Contents [ printable ]
Eng MSS 726-734, 876-877 - Elizabeth Gaskell Manuscript Collection- GB 133 Eng MS 726 - Charles Dickens Manuscript: A Child's Dream of a Star
- GB 133 Eng MS 727 - Letters of Walter Savage Landor
- GB 133 Eng MS 728 - Letters of William Makepeace Thackeray
- GB 133 Eng MS 729 - Letters to Elizabeth and William Gaskell from Charles Dickens
- GB 133 Eng MS 730-731 - Letters to Elizabeth and William Gaskell
- GB 133 Eng MS 732-734 - Miscellaneous Letters
- GB 133 Eng MS 876-877 - Elizabeth Gaskell Manuscripts
Elizabeth Gaskell Manuscript Collection
| This material is held at | The University of Manchester, The John Rylands University Library |
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MSS 726-734, 876-877 |
| Dates of Creation | c 1840-1867 |
| Name of Creator | Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 11 subfonds |
Scope and Content
The collection includes letters from Charles Dickens to Elizabeth Gaskell; an autograph manuscript of Dickens' A Child's Dream of a Star ; over 200 letters collected by Mrs Gaskell from contemporary writers, politicians and other notable persons; letters of William Makepeace Thackeray and Walter Savage Landor; and original manuscripts of The Grey Woman and Wives and Daughters (both published in 1865). The Library also holds manuscripts of Gaskell's Life of Charlotte Brontë (1857) and The Crooked Branch (1859); autograph letters from Charlotte Brontë and Patrick Brontë to Mrs Gaskell, and other manuscripts relating to the Brontë family; a portrait miniature of Mrs Gaskell by W.T. Thomson; and Mrs Gaskell's ink-stand, paper-knife and other personal possessions.
Biographical History of Elizabeth Gaskell
Elizabeth Gaskell was born Elizabeth Stevenson at Lindsey Row, Chelsea on 29 September 1810. Her father, William Stevenson, was a keeper of the records to the Treasury in London and a writer on commercial topics; earlier in his life he had been a Unitarian minister. Soon after her birth, Elizabeth's mother died and she was sent into the care of her aunt, Mrs Lumb, at Knutsford in Cheshire. Elizabeth Gaskell was much influenced by her early life at Knutsford which was to be the model for her novel, Cranford (she also based Hollingford in Wives and Daughters on it). At fifteen she was sent to school at Stratford-upon-Avon, where she remained for two years.
In 1832 she married the Reverend William Gaskell, minister of Cross Street Unitarian Chapel in Manchester. The marriage proved a happy one; the Gaskells originally lived at Dover Street, Manchester, before moving to Rumford Street in 1842 and finally to 84 Plymouth Grove in 1850. Her first-known publication, an account of Clopton Hall, was published in 1840. In 1844, after her son Willie died during a visit to Festiniog, Elizabeth Gaskell turned to writing to overcome her grief, beginning work on Mary Barton . The book was finally completed in 1847 and was published anonymously by Chapman and Hall in 1848. It enjoyed immediate success, winning plaudits from many leading literary figures, and it was translated into a number of different languages. However Gaskell had also aroused controversy by her unfavourable portrayal in the novel of the employing class in Manchester, some of whom attacked her in the press.
Charles Dickens had been especially impressed by Gaskell's debut, and he invited her to contribute to his new journal, Household Words in 1850. The first number, published on 30 March 1850, included her short story 'Lizzie Leigh'. She contributed frequently to this and other journals in coming years, writing stories in a number of different styles. In 1853, Mrs Gaskell published her second novel, Ruth, and this was followed by her humorous portrait of provincial life, Cranford, in the same year (this work had originally appeared in Household Words between 1851 and 1853). One of her most important works, North and South, was published in Household Words between September 1854 and January 1855, and was reproduced in a single edition in the latter year. This was a less emotive and more deeply characterised novel of contemporary social conditions, for which Gaskell had undertaken a great deal of research in the Lancashire area.
After the publication of this novel, Mrs Gaskell moved into the new area of biography. She had met Charlotte Brontë in 1850, and they became firm friends, despite considerable differences of personality. After Brontë's death in 1855, Mrs Gaskell agreed to write her life, which she worked on intensively until it was published in 1857. Certain comments made in the book, based on conversations between Gaskell and Brontë, aroused great controversy, and Gaskell was forced to retract the statements in the columns of The Times, and to withdraw all the unsold copies of the first edition on the grounds that they were libellous. Despite these setbacks, her portrait of Charlotte Brontë was considered a success. Gaskell temporarily reduced her literary output after this controversy, and she spent time travelling on the Continent and working on various philanthropic causes, especially during the Cotton Famine of 1862-3. In 1863 she published Sylvia's Lovers, followed by Cousin Phyllis. Her last work, Wives and Daughters, was published in the Cornhill Magazine between August 1864 and January 1866. It was reprinted as an unfinished work in the following February. In November 1865 Mrs Gaskell died suddenly of a heart attack at her country home at Holybourne, Hampshire. She was buried at the Unitarian chapel in Knutsford, where her husband was also laid to rest in 1884. A collected edition of Mrs Gaskell's works was published in seven volumes in 1873.
Source: Jenny Uglow, 'Gaskell , Elizabeth Cleghorn (1810-1865)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. By permission of Oxford University Press - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/10434.
Access Restrictions
The collection is available for consultation by any accredited reader.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Donated to the John Rylands Library by the executors of Miss M.E. Gaskell, October 1936.
Other Finding Aids
Recorded in published handlist of English Manuscripts (English MSS 726-734, 876-877); other material recorded in unpublished card catalogue of University MSS.
Existence and Location of Copies
Alternative form: published microfilm: Elizabeth Gaskell and Nineteenth-Century Literature: Manuscripts from the John Rylands University Library, Manchester (Woodbridge: Research Publications, 1989).
Related Units of Description
See also the Elizabeth Gaskell Printed Collection held at The John Rylands University Library, which includes first editions and association copies of many of her writings.
Separated Materials
Elizabeth Gaskell's papers have been widely dispersed. The Brotherton Library, Leeds University has some letters and literary manuscripts including Sylvia's Lovers; there are also letters and literary manuscripts at Princeton University Library. A summary version of Mary Barton is held by the Victoria & Albert Museum, National Art Library, (ref.: Location Register of English Literary MSS 18-19th cent 1995 48.E.23).
Bibliography
For Eng MSS 727 and 731-734 see also Ross D. Waller, Letters addressed to Mrs Gaskell by celebrated contemporaries (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1935). .
Preferred Citation
The collection should be cited as: Elizabeth Gaskell MSS, The John Rylands University Library, The University of Manchester.
Individual items should be cited as: English MS 726 (etc.), The John Rylands University Library, The University of Manchester.
Control Access Terms
Cataloguing Info
| Title | Elizabeth Gaskell Manuscript Collection |
| Creation | Finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Jo Klett using Epic Editor v.4.1, 17 May 2005. |
| Descriptive Rules | Finding aid compiled according to JRUL's Guide to the listing of archives (3rd edition, 2004), which is based on the General International Standard Archival Description (ISAD(G)), second edition. |
| Language Usage | Finding aid written in English. |
Charles Dickens Manuscript: A Child's Dream of a Star
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 726 |
| Dates of Creation | 1850 |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: Charles Dickens |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 1 volume (6 folios); various sizes. |
Scope and Content
A much-corrected manuscript in the hand of Dickens. His autograph is on folio 1, otherwise blank. The work was printed in Household Words in 1850.
Letters of Walter Savage Landor
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 727 |
| Dates of Creation | 1854, 1858 |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: Walter Savage Landor |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 1 volume (5 items); various sizes. |
Scope and Content
The volume contains:
- Numbers 1-2: two letters from Landor to Mrs Gaskell;
- Number 3: letter from Landor to the Reverend William Gaskell;
- Number 4: autograph poem by Landor 'To the author of Mary Barton';
- Number 5: corrected page proofs of part (pp. 145-160) of Landor's Giovanna of Naples, published with Andrea of Hungary in 1839.
Related Units of Description
See also the Walter Savage Landor Papers (ref.: GB 133 Eng MSS 1237-1238).
Letters of William Makepeace Thackeray
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 728 |
| Dates of Creation | n.d [19th century] |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: William Makepeace Thackeray |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 1 volume (3 items); various sizes. |
Scope and Content
The volume contains:
- Number 1: letter from Thackeray to Mrs Procter;
- Number 2: note from Thackeray to Mrs James;
- Number 3: MS preface, much corrected and signed "M.A. Titmarsh, Kensington, December 15", of Rebecca and Rowena, or Romance upon Romance, which was printed in 1850. There is a pen and ink sketch of the author in bed.
Letters to Elizabeth and William Gaskell from Charles Dickens
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 729 |
| Dates of Creation | 1850-1862 |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: Charles Dickens |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 1 volume (30 items); various sizes. |
Scope and Content
There are twenty-six letters from Charles Dickens to Mrs Gaskell; three letters from Dickens to the Reverend William Gaskell (numbers 14, 18 and 300; and a single letter from W.H. Wills at the office of Household Words to Mrs Gaskell. In number 3, the signature is cut away.
Bibliography
See also Tyson, A review and other writings by Charles Dickens (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1934), pp. 18-19.
Letters to Elizabeth and William Gaskell
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 730-731 |
| Dates of Creation | c 1840-1868 |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: Various |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 2 volumes (113 items); various sizes. |
Scope and Content
113 letters to Elizabeth and William Gaskell, arranged alphabetically by correspondent as follows:
- Volume I (Eng MS 730), letters 1-58, A-K, c 1847-1868;
- Volume II (Eng MS 731), letters 59-113, L-W, c 1840-1867.
Miscellaneous Letters
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 732-734 |
| Dates of Creation | Late 18th to late 19th centuries |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: Various |
| Language of Material | English, French and German |
| Physical Description | 3 volumes (208 items); various sizes. |
Scope and Content
Evidently an autograph collection made by Mrs Gaskell. Small groups of letters are addressed to Sir Benjamin Brodie, Rev. Edward Coleridge, W.J. Fox, Madame Mary Mohl, and others. Many nineteenth-century celebrities, writers and politicians are represented, including Richard Bentley, Robert Browning, William C. Bryant, William E. Channing, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Maria Edgeworth, Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Ewart Gladstone, Nathaniel Hawthorne (3), Charles Lamb, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Giuseppe Mazzini, Dr Joseph Priestley, Samuel Rogers (2), Sir Walter Scott (2), Robert Southey, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Daniel Webster, Prosper Mérimée, and George Sand. The letters are arranged alphabetically as follows:
- Volume I (Eng MS 732), letters 1-71, A-Ha;
- Volume II (Eng MS 733), letters 72-141, He-Rom;
- Volume III (Eng MS 734), letters 142-183, Rou-Y;
- Items 184-208, in French and German.
Elizabeth Gaskell Manuscripts
| Reference Number(s) | GB 133 Eng MS 876-877 |
| Dates of Creation | 1861-1866 |
| Name of Creator | Name of Author: Elizabeth Gaskell |
| Language of Material | English |
| Physical Description | 3 volumes (I - 72 folios; II and III - 920 folios); 330 x 210 mm, 330 x 200 mm. |
Scope and Content
Original MSS, both with numerous corrections by the author:
- Eng MS 876, The Grey Woman, 1861;
- Eng MS 877, Wives And Daughters, c 1864-1866. Consisting of 918 folios bound in two volumes, with 2 folios at the end containing corrections for a page of the proof-sheets.
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