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Publishers for the People: W. § R. Chambers — the Early Years, 1832-18S0
I I 71-17,976 COONEY, Sondra Miley, 1936- PUBLISHERS FOR THE PEOPLE: W. § R. CHAMBERS — THE EARLY YEARS, 1832-18S0. The Ohio State University, Ph.D., 1970 Language and Literature, general University Microfilms, A XEROXCompany , Ann Arbor, Michigan © Copyright by Sondra Miley Cooney 1971 PUBLISHERS FOR THE PEOPLE: W. & R. CHAMBERS THE EARLY YEARS, 1832-1850 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Sondra Miley Cooney, B.A., A.M. The Ohio State University 1970 Approved by Adviser Department of English ACKNOWLEDGMENTS X wish to thank first those to whom I am indebted in Scotland. Had it not been for the assistance and co-operation of Mr. Antony S. Chambers, chairman of W. & R. Chambers Ltd, this study would never have become a reality. Not only did he initially give an unknown American permission to study the firm's archives, but he has subsequently provided whatever I needed to facilitate my research. Gracious and generous, he is a worthy descendent of the first Robert Chambers. All associated with the Chambers firm— directors and warehousemen alike— played an important part in my research, from answering technical queries to helping unearth records almost forgotten. Equally helpful in their own way were the librarians of the University of Edinburgh Library and the National Library of Scotland. Finally, the people of Edinburgh made a signif icant, albeit indirect, contribution. From them I learned something of what it means to a Scot to be a Scot. In this country I owe my greatest debt to my adviser, Professor Richard D. -
S7ilut€ to J. M. Smith
$i.2j per copy Winter y ig6j S7ILUT€ TO J. M . SMITH Articles BY A. J. M. SMITH, Ε ARLE BIRNEY, MILTON WILSON, ROY FULLER, MARILYN DA V I E S , ALVIN LEE, WILLIAM TOYE Reviews BY WILFRED WATSON, ALBERT TUCKER, INGLIS F . BELL, HUGO MCPHERSON, MARGARET LAURENCE, Ε. Μ. MANDEL, PHYLLIS WEBB AND OTHERS Annual Supplement CANADIAN LITERATURE CHECKLIST, 1962 A QUARTERLY OF CRITICISM AND R€VI€W SMITH'S HUNDRED THIS ISSUE of Canadian Literature is in part a celebration occasioned by the publication of the Collected Poems of A. J. M. Smith1, one of Canada's important writers and, since the 1930's, a poet of international repute. It is an act of homage, but just as much a conversation in which various writers, including the poet himself, express their views on his achievement; as becomes evident, it is an achievement by no means confined to the hundred poems which Smith at this time has chosen to represent him. Earle Birney, who has known A. J. M. Smith ever since the early days of the renaissance of Canadian poetry during our generation, speaks of his virtues as a leader in a literary move- ment and as an anthologist who has used his trade to help shape the Canadian literary consciousness. The distinguished English poet Roy Fuller who, like the editor of this magazine, appeared beside A. J. M. Smith in the English poetry magazines of the 1930's (New Verse and Twentieth Century Verse), takes up the thread again and examines Smith's poetic achievement as a whole. -
NPS 0373B, Part 2
2.5. Wixenford Bottom and Farm History Like Pomphlett Barton, Wixenford was owned by the Dukes of Bedford until the early nineteenth century but had been acquired by the Earl of Morley before 1841 when it is recorded in his freehold on the Plymstock tithe award. Although it may not have been secured immediately, in the negotiations of 1805-06, Lord Boringdon showed a particular desire to secure Wixenford as well as Pomphlett Barton, as part of his efforts to secure the complete visual envelope of Saltram, and because of the access the valley affords into the heart of the Saltram landscape (DRO, L1258M/SS/C/DL101). The planting has been identified as c1770 (NPA, 1999, 42). A narrow band of tree- planting along the road between the farm and the eastern end of the creek which became Chelson Meadow is recorded as early as 1785 [see Fig.16]. By 1809, it appears to have been planted with two more substantial strips of woodland on either side of its valley [Fig.26]. The 1869 Ordnance Survey appears to show tree- plantingalong both the centre and on the slopes although the 1881 OS does not make such a distinction. The 1869 OS also indicates a drive running down the centre, lined with trees. It certainly shows a drive on the north side of the valley running along the edge of the plantation and the open fields. This is shown to be a metalled surface on the 1881 OS. The 1907 OS indicates both the metalled drive and a less formal drive along the edge of the stream in the bottom of the valley, the two drives meeting at the northern end of the valley, where a wall crosses the valley, with a gate to allow the drive through [Fig.27]. -
Plym Valley Connections Heritage Lottery Fund Project
Designers of the London 2012 Olympic Parklands PLYM VALLEY CONNECTIONS HERITAGE LOTTERY FUND PROJECT LANDSCAPE CHARACTER AND HERITAGE ASSESSMENT AUGUST 2013 CONTENTS 1.0 FOREWORD 5 2.0 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 8 3.0 INTRODUCTION 10 4.0 APPROACH TO THE LCHA 12 5.0 METHODOLOGY 14 5.1. Guidance and Sources of Information 14 5.2. Study Area 15 6.0 OVERVIEW OF ASSESSMENT THEMES 16 6.1. Introduction 16 6.2. Physical Landscape and Natural Heritage 16 6.3. Cultural Heritage 22 6.4. People, Access and Places 30 6.5. Drivers for Change 33 7.0 LANDSCAPE CHARACTER AREAS 34 1. Coastal and Tidal Waters Landscape Character Type 36 2. Open Coastal Plateau and Cliffs Landscape Character Type 42 3. Lowland Plain Landscape Character Type 44 4. Wooded Valley and Farmland Landscape Character Type 46 5. Upland Fringes Landscape Character Type 54 6. Upland Moorland Landscape Character Type 62 7. Urban Landscape Character type 64 8.0 PROPOSED HLF BOUNDARY AND CONSIDERATIONS 66 9.0 CONCLUSIONS 68 APPENDICES 71 Appendix 1. Workshop Summary Findings Appendix 2. List of Significant Heritage Assets Appendix 3. Gazetteer of Environmental Assets Appendix 4. Landscape Character Overview FIGURES 4 1.0 FOREWORD “The longer one stays here the more does the spirit of the moor sink into one’s soul, its vastness, and also its grim charm. When you are once out upon its bosom you have left all traces of modern England behind you, but, on the other hand, you are conscious everywhere of the homes and the work of the prehistoric people. -
Leslie's Directory for Perth and Perthshire
»!'* <I> f^? fI? ffi tfe tI» rl? <Iy g> ^I> tf> <& €l3 tf? <I> fp <fa y^* <Ti* ti> <I^ tt> <& <I> tf» *fe jl^a ^ ^^ <^ <ft ^ <^ ^^^ 9* *S PERTHSHIRE COLLECTION including KINROSS-SHIRE These books form part of a local collection permanently available in the Perthshire Room. They are not available for home reading. In some cases extra copies are available in the lending stock of the Perth and Kinross District Libraries. fic^<fac|3g|jci»^cpcia<pci><pgp<I>gpcpcx»q»€pcg<I»4>^^ cf>' 3 ^8 6 8 2 5 TAMES M'NICOLL, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, 10 ST. JOHN STREET, TID "XT' "IIP rri "tur .ADIES' GOODS IN SILK, SATIN, KID, AND MOROCCO. lENT.'S HUNTING, SHOOTING, WALKING, I DRESS, IN KID AND PATENT. Of the Newest and most Fashionable Makes, £ THE SCOTTISH WIDOWS' FUNDS AND REVENUE. The Accumulated Funds exceed £9,200,000 The Annual Revenue exceeds 1,100,000 The Largest Funds and Revenue possessed by any Life Assurance Institution in the United Kingdom. THE PROFITS are ascertained Septennially and divided among the Members in Bonus Addi- tions to their Policies, computed in the corrfpoundioxva.^ i.e., on Original Sums Assured and previous Bonus Additions attaching to the Policy—an inter- mediate Bonus being also added to Claims between Divisions ; thus, practically an ANNUAL DIVISION OF PROFITS is made among the Policyholders, founded on the ample basis of seven years' operations, yielding to each his equitable share down to date of death, in respect of every Premium paid since the date of the policy. -
Saltram House: the Evolution of an Eighteenth-Century Country Estate
University of Plymouth PEARL https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk 04 University of Plymouth Research Theses 01 Research Theses Main Collection 2020 Saltram House: The Evolution of an Eighteenth-Century Country Estate Norley, Katherine R http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/16730 University of Plymouth All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law. Author manuscripts are made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the details provided on the item record or document. In the absence of an open licence (e.g. Creative Commons), permissions for further reuse of content should be sought from the publisher or author. Saltram House: The Evolution of an Eighteenth-Century Country Estate By Katherine R Norley A thesis submitted to the University of Plymouth in partial fulfilment for the degree of RESEARCH MASTERS School of Humanities and Performing Arts December 2020 1 This copy of the thesis has been supplied on condition that anyone who consults it is understood to recognise that its copyright rests with its author and that no quotation from the thesis and no information derived from it may be published without the author’s prior consent. 2 Author’s Declaration At no time during the registration for the degree of Research Masters has the author been registered for any other University award without prior agreement of the Doctoral College Quality Sub-Committee. Work Submitted for this research degree at the University of Plymouth has not formed part of any other degree either at the University of Plymouth or at another establishment. This study was financed with the aid of government funding. -
List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007
Library and Information Services List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007 A - J Library and Information Services List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007 A complete listing of all Fellows and Foreign Members since the foundation of the Society A - J July 2007 List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007 The list contains the name, dates of birth and death (where known), membership type and date of election for all Fellows of the Royal Society since 1660, including the most recently elected Fellows (details correct at July 2007) and provides a quick reference to around 8,000 Fellows. It is produced from the Sackler Archive Resource, a biographical database of Fellows of the Royal Society since its foundation in 1660. Generously funded by Dr Raymond R Sackler, Hon KBE, and Mrs Beverly Sackler, the Resource offers access to information on all Fellows of the Royal Society since the seventeenth century, from key characters in the evolution of science to fascinating lesser- known figures. In addition to the information presented in this list, records include details of a Fellow’s education, career, participation in the Royal Society and membership of other societies. Citations and proposers have been transcribed from election certificates and added to the online archive catalogue and digital images of the certificates have been attached to the catalogue records. This list is also available in electronic form via the Library pages of the Royal Society web site: www.royalsoc.ac.uk/library Contributions of biographical details on any Fellow would be most welcome. -
Devon Tourism: the Story of the County's Economic Leviathan
University of Plymouth PEARL https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences Devon Tourism: the story of the county's economic leviathan Essex, SJ http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/13075 Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and the Arts All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law. Author manuscripts are made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the details provided on the item record or document. In the absence of an open licence (e.g. Creative Commons), permissions for further reuse of content should be sought from the publisher or author. 1 ESSEX, S. & BRAYSHAY, M. (2018) Devon Tourism: the story of the county’s economic leviathan, Transactions of the Devonshire Association, 150, 177-222. Devon Tourism: The Story of the County’s Economic Leviathan Stephen Essex, BA, PhD, FRGS, MHEA, MRTPI and Mark Brayshay, BA, PhD School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth Over the past 149 volumes of these Transactions, fewer than half a dozen papers have focused directly on tourism in Devon. Given its key role in shaping the county’s history, landscape and infrastructure, and its contemporary social and economic character, such a dearth of studies is striking and contrasts with the burgeoning body of scholarly work on Devon tourism aired elsewhere. The aim of this paper is to offer a broad, benchmark review of the origins, historical growth and changing character, as well as the contemporary state and future prospects, of tourism in the county. -
Postgraduate Prospectus 2019
POSTGRADUATE PROSPECTUS 2019 At the heart of our Graduate School lies a culture of opportunity, innovation and enterprise, fuelled by a diverse and inclusive social community that has ambitions to shape a better world. B Queen’s University Belfast – Postgraduate Prospectus 2019 Queen’s University Belfast – Postgraduate Prospectus 2019 C WELCOME WELCOME TO Thank you for considering joining us at Queen’s QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY University Belfast for your postgraduate studies. Queen’s is an exciting place. A place that delivers both local and BELFAST international impact. This makes us a global top 200 university*, based in Belfast, a modern capital city known for its welcome, accessibility and affordability as well as being a vibrant hub for the creative and tech sectors. It is a great place to live and work. We are immensely proud of what our city and our university will offer you. CONTENTS 3 Why Postgraduate Study at Queen’s? From the day you arrive at Queen’s, you will be part of a world-class international university with a thriving 4 The Graduate School 43 Postgraduate Taught postgraduate culture built on teaching excellence, leading- 7 Your Future Career 45 A–Z of Postgraduate Taught Programmes edge research, innovation, collaboration and engagement. 9 World-Class Facilities 83 A–Z of Professional Doctorates These components are woven together in our Graduate 10 Support Services School to deliver a truly integrated experience. 87 Postgraduate Research Programmes 11 A Global Experience 89 Your Postgraduate Research Journey You will receive an educational experience that is research-led, 13 Research with Global Impact to Queen's learning from academics who are global leaders in their field, Global Research Institutes and you will benefit from a range of academic and professional 15 91 Postgraduate Research opportunities available through our global connections. -
Parliamentary Directory, 1899. 2884
PEERS PARLIAMENTARY DIRECTORY, 1899. 2884 PEERS. A L P H A B ET I C A L L Y A R RA N G B D. N A M }: S 0 F M I N 0 R 8 0 M I T T E D F R 0 M T B I S L I S T. SPEAJn::a.-The Lord Chancellor for the time being. CHAIRMAN 01' COMMITTEE!! & DEPUTY SPEAKER.-The Earl of Morley, P.C. Created. ! Created. 1868. Aberoorn Duke of, in the Peerage of Ireland, sits as SW; Kildare Street & University (Dublin) clubs; & 12 Marquess of .Abercorn (1790) in that of Great Britain, lierrion square north, Dublin K.G .• P.C., c. B. Lord Lieutenant of eo. Donegal, Groom 1730 . .Ash burn ham Earl of, .Athenreum & Travellers' clubs SW; of the Stole to the Prince of Wales, 60 & 61 Green Ashburnham place, Battle. ISussex; Barking h&!l, lltreet, Grosvenor square W; Carlton, Travellers·, NeedhamMarket,Sulfollr; &Pernbrey,Carma.rthenshin! Turf & Marlborough clubs; Barons court, Newtown 1836. Ashburton Lord, Carlton & Arthur'a clubs SW; Stewart, Ireland ; & Duddingstone, N. B Bachelors' club W; & The Grange, .Alresford, Hantll 1801. Abercromby Lord, 14 Groavenor lltreet W; Ferntower, 11892. Ashoombe Lord, P.c. Hon. Col. 2nd Volunteer Batt. Crieff, Perthshire; & 'fullibody house. CJackmannan 1 R. W. Surrey Reg-iment.,17 Prince's gate SW; Carlton Ul71. A berdare Lord, 8:i ]o;aton ~quare SW; Longwood, Win· club SW; & Denbies, Dorking eh ester; & Duffryn, Mountain Ash, South Wales 1895. .Ash ton Lord, .AI ford house, Prmre's gate SW; ~on· 1082. Aberdeen Earl of, in the Peerage of !Scotland, sits u shire club SW; & Ryelands & Ashton hall, LanCil!lt~ Viscount Gordon (1814) in that of the United Kingdom, 1863 . -
British and German Textbook Publishers: a Guide to Archive Collections
(FNHUW'RVVLHUV /DUV0OOHU %ULWLVKDQG*HUPDQ7H[WERRN3XEOLVKHUV $*XLGHWR$UFKLYH&ROOHFWLRQV 'LHVH3XEOLNDWLRQZXUGHYHU|IIHQWOLFKWXQWHUGHUFUHDWLYHFRPPRQV/L]HQ] 1DPHQVQHQQXQJ.HLQH%HDUEHLWXQJ8QSRUWHG &&%<1' KWWSFUHDWLYHFRPPRQVRUJOLFHQVHVE\QG Eckert. Dossiers Georg Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research ISSN 2191-0790 Volume 12 (2017) Editors Nicola Watson, Tim Hartung and Victoria Schnitker Form for referencing: Müller, Lars. British and German Textbook Publishers: A Guide to Archive Collections. Eckert. Dossiers 12 (2017). urn:nbn:de:0220‐2017‐0162. British and German Textbook Publishers: A Guide to Archive Collections 3 Introduction Lars Müller Historic research is predominantly dependent upon access to source materials. The archives of textbook publishers contain material that has great potential for innovative new studies, but research in this area is hindered by a lack of access to these sources and by their great disparity. This archive guide aims to redress this situation. It provides brief information about existing archive collections and can act as a starting point for locating source material. In addition it represents the hope that the increasing interest in archive-based research into textbooks and educational materials will stimulate new research. Existing studies using archive material from textbook publishers have tended to focus on individual publishing houses meaning that international comparative analyses are a significant desideratum of research in this field. This archive guide primarily provides information about German and British textbook publishers. Defining which publishing houses fall into those categories is complicated by two main factors. The first of these is that many publishing houses were, and still are, international companies producing textbooks for diverse countries and regions; either through subsidiaries or agreements with local publishers. -
CHRISTOPHER HILL Copyright © British Academy 2005 – All Rights
CHRISTOPHER HILL Copyright © British Academy 2005 – all rights reserved John Edward Christopher Hill 1912–2003 CHRISTOPHER HILL was a great historian. People who question this can point to his apparent limitations. Nearly all his huge output was on the seventeenth-century ‘English Revolution’ and its origins. He seldom used manuscript records or original letters. He did not write much straight nar- rative. He said little about art or music or agriculture to add to his huge knowledge of literature. More seriously it was claimed that his Marxism, even when mellowed, led him to ignore evidence that did not support it. The ‘bourgeois revolution’ was a theme he never quite discarded but its meaning changed uneasily. None of this, even so far as it was valid, dimin- ished his great achievement—to show, largely from one period and coun- try, the role of historical studies in the sum of human knowledge. In at least twenty books and innumerable articles he made two vital additions to the old accounts of his chosen time: the impact of popular movements and the immense range of ideas written and spoken. No seventeenth- century author escaped him. No group and no person was insignificant. His regular technique was to combine close study of an individual, great or obscure, with a forthright account of the social and economic setting. His style was lucid, uncomplicated, enthusiastic. He showed that it was possible for a great historian to have a most pleasing personality, gener- ous and tolerant, warm and humorous. Belief in equality was as essential in his life as in his scholarship even when he rose to a position of power.