Collection Level Description: Additional Manuscripts

Reference and contact details: GB 0033 ADD
Title: Additional Manuscripts
Dates of creation: 12th - 20th century
Extent: 25 metres
Name of Creator: Durham University Library (collector)
Level of Description: fonds
Published by: Durham University Library: Archives and Special Collections
Palace Green Section, Palace Green, Durham, DH1 3RN, England
Telephone: 0191 374 3001
Email: PG.Library@durham.ac.uk
URL: http://www.dur.ac.uk/Library/asc/index.html


Administrative/Biographical History

This artificial collection provides the location for many miscellaneous small accessions of manuscripts and papers received by the University Library from about 1930 onwards, and not preserved as separate collections. Similar small accessions received prior to 1930 are largely located in the Old University MSS, but a few miscellaneous manuscripts acquired before 1930 and not known by Old University MSS citation numbers have been absorbed into the the Add. MSS class. Small accessions of manuscripts of oriental interest are located in the Oriental MSS class. Small accessions of papers received by the University's Department of Palaeography and Diplomatic (from 1990 merged in the University Library's Archives & Special Collections department) were placed in its SGD (Small Gifts and Deposits) class, and that class continues to be used for small archival accessions, whereas the emphasis in making additions to the Add. MSS class is now more distinctly on manuscripts and single documents.

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Acquired by gift and purchase at different times from many different sources. Additions are still being made to the collection.

Scope and Content

In subject matter the collection is extremely wide-ranging, including literary, theological, political, historical, legal, educational, military and scientific material, maps, plans, and drawings and sketches of people and places. There is a strong concentration of material relating particularly to the North-East of England, Co. Durham, Durham city, and the University of Durham. The collection includes several medieval book manuscripts and a few medieval documents.

Administrative Information

Accruals

Additions continue to be made frequently.

System of Arrangement

The main sequence is arranged in order of Add. MS number (arbitrarily assigned as cataloguing progresses), except for a few items shelved out of sequence because of their physical form or size, and some others which are bound with printed books and located with them in the printed book collections. There is also a closed and diminishing sequence of items covered only by an interim finding-aid, to which permanent numbers have yet to be assigned; these are arranged by shelf reference and date. Recent accessions not yet catalogued are recorded in the accession register, which gives their temporary location until an Add. MSS number is assigned.

Administrative Information

Access Conditions

Open for consultation.

Administrative Information

Copyright/Reproduction

Permission to make any published use of material from the collection must be sought in advance from the Sub-Librarian, Special Collections (e-mail PG.Library,durham.ac.uk) and, where appropriate, from the copyright owner. The Library will assist where possible with identifying copyright owners, but responsibility for ensuring copyright clearance rests with the user of the material.

Further Information

Finding Aids

There are at present three blocks of material with separate finding-aids, although the long- term intention is to blend them into one, with a common system of arrangement and cataloguing:

  • (1): Add. MSS 1-731
    Online list available at http://flambard.dur.ac.uk:6336/dynaweb/handlist/msc/addmss1/. This revises and corrects the published list by David Ramage, Summary list of the Additional Manuscripts accessioned and listed between September 1945 and September 1961 (Durham, 1963). A sheaf-slip alphabetical index to the list is available in the Search Room
  • (2): Add. MSS 732 onwards
    Briefly described in Search Room sheaf-slip "Summary catalogue of MSS" (photocopied typescript). Alphabetical and chronological indexes are provided. For material requiring more lengthy description than can be encompassed within the "Summary Catalogue", detailed word- processed lists are available in the Search Room, to which references are given in the "Summary Catalogue".
  • (3): Sequence of manuscripts covered by the Search Room "Rough index of uncatalogued mss" (catalogue on sheaf-slips, photocopied ms). Alphabetical and chronological indexes are provided. The "Rough index" was compiled in the early 1980's to provide an interim rough and ready finding-aid to the substantial proportion of the Add. MSS which were then unrecorded. This sequence is diminishing as items from it are gradually absorbed into (2) above. Accessions of Add. MSS since 1986 have gone directly into (2).

13 October 1999


Reference: GB 0033 ADD-816

Nicholas Kilburn Correspondence

Dates of creation: 1880-1923
Extent: 85 items
Name of Creator: Nicholas Kilburn (1843-1923), musical amateur


Administrative/Biographical History

Nicholas Kilburn (1843-1923), a pump manufacturer in Bishop Auckland, was awarded the degree of B.Mus. from Cambridge in 1880 and received an honorary D.Mus. from Durham in 1914, in recognition of his contribution to the standard of amateur musical life in the North East of England. A keen supporter of the English composers of his day, he became a close friend of Edward Elgar, who dedicated The Music Makers to him. Kilburn was also ardently interested in the music of Wagner, frequently visiting Bayreuth and publishing Wagner, a sketch of his life and works (London, [1895]) and The story of Wagner's Ring for English readers (London, [1898]). Kilburn's regular attendance at the major music festivals at home and abroad enabled him to keep in close touch with new music, which he enthusiastically sought to introduce into the repertoire of the various amateur groups with which he was actively involved. He was conductor of the Bishop Auckland Musical Society from 1875, the Middlesbrough Musical Union from its foundation in 1882, and the Sunderland Philharmonic Society from 1886. A proficient cellist, pianist and organist, as well as conductor, he also composed a number of part-songs and works for chorus and orchestra.

Scope and Content

Chiefly letters to Nicholas Kilburn, together with a few letters to his wife Alice, and several miscellaneous items.

The letters are largely concerned with amateur music making, particularly in the North East of England, but also include accounts of music heard during travels on the continent and in America, news of Elgar, and a letter from Eva Wagner settling a point about the correct staging of her father's opera Parsival. They illustrate both the vigour of Kilburn's contribution to the musical life of the North East and the wide range of his contacts among contemporary composers and musicians, both English and American. Kilburn's correspondents include the British composers Sir Frederick Bridge (1844-1924), Sir George Henschel (1850-1934), and Hamish MacCunn (1816-1916), and the Americans Horatio Parker (1863-1919) and Bertram Shapleigh (1871-1940). Correspondents from outside the musical world include Sir Willam Eden (1849-1915), soldier and amateur artist, Samuel Smiles, author of Self-Help, two bishops of Durham, Brooke Foss Westcott (1825-1901) and H.C.G. Moule (1841-1920), and Thomas Carlyle's daughter, Mary.

System of Arrangement

In alphabetical order of correspondent, and then chronological

Note

English

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased at Sotheby's sale, 9 February 1976, where the letters formed one lot (79) in a much larger collection (lots 69-82) of Kilburn's correspondence with the leading musical figures of the day. A copy of the sale catalogue entries for lots 69-82 is kept with the group (Add. 816/85)

Further Information

Finding Aids

Detailed word-processed list

16 November 1999

Reference: GB 0033 ADD-833

Letters to the Rev. James Raine (1791-1858), antiquary and historian

Dates of creation: 1841-1854
Extent: 38 items


Administrative/Biographical History

James Raine (1791-1858) was born at Ovington, Yorkshire, the son of James and Anne Raine, and educated at Kirby Hill School and at Richmond Grammar School in Yorkshire. From 1812 until 1827 he was Second Master at Durham School. He was ordained deacon in 1814 and priest in 1818. Meanwhile, in 1816, he had been appointed librarian to the Dean and Chapter of Durham, a post which he retained until his death. In 1822 the Dean and Chapter appointed him to the rectory of Meldon, Northumberland. In 1825 he was appointed Principal Surrogate in the Consistory Court of Durham under the Chancellor, James Baker, and in 1828 he was appointed by the Dean and Chapter to the rectory of St Mary the Less, Durham City.

Raine achieved lasting fame as an antiquary and historian. As a young man he was the friend of several of the most notable local historians of North East England, including Robert Surtees (d. 1834), the historian of County Durham, and John Hodgson (d. 1845), the historian of Northumberland. Raine's first historical writings appeared in the 1820's, and the first to achieve fame was his account of the excavations of 1827 at St Cuthbert's shrine in Durham cathedral. In and after 1834, he was the prime mover in the foundation of the Surtees Society, intended as a memorial to the historian whose name it bore. In the ensuing years, Raine edited numerous texts for the society, as well as producing further works of his own, of which the best known was his History and Antiquities of North Durham.

Raine married, 28 January 1828, Margaret Peacock. They had three daughters and one son (Rev. James Raine the younger, 1830-1896, Chancellor and Canon Residentiary of York). The family lived at Crook Hall, just outside Durham. James Raine the elder died on 6 December 1858, and was buried in the churchyard of Durham cathedral.

Scope and Content

These letters, from a late stage of Raine's life when he was widely known and respected, relate to many different areas of his activities, as antiquary and historian, librarian to the Dean and Chapter of Durham, Surtees Society secretary, Rector of Meldon, and Principal Surrogate in the Durham Consistory Court.

System of Arrangement

The letters are arranged in six sections, five by topic, and one miscellaneous. Each section is arranged alphabetically by correspondent and then chronologically:

  • Add. MS 833/1-21: Antiquary and historian
  • Add. MS 833/22-25: Librarian to the Dean and Chapter of Durham
  • Add. MS 833/26-27: Secretary to the Surtees Society
  • Add. MS 833/28-32: Rector of Meldon
  • Add. MS 833/33-34: Principal Surrogate of the Durham Consistory Court
  • Add. MS 833/35-38: Miscellaneous

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased from Edward Hall, 1957

Further Information

Finding Aids

Detailed word-processed list

Further Information

Related Units of Description

Surtees Society Records

Further Information

Associated Material

Durham Cathedral Dean and Chapter Library, Raine MSS


Reference: GB 0033 ADD-834

Letters to the Rev. Charles Thomas Whitley (1808-1895)

Dates of creation: 1832-1850
Extent: 24 items


Administrative/Biographical History

Charles Thomas Whitley (1808-1895) was one of the founder members of staff of the University of Durham. The son of John Whitley of Liverpool, he was educated at Shrewsbury School and St. John's College, Cambridge. He graduated B.A. (Senior Wrangler) in 1830, and was elected a fellow of St. John's in 1831. In 1833 he was appointed Reader in Natural Philosophy and Mathematics in the new University of Durham, a post which he retained until 1855. He also filled a number of other university offices for various periods during those years - Librarian, Proctor, Tutor, and later Vice-Master of University College. He was ordained in 1836, and in 1849 became an honorary canon of Durham Cathedral. In 1854 he was appointed Vicar of Bedlington, Northumberland. Whitley's translation of Louis Poinsot's work on rotatory motion was published in Cambridge in 1834, the same year in which the French original first appeared. At Cambridge he had become a close friend of Charles Darwin, and he maintained his scientific interests and correspondence throughout his life. From 1864-1872 he was President of the College of Medicine and Surgery in Newcastle upon Tyne.

Scope and Content

Several of these letters (nos 3, 5 and 16) shed light on Whitley's scientific interests and his friendships with leading figures in the contemporary scientific world, among them Charles Darwin, William Whewell (1794-1866), William Hopkins (1793-1866), the geologist and mathematician, and J.S. Henslow (1796-1861), Professor of Mineralogy and Botany at Cambridge, whose letter to Whitley mentions the casks of natural history specimens he has received from Darwin. Others (nos 1-2, 6, 8, 19, 20-21, 24) concern affairs of the University of Durham. No. 20, from Thomas Sopwith, the Newcastle upon Tyne mining engineer, illustrates Whitley's interest in developing the teaching of science in the university. Nos 18, from the architect Anthony Salvin (1799-1881), and 23 concern alterations to Durham castle. No. 14 is from the sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866), and no. 15 from A.D. Bache (1806-1867), the American educationalist and physicist. The remaining letters are mainly about personal matters.

System of Arrangement

Chronological

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased from Winifred A. Myers (Autographs) Ltd, 1971

Further Information

Finding Aids

Detailed word-processed list

Further Information

Related Units of Description

Thorp Correspondence

University of Durham Records

Further Information

Publication Note

Poinsot, Louis, Outlines of a new theory of rotatory motion from the French of Poinsot, with explanatory notes, translated by C.T. Whitley (Cambridge, 1834)


Reference: GB 0033 ADD-835

John Stevens Blackett letters on the Indian Mutiny

Dates of creation: 1857-1859
Extent: 97 items (94 letters, and some later notes about them)


Administrative/Biographical History

John Stevens Blackett was born at Stokesley (N. Yorkshire) in 1833, and lived at 20 South Street, Durham from 1839 to 1841, when his father, John Blackett, became agent on the Bessborough estates in Ireland. Apart from the period of service as a railway surveyor in India to which these letters relate, the details of John Stevens Blackett's career are obscure, but it appears from documentation acompanying the letters from the donor, his son, that a considerable part of his career was spent in India.

Scope and Content

These letters were written from the Agra district in India, where John Stephens Blackett was in the service of the East Indian Railway as a surveyor, to his mother in Ireland. They cover the period of the Indian Mutiny, and describe the course of the rebellion in the neighbourhood of Agra, where Blackett was forced to take refuge. They also throw light on the social conditions experienced by young "Chota Sahibs".

System of Arrangement

Chronological

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Deposited on permanent loan in 1948 by the writer's son, J.P.M. Blackett, who taught for many years at Durham School

Further Information

Finding Aids

Outline word-processed list


Reference: GB 0033 ADD-836

Correspondence and family papers of Samuel Smith (1766-1841)

Dates of creation: 1786-1887
Extent: 1 box


Administrative/Biographical History

Samuel Smith (1766-1841), son of Dr. Samuel Smith of Westminster, was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford (B.A. 1786, M.A. 1789, B.D. 1797, D.D. 1808). The date and place of his ordination are untraced. From 1795 he held the perpetual curacy of Daventry (Northamptonshire); in addition from 1808 to 1829 and again from 1831 until his death he was rector of Dry Drayton (Cambridgeshire). Prebends at Southwell and York were bestowed upon him in 1800 and 1801 respectively. In 1802 he was appointed chaplain to the House of Commons. From 1807 to 1831 he was active at Christ Church, Oxford, as canon (1807-1824), sub-dean (1809), treasurer (1813), and dean (1824-1831). From 1831 he was a canon and sub-dean of Durham.

Smith married a Miss Taunton, by whom he had at least four children. Their eldest son, Samuel, pre-deceased his father in 1831, after education at Westminster and Christ Church, and a brief tenure of the rectory of Dry Drayton (1829-1831). William, probably the second son, followed his brother to Westminster and Christ Church. He also took holy orders, and became rector of Dry Drayton after his father's death. Two other sons are recorded, Charles, another cleric (d. 1855), and Thomas, who pursued a military career.

Scope and Content

The chief interest of this collection lies in the twenty-one letters concerning the University of Durham in its earliest years. The remaining papers represent the surviving fragment of the family's papers, and throw only a fitful light on the careers of Samuel Smith and his children.

System of Arrangement

  • Add. MS 836/A/1-21: Correspondence concerning the University of Durham, 1832-1834 (9 letters from Samuel Smith to William Van Mildert, Bishop of Durham; 9 letters from Van Mildert to Smith; 2 letters to the Dean and Chapter of Durham from Hugh James Rose, to whom the chair of Divinity was offered in 1833).
  • Add. MS 836/B/1-12: Letters to Samuel Smith from various correspondents, 1816-1838. Many refer to events and business familiar to the recipients but now obscure, but there are occasional comments on the political scene of the day, or reflections of social history.
  • Add. MS 836/C/1-35: Letters of Thomas Smith, 90th Infantry Regiment, to his brother, Rev. William Smith, from the Crimea, 1857-1859, with other papers relating to Thomas Smith's career. The letters are mainly concerned with Thomas's hopes of promotion, but there are occasional references to conditions and the conduct of campaigns.
  • Add. MS 836/D/1-26: Correspondence and other papers of the Smith family, 1827-1887
  • Add. MS 836/E/1-13: Letters to members of the Smith family from various correspondents outside the family circle, 1807-1885
  • Add. MS 836/F/1-33: Correspondence and papers relating to administration of the Strahan Trust, 1852-1863
  • Add. MS 836/G/1-10: Correspondence relating to the administration of the Eliot Trust, 1865
  • Add. MS 836/H/1: Draft letter from Rev. George Strahan to David [?Robertson], 14 February 1800
  • Add. MS 836/I/1-5: Correspondence of Rev. George Quilter, 1817-1818
  • Add. MS 836/J/1-11: Miscellaneous letters and papers not obviously connected with the Smith family, 1786-1856, including a letter from the Duke of Wellington to Henry Goulburn, M.P., 29 August 1836

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased, with help from the Purchase Grant Fund, from Robin Waterfield Ltd, Oxford, in 1980

Further Information

Finding Aids

Word processed list, with detailed calendar of section A, and group descriptions of the remainder

Further Information

Related Units of Description

Thorp Correspondence

University of Durham Records


Reference: GB 0033 ADD-837

Chevallier/Corrie correspondence

Dates of creation: 1832-1865
Extent: 129 items
Name of Creator: Rev. Temple Chevallier (1794-1873), astronomer, mathematician, and theologian, and Rev. George Elwes Corrie (1793-1885), theologian


Administrative/Biographical History

Rev. Temple Chevallier (1794-1873): son of the Rev. Temple Fiske Chevallier, of Badingham (Suffolk). Educated Pembroke College, Cambridge; B.A. (Second Wrangler) 1817, M.A. 1820, B.D. 1825. Ordained priest 1818. Fellow of Pembroke College 1819; Fellow and Tutor of Catharine Hall (St Catharine's College), Cambridge, 1820. Hulsean lecturer in Divinity 1826 and 1827 (lectures published as Of the proofs of the divine power and wisdom derived from the study of astronomy, 1835). In 1835 Chevallier was invited to become Professor of Mathematics in the newly founded University of Durham, and held this post until 1872. He was also Professor of Astronomy 1841-1871, Reader in Hebrew 1835-1871, registrar of the university 1835-1865, and in 1834-1835 assisted with lectures in divinity. To this busy academic life he added the duties of a parish priest, as perpetual curate of Esh, just outside Durham, from 1835 until his death. He was made an honorary canon of Durham in 1846, Rural Dean of Durham in 1858, and a residentiary canon of Durham in 1873.

Rev. George Elwes Corrie (1793-1885): son of Rev. John Corrie of Colsterworth (Lincolnshire). Educated Catharine Hall, Cambridge; B.A. 1817, M.A. 1820, B.D. 1831. Ordained priest 1817. Tutor at Catharine Hall until 1849, when he became Master of Jesus College. Norrisian Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge 1838. From 1851 until his death he held the rectory of Newton (Cambridgeshire) in conjunction with the mastership of Jesus.

Scope and Content

These letters illustrate the chief interests and preoccupations of Chevallier and Corrie over a period of thirty years. As well as matters of personal and family concern, they cover the affairs of the universities of Durham and Cambridge, and speak of the movements and causes which agitated the Church of England and the diocese of Durham in the mid-19th century.

The letters are an important source for the early history of the University of Durham, commenting on the struggles to secure sufficient endowment, the appointment of staff, the development of the curriculum, choice of textbooks, content of lectures, the founding of the university's observatory, in which Chevallier was instrumental, and many other aspects of the fledgling institution. Cambridge controversies reflected in the letters include the contested election to the chancellorship in 1847, the proposal for a royal commission to enquire into the running of the university in 1850, and quarrels over attempts to introduce examinations for students in divinity. On church affairs, there are comments on moves to reform church endowments, episcopal appointments, the Oxford Movement, and the deplorable (in Corrie's view) consequences of Catholic emancipation. There are also vivid glimpses of some of the pastoral difficulties Chevallier encountered at Esh, where more than half the inhabitants of the parish were Roman Catholics, and Sunday cricket and illicit whisky distilling flourished.

System of Arrangement

Chronological

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased from Miss Susan Todd, via Cider Press Books, Long Sutton, Somerset, 1976

Further Information

Finding Aids

Word-processed list, with detailed summary of contents in introduction

Further Information

Related Units of Description

Thorp Correspondence

University of Durham Records

University of Durham Observatory Records

Further Information

Associated Material

Jesus College, Cambridge, Class R.2, 15 (NRA 39212): George Elwes Corrie's journal of a tour through France to Switzerland

Further Information

Publication Note

Klottrup, Alan, "Astrorum acerrimus indagator": Temple Chevallier and Durham 1834-1873, Durham University Journal, 78 no. 1 (December 1985), 11-21
Memorials of the life of George Elwes Corrie: drawn principally from his diary and correspondence (Cambridge, 1890) [prints a substantial proportion of these letters] (Cambridge, 1890).



Reference: GB 0033 ADD-838

Dates of creation: 1850-1890
Extent: 154 items
Name of Creator: William Bell Scott (1811-1890), artist and poet


Administrative/Biographical History

William Bell Scott (1811-1890) was born in Edinburgh, the son of the engraver Robert Scott, and initially trained in his father's profession, but from an early age was drawn to the writing of poetry. He migrated to London in 1837, where he turned to historical painting, and gained many friends and acquaintances in literary and artistic circles. In 1839 he married Letitia Margery Norquoy, and in 1843 accepted the post of head master of the School of Design in Newcastle upon Tyne, where he lived until his retirement and return to London in 1864.

While in Newcastle Scott was befriended by Pauline, Lady Trevelyan, and commissioned to paint the major work of his artistic career, the decoration of the hall at Wallington (Northumberland), including eight large panels depicting Northumbrian history. After his return to London, he was commissioned to do part of the decoration of the South Kensington Museum, and he continued to paint and exhibit, and to contribute regularly to periodicals such as The Academy and the Athenaeum. He published five volumes of poetry, a number of works on art, and contributed editorial matter and illustrations to editions of the Romantic poets. His Autobiographical notes, published posthumously, aroused much controversy because of his adverse comments on some of his associates.

Scott's poem, The year of the world, published in 1846, aroused the enthusiasm of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and he became a close friend of the Rossetti family, including Dante Gabriel's brother William Michael Rossetti (1829-1919), the recipient of these letters. In 1872 Dante Gabriel Rossetti suffered a severe breakdown, followed by attempted suicide, and Scott was intimately involved in this crisis. Scott's marriage was not a satisfactory one, and in 1859 he formed a relationship with Alice Boyd. This lasted until his death, while preserving the facade of his marriage. In 1864 Alice Boyd inherited Penkill Castle in Ayrshire, and thereafter the Scotts regularly spent the summer at Penkill, while Alice lived as their guest in London for the rest of the year.

Scope and Content

This small collection contains 146 letters from William Bell Scott to W.M. Rossetti, 1850-1890, together with three related letters from Alice Boyd to W.M. Rossetti, 1890. Six letters are appended from Rossetti's daughter Mrs Helen Rossetti Agresti to Professor C.C. Abbott of the University of Durham, 1949, concerning the acquisition of the collection by Durham University Library.

The subject matter of the letters is largely literary, artistic and domestic, with numerous references to the work and lives of members of Scott's wide circle of acquaintances and friends, particularly Dante Gabriel Rossetti and other leading Pre-Raphaelites. The letters fall into two distinct groups: the first up to 1863, when Scott was living in Newcastle, and the second from 1864. During the first period the letters tend to be discursive, with extensive comment on his current reading and gossip concerning friends in London. After Scott's return to London in 1864, there was no longer a need to write to keep in touch, except while at Penkill, and the letters sent at other times are largely occasioned by specific incidents or transactions.

Apart from the light which the letters shed on Scott himself, their greatest significance lies in the information they contain on Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Also of importance was Scott's role in introducing W.M. Rossetti to the work of Walt Whitman; Rossetti's subsequent article on Whitman, and edition of a selection of his poems, introduced him to the English public and helped to establish his reputation in Europe. The letters also contain references to the work and personalities of a wide range of the leading figures in Victorian literary and artistic circles. Among the most notable of those mentioned are Alma-Tadema, Ford Madox Brown, the Brownings, Carlyle, Holman-Hunt, the collector James Leathart, Millais, Patmore, Ruskin, the "spasmodic" poet Alexander Smith, Swinburne, Tennyson, Turner, Whistler, Walt Whitman and the sculptor Thomas Woolner.

System of Arrangement

Chronological

Administrative Information

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Purchased from Mrs Olivia Rossetti Agresti, 1949

Further Information

Finding Aids

Word-processed calendar

Further Information

Related Units of Description

Add. MSS 338-339 (William Bell Scott manuscripts), Add. MSS 839-842 and X Microfilm Misc. 18 (facsimiles of William Bell Scott manuscripts elsewhere)

Further Information

Publication Note

Substantial extracts from the letters, extracts from related correspondence, and biographical information on William Bell Scott have appeared in the following works: Autobiographical notes of the life of William Bell Scott, ed. W. Minto, 2 vols (London, 1892) Selected letters of William Michael Rossetti, ed. R.W. Peattie (University Park, 1990) Fredeman, W.E., A Pre-Raphaelite gazette: the Penkill letters of Arthur Hughes to William Bell Scott and Alice Boyd, 1886-97, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 50 (1968), 34-82 Fredeman, W.E., Prelude to the last decade. Dante Gabriel Rossetti in the summer of 1872, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 53 (1971), 75-121, 272-328 Fredeman, W.E., The letters of pictor ignotus: William Bell Scott's correspondence with Alice Boyd, 1859-1884, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 58 (1976), 60-111, 306-352 Walker, Vera, The life and work of William Bell Scott, 1811-1890, University of Durham M.A. thesis, 1951

16 November 1999