnet.
The volume describes the voyage from Dublin and along the North Wales coast and the disembarkation by boat in the vicinity of Llandudno (ff. 1 verso-6), followed by visits to Abergele (ff. 6 recto-verso), St Asaph (ff. 8-9, 11), Holywell (ff. 13-15), Chester (ff. 17-23), Liverpool (ff. 25 verso-31), Manchester (ff. 33 verso-51), Buxton (ff. 51 verso-59 verso), Leeds (ff. 69-71), York (ff. 71 verso-75 verso) and Harrogate (inside back cover). The leaves of blotting paper are used mostly for notes and for an account of expenditure for [26 July]-31 August (ff. 9 verso-10 verso, 12 recto-verso); this account, together with the reference to Westmoreland and Cumberland on f. 1, demonstrates that the journal is incomplete.

Real Aberystwyth and Real Liverpool

Two manuscript drafts and a typescript draft of ‘Real Aberystwyth’ with manuscript and typescript annotations by Niall Griffiths and the publisher, and related letters and email correspondence between them concerning the writing and production of the book, as well as correspondence between Niall Griffiths and the predominantly literary contacts whom he consulted about the content of the book, together with other material accumulated during the writing of the book and relating to people, places, events, activities, issues and phenomena in Aberystwyth and the surrounding area as well as the ‘Real Aberystwyth’ project itself, comprising manuscript and typescript notes by Niall Griffiths, typescript copies and photocopies of poems (notably ‘One, Rheidol Place’, ‘Symbols’ and ‘River Moods’ by Herbert Williams, ‘An Aberystwyth Canto’ by Matthew Jarvis, ‘Nietzscheanism and the meaning of the superman’ and ‘Aberystwyth short fiction’ by Tiffany Atkinson, and ‘The Buoy’ by Gwyneth Lewis), typescript copies of articles (including ‘“In a very deranged state”: notes on the Iolo Morganwg Project’ by Mary-Ann Constantine, ‘The English in Wales: an Englishman’s view’ and ‘Flag waving’ by Simon Rodway, ‘Crud cenedlaetholdeb Cymreig’ [‘A cradle of Welsh nationalism’] by Rhys Jones and Carwyn Fowler, and ‘Teithio yn y nos / Nachtreise’ by Patricia Duncker), photographs taken by Niall Griffiths (in labelled envelopes which have since become jumbled), printouts from websites, press cuttings and tourist information literature. Also included, bound in a volume with a draft of ‘Real Aberystwyth’, is a manuscript draft of ‘Real Liverpool’ with manuscript notes by Niall Griffiths and an outline proposal by him for the book, together with a copy of related email correspondence between him and the publisher.

Real Liverpool

Manuscript notes for ‘Real Liverpool’ by Niall Griffiths, together with professional and personal correspondence between him and the predominantly literary contacts whom he consulted about the content of the book and in particular Liverpool’s role as the European Capital of Culture in 2008, as well as other material accumulated during the writing of the book and relating to people, places, events, activities, issues and phenomena in Liverpool and the surrounding area, including typescript copies of articles and other prose (notably ‘Elysian fields, ropewalks and capitalist vultures: life in Liverpool 1’, ‘John 7:14’ and ‘Where it all began’ by Kenn Taylor, ‘Another brief history of time’ by Ade Jackson, ‘Nerve magazine’ by Deborah Mulhearn, ‘Waiting for Brando’ by Tony Wailey, ‘Five short strolls, or one long hike, through Malcolm Lowry’s Wirral’ by Michael Wherly [under the pseudonym Michael Carson], ‘Sweet F.A. about Big Sugar and a key Presidential State’, ‘Bitter sweet pensioner stories’, ‘Florida sugar: a toxic ingredient in American democracy’, ‘Mr Cube and the re-branding of Mr Tate’s sugar lumps’ and ‘The secret in the stone’ by Ron Noon, and ‘And in the end …’ by Joe Shooman with an extract from his autobiography), typescript copies of poems (including ‘Trick or Treat’, ‘Cwm bie yer’, ‘Booklaunch’, ‘Song to Belong’, ‘It Only Takes One Dickhead’, ‘The tempest’, and ‘I’m Explaining a Few Things’ by Nathan Jones, ‘A Kali-Yuga Journal’ and ‘Scimitar H’ by Ade Jackson, ‘Dice Dancers’ and ‘A luxury I’ve learned to live without’ by Joe Shooman, and ‘Quiz Bomb’ and ‘Top Deck’ by Ross Sutherland), typescript copies of notes for lectures and talks (including ‘A Merseyside writer responds to Malcolm Lowry’ by Michael Wherly and ‘Staying pure in Liverpool: the Welsh community in the late nineteenth century’ by Mike Benbough-Jackson), photographs taken by Niall Griffiths, press cuttings, photocopies of published articles, educational materials, printouts from websites and promotional and tourist information literature.