Letters. Correspondence.
Found in 753 Collections and/or Records:
Article, "Junius", by David Coulton. The article has been extracted from the "Quarterly Review" and is bound with letters of various writers to John Murray III, John Murray IV, William Smith and Robert Cooke concerning the article., 1851-1852, 1904.
Correspondence and other material relating to 'Astarte', by Ralph Milbanke, 2nd Earl of Lovelace, and Byron correspondence in the possession of Lady Dorchester., 1902-1957, undated.
Correspondence and other material relating to the article 'True history of Lady Byron's life', in the 'Atlantic', by Harriet Beecher-Stowe., 1869-1870, 1909.
Correspondence between John Murray, publishers, and various printing firms concerning the 1885 edition of "The Moon Considered as a Planet, a World, and a Satellite", by James Nasmyth and James Carpenter., 1883-1885.
Correspondence concerning a short biography of Austen Henry Layard published by Cassell’s in its ‘Famous lives’ series; with a receipt relating to an autobiography of Layard., 1924-1925.
This folder has been arranged chronologically.
Letter of Harold Wheeler to Louis Charles Du Cane, 1924: folio 1;
Letter of John Murray [IV] to Louis Charles Du Cane, 1924: folio 2;
Copy of a letter of Louis Charles Du Cane to Harold Wheeler, 1924: folios 3-4;
Receipt probably of John Murray [IV] to Louis Charles Du Cane for a reading fee for ‘Layard’s autobiography’, 1925: folio 5.
Correspondence concerning memoirs of Austen Henry Layard., 1900-1925, undated.
Forged letters and manuscripts of Lord Byron; with correspondence and notes relating to the forgeries and to George Gordon Du Luna Byron., 1841-2004, undated.
Fragments of letters, mostly undated, to John Murray, publishers, of Henry Pullen; with miscellaneous letters and papers concerning Pullen and the editorship of “Murray’s Handbooks for Travellers”., ? 1883-? 1903.
Incomplete manuscript, "Indian Island", by Letitia Landon., ? 1836-1896.
John Murray Family Papers., 1877-1996
Letters and notes concerning the publication by John Murray of 'Works of Lord Byron'., 1896-1915.
Letters, assignments and receipts concerning the sale of papers and copyrights relating to Lord Byron., Undated.
Letters concerning Lord Byron of various correspondents to John Murray, publishers., 1880-1923, undated.
Letters mostly of Lord Byron to John Murray II., 1811-1813, 1901-1902.
Letters mostly to George Prothero as editor of the ‘Quarterly Review’ of correspondents with surnames M-R., 1900-1917.
Letters of and concerning George Crabbe, with a lock of Crabbe`s hair., 1794-1863, 1926.
Letters of and to Lord Byron concerning Newstead Abbey; with letters of the Webb family of Newstead Abbey mainly to John Murray, publishers., 1779-1975.
Letters of Archibald Constable and Co., publishers, and Constable and Co. Limited, publishers, to John Murray, publishers, with related papers., 1897, 1915-1917, 1928.
Letter, 3 August 1897, of Archibald Constable and Co. to John Murray IV. Folio 1.
Correspondence, 1915-1917 and 1928, between W.M. Meredith of Constable and Co. Limited and John Murray IV. Also included is a letter (folio 8) of O. Kyllmann, of Constable and Co. Limited, to John Murray IV. The letters include information concerning the Publishers’ Association, and the acquisition of Smith Elder and Co. by John Murray, publishers. Folios 2-21.
Letters of Austen Henry Layard to John Murray III, John Murray IV and Hallam Murray., 1848-1894.
Letters of Austen Henry Layard to John Murray III, to John Murray IV and to Hallam Murray., 1838-1893.
Letters of Elizabeth Eastlake to John Murray III and to John Murray IV., 1880-1893.
Letters of Enid Layard to Hallam Murray and to John Murray IV., 1891-1907.
Letters of Frederick Blackwood to John Murray III and to John Murray IV. Included are a typescript copy of an extract from a letter of Blackwood; a letter of Helen Hay to John Murray III, and an advertisement for "Chappell and Cos New and Popular Songs"., 1890-1902.
The typescript is of an extract from a letter of Blackwood in which he expresses fully the merits of his trusted servant, Frederick Nowell.