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Journal containing an account of a tour made by an English gentleman 'Among the Alps', probably in the middle of the nineteenth century.
The journal is profusely illustrated with pencil drawings of the scenery described and of places visited. Several of the drawings bear the initials R D.
Journal, day-books and an autograph book of William Scott of Raeburn (1773-1855).
Journal entitled 'Notes of a Visit to the Hebrides and Walking Excursion through the Highlands in July and August 1819'.
The journal is unsigned, but the text indicates that the writer was an Irishman living in Glasgow or Greenock. Inside the front cover is written in pencil 'Mr Jn. Gordon'. The journal is a connected narrative interspersed with scenic descriptions of places such as Glen Farigaig, the falls of Foyers (folios 55-61) and Glencoe (folios 70-72). It is incomplete, ending in an unfinished sentence when the travellers had arrived at Greenock, one day's journey from the writer's home.
Journal (in Italian) of Arabella Graham Clark.
Documenting an expedition in Switzerland.
‘Journal in Scotland, August, 1870’ by Edmund Gosse, being the record of a tour in the Hebrides and central Highlands, addressed to the author's father, who financed the trip.
The journal concludes with the words, 'So came to an end this glorious outing, for the great pleasure and profit of which I owe most hearty thanks to the best of Fathers that ever lived'. It was on this tour that Edmund Gosse met Robert Louis Stevenson, but there is no mention of the meeting in the journal.
Journal, January-October 1887, of John M Walker, engineer on the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition of H.M. Stanley.
John Walker, from Kilmarnock, had previous experience on the Congo. The journal covers his voyage from Southampton to Cape Town, where he met H.M. Stanley, thence to the Congo, and the steamship operations to convey the expedition into the interior.
Journal kept by David Livingston from August 1862 to February 1863, describing the ascent of the rivers Rovuma and Shire, with accounts of the country and people passed; illustrated with diagrams and sketches.
Journal kept by Sir William Forbes, 6th Baronet, of Pitsligo, of a tour taken on the Continent with his wife and daughter.
Consists of volumes i-vii. The route taken was; Edinburgh, Tunbridge Wells, Belgium, the Rhine, Frankfort, Bavaria, Tyrol, Naples (several months), Rome (two months), and home by much the same route as before, only by Stuttgart and Heidelberg.
Journal kept by William Cospatrick Hume of tours in Switzerland in 1853 and 1857 and in South Germany and the Tyrol, 1856.
Journal kept by William Maxwell, managing director of R and R Clark, the Edinburgh printers, on a trip to the United States and Canada in October and November 1932.
The volumes contain carbon copies of diary-letters to a friend in Edinburgh, of which folios 51-65 are duplicated in MS.9759 by the retention of the originals. The journal contains a description of the sea voyage and the social life of his tour, but is notable for its detailed descriptions of visits to printing houses, particularly Donnelley's of Chicago (MS.9759, folios 51-65) and the Government Printing Office, Washington (MS.9760, folios 1-29).
Journal of a caravan tour in the Scottish Highlands by Elsie Jollyman, illustrated with photographs.
Journal of A Coaching Tour in Scotland.
Journal of a continental tour of Andrew MacInnes.
Journal of a continental tour of Lady Mary Christopher Nisbet Hamilton
Journal of a Continental tour written by a traveller of Scottish descent and with Scottish connections.
Journal of a cruise through the Western Isles, Scotland, in the `Spey` and `Echo` personal boats, by Hugh Tennent and dedicated to Robert Tennent.
"Journal of a few days from home in the summer of 1856 with selected poetry and songs".
Journal of `A few weeks among the Blue-bells of Scotland, memoranda of men, manners and mountains above the Tweed`
Journal of a Miss Ewbank of York, covering the period 9 September 1803 to 11 September, 1805.
The narrative opens with an account of a tour in the Lake District and the Yorkshire Dales, but most of the text is concerned with social life in York. The writer was a niece of the Reverend Andrew Ewbank, rector of Londesborough, Yorkshire, and many entries relate to his family. Amongst prominent personalities are Miss Elizabeth Hamilton, the novelist, and Dr Henry Moyes, a blind Scottish lecturer on popular science. A few pages have been torn out.
Journal of `A Month in Scotland by M`, Rev. J.J. Twist, Rector of Holy Innocents Church, Manchester.
Journal of a Scotsman, concerning travels in Mauritius, Madagascar, and Zanzibar.
Journal of a sea voyage from Edinburgh to Aberdeen, Banff and Montrose by John K Sim.
Journal of a tour in England and Scotland from August to October 1790, by an unnamed writer.
The writer is not named but was apparently a young lady travelling with her brother and friends from Hampshire. She gives brief descriptions of the places visited which included Nottingham, the Lake District and Edinburgh; from here they toured the Highlands via Stirling, Inveraray and Loch Lomond before returning south through York and Peterborough.