Consists of a photocopy of a paper presented at a symposium on Gynecologic Endocrinology (19 Mar 1964) with a copy of a letter about the paper and pages referring to a related study.
The paper was written by Robert A. Wilson, Raimondo E. Brevetti, Edmund R. Marino, Thelma A. Wilson and Gretchen I. Wilson (Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Methodist Hospital, Brooklyn, New York).
Willow Place was a continuation of Willow Walk to the east of Fair Street. The south side of Willow Place was built upon Ropemaker's Close which was allotted to the College by the Barnwell Inclosure Award. The north side of Willow Place was part of the south verge of Newmarket Road and belonged to various owners. The name survives to denote a passage leading to the service roads at the back of the Grafton Centre, but the site of these houses is now under the western car park
Printed letter from Francis, Webster and Riches regarding the collection of the Willingham Rectorial Tithe-Rent Charge. The letter asks Mr George Cockle to attend the George Inn, Willingham, on behalf of Jesus College on Thursday 19th January 1865 to pay the amount due. Total rent charge equals £2 8s 5d, including the rent-change as in apportionment and the average increase. The note also includes annotation of tenants' names and rents: Tebbutt and W. Harvey [?].
Letter from John Francis Gleaves (collector) to Jesus College. informing that he will be in Willingham on 5 January to collect Tithe Rent-Charge due on 1 October 1904. Handwritten sum in the corner of £34 1s and 8d.
Received of Dr Witterey 14 shillings for half a year's land tax charged on the estate of the Master and Fellows of Jesus College at Willingham, due last March. Signed by William Smith, collector.
Of D Whittlney fourteen shillings from half a year's land tax charged charged on the estate of the Master and Fellows of Jesus College at Willingham due last Lady Day. Signed by William Smith, Collector.
Land and assessed taxes (only assessed for land tax), Willingham, Cambridge. Received of Mr O. Whittlesey for Jesus College, 27th November 1857, 14 shillings, for two quarters' taxes due 20th September 1857. Signed C Underwood, collector.
Land tax for Willingham, Cambridge. Received of O. Whittlesey for Jesus College, 27th April 1858, the sum of 14 s. for two quarters' taxes due 20th March 1858. Signed C Underwood, collector.
Income tax, 1857-8, first moiety. Willingham. Received of Mr O Whittlesey for Jesus College the sum of 7s 10 1/2d on 30th JUne 1858, for two quarters' income tax due 20th September 1857. Signed C Underwood, collector.
Income tax, 1857-8, second moiety. Willingham. Received of Mr Whittlesey for Jesus College, 27th July 1858, 7s 10 1/2d for two quarters' income tax due 20th March 1858. Schedule A. Signed C. Underwood.
Land and assessed taxes 1857-8, second moiety, parish of Willingham, Cambridge. Received of Mr Robert Ellis for Jesus College, April 1858, the sum of £1 8s. 3d. for two quarters' taxes due 20th march 1858. Assessed only for land tax. Signed G. Underwood, collector.
Received 4th December 1859 from Robert Ellis the sum of £1 3s 3d. for the first instalment of tax for the year 1858 for fen land in Cottenham Level belonging to the Master of Jesus College. Signed J. Haid, receiver.
Received 2nd April 1859 of Robert Ellis the sum of £1 3s 3d, the second instalment of income tax for the year 1858, for fen land in Cottenham level.
Land and assessed taxes, 1858-9, first moiety, parish of Willingham, Cambridge. Received of Mr R. Ellis for Jesus College the 5th October 1858, the sum of £1 8s 3d. for two quarters' taxes due 20th September 1858. Signed C. Underwood, collector.
Income tax, 1857-8, first moiety, parish of Willingham, Cambridge. Received of Mr Robert Ellis, for Jesus College, June 1858, the sum of 13s 3d. for two quarters' income tax, due 20th September 1857. Signed C. Underwood, collector.
Income tax 1857-8, second moiety, Willingham. Received of Mr R. Ellis for Jesus College, 30th July 1858, the sum of 13s 3d for two quarters' income tax due 20th March 1858. Signed C. Underwood, collector.
Received 2nd April 1858, from Robert Ellis, the sum of £12 as the second instalment of tax for the year 1858, for 5 A(cres) 3 R(ods) 1 P. of fen land in Cottenham Level belonging to Jesus College. Signed Haid, receiver.
Received 4th December 1857 of Robert Ellis, the sum of £12 as the first instalment of tax for the year 1857, for 5A, 3R 1P of fen land in Cottenham level belonging to Jesus College. Signed Haid, collector.
Letter to Jesus College stating: I have surveyed the above property which comprises the yeard (approached from King street) on one side of which is a range of sheds, also a thatched barn, wheelwright's and blacksmith's shop - the whole of which I estimate at thirty pounds per annum
The album contains snapshot photographs of fellow Jesuans as the First World War begins. There are also photographs of 'Jesus Lines' at an Officer Training Camp showing Jesuans some of whom died during the Great War. Nevill himself was killed during the attack on Montaubin at the Battle of the Somme on the 1 July 1916.
Many photographs have been removed from the album, the remainder are as follows:
Howard in the drawing room [missing]
Majorie & Barbara [missing]
Woodroffe in Pump Court
Richardson; Miller; McLoughlin; Woodroffe and Higgins
Pump Court
Chapel Court
New Buildings
Cloister Court
Master's Garden & Chapel
Clare Kings
Trinity Bridge
George's hat, Woodroffe
Self, Gstaad [missing]
Tom [missing]
Self [missing]
Woodroffe & Passingham on my bedroom balcony
Daibuler; Searing & Maurice [missing]
D.;H.;N.S.;T.;M.;E. Holmbury [missing]
A.F. Wildings VI v. Varsity
Elsie; N.S. and Holmbury [missing]
Mason; N.S.; 'Snippets' Morrison; H.N.; George and W.P.N.
A.F. Wilding
Woods near Holmbury [missing]
Beaumont Manor [missing]
Maisie P.; D.; N.S.; D.G. And E. [missing]
View from Gstaad to Saanen [missing]
Maisie P. [missing]
Untitled
May Week 1914, Jesus III
May Week 1914, The End
May Week 1914, View in May week
May Week 1914, Jesus II
May Week 1914, Johnny; Jasper Holmes and K.S Rudd
May Week 1914, Ridley; Eric Fairbairn
May Week 1914, Jesus I Head
May Week 1914, Bell; Livingstone; Bullough; Fisher and Oldham
Bugatti, John Miller up
Hispano Suisa, Higgins up
Rover J. L-G [Le Gros] up, also Hamel
TT Triumph, Richardson up
Destroyer & Review in distance
Hamel at Cambridge
Finish of coaching marathon at Richmond, Vanderbilt's team
'Lord Duck!' Richardson
Elsie, Doff [missing]
D.;H.;N.S.;T.;M. and E. [missing]
Captain Herring [missing]
Rough [missing]
Friday Street [missing]
Holmbury St Marys [missing]
Chapel Court
Master's Garden & Chapel
Tennyson's House
Same back view [missing]
G. L-G [Le Gros] at 51 M.C.
Self's ghost on drawing room [missing]
Lord Duck punting, Woodroffe
Arthur Bond at Beaumont, the morning after [missing]
'Geoff' Bradley
'Dick' Piper
'Johnny'; C. Brockmer; Lowe; 'Sticks'and Woodroffe [and others]
Comprises correspondence with William Glazier (Associate Dean of Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York) about Glazier's involvement with the Salk Institute, including being part of the Commission on Biology, Medicine and Health Care, and declining the invitation to be Executive Director of the Council [for Biology in Human Affairs]. Includes letters from Glazier to Joseph Slater (Anderson Foundation) and Stuart Ross (Salk Institute).
Correspondence of bust of Frend in the Old Library, including notes on donation to the College by Philothea Thompson in 1962 and relating to its being photographed in 1964. Includes photograph of bust.
Three letters from Grain, Moyes & Wisbey (Auctioneers, Surveyors & Land Agents) to J. H. H. Goodwin (Bursar) advising on the tenancy agreement to let three acres previously occupied by Mr Solly to William Doe
Comprises slides for Bronowski's lecture on 'The Minute Particulars of William Blake', the original box (stored separately) and an annotated list of slides.
Comprises: an annotated script of 'The Prophetic Books of William Blake' radio programme by Bronowski (produced by Douglas Cleverdon, BBC Third Programme, 25 Jan 1951); an annotated script for 'Invention and Imagination 1. William Blake' radio programme by Bronowski (BBC Third Programme, 9 Oct 1946); a letter from William Heinemann publishers on promoting ['William Blake: A Man Without a Mask']; an annotated typescript and published copy from 'Literary Guide' (vol. 69, no. 6, Jun 1954) of 'The Mystical Quest of William Blake' by Bronowski; an annotated typescript of 'William Blake, 1757-1827' for publication in 'The Nation' (Nov 1957); [an earlier] annotated typescript on William Blake; [an introduction] by Bronowski for a publication of Blake's 'Songs of Innocence'; a typescript of Bronowski's introduction to 'William Blake: A Selection of Poems and Letters' edited by Bronowski; a typescript of 'William Blake, 1757-1827' sent to the Daily Express 'Books and Art' section (24 Sep 1957); a typescript and press cutting of a review by Bronowski of 'William Blake's illustrations to the Bible: A catalogue compiled by Geoffrey Keynes' (Dec 1957); a typescript review for publication in 'The Listener' of 'Symbol and Image in William Blake' by George Wingfield Digby and 'The Complete writings of William Blake with all the Variant Readings' edited by Geoffrey Keynes (25 Nov 1957); a typescript review for publication in 'New Statesman' (Nov 1957) of Keynes' volume of Blake writings and 'The Divine Vision' edited by Vivian de sola Pinto; a message and foreword written for an exhibition at Battersea Public Library to commemorate the bicentenary of William Blake's birth; reports by Bronowski on 'The Great Antinomian: A Study in the Sources of William Blake' by A L Morton (21 Jan 1958) and 'William Blake, The Politics of Vision' by Mark Schorer (2 Oct 1959); a press cutting of 'William Blake's Visions: Myth and Symbol' by Kathleen Raine (Manchester Guardian, 23 Nov 1957); a typed extract from 'Blake Studies' by Geoffrey Keynes (1949); and notes and press cuttings relating to Blake.
Mainly comprises correspondence with Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd (publishers, London) relating to the publication and promotion of 'William Blake and the Age of Revolution' (Mar 1972).
Also includes: copies of correspondence with Nature (journal) and Doubleday & Company Inc. on publication of Bronowski's 'The Identity of Man' lectures; a letter from [Brian Southam] (Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd) about a book he had written on [T. S.] Eliot; correspondence with Reverend Bernard Hall (The Methodist Church, St Pauls, Bristol) on brass manufacture, the Baptist Mills in Bristol and William Blake; 'RKP Books News' announcing the publication of 'William Blake and the Age of Revolution' by Routledge & Kegan Paul; photocopies of the proof dust jacket for the Routledge & Kegan Paul edition of 'William Blake and the Age of Revolution'; and press cuttings about the publication of 'William Blake and the Age of Revolution'.
Additionally includes correspondence with Dieter Pevsner and Sir Allen Lane (Penguin Books Ltd), Alan Hill (Heinemann Educational Books), and Robert Lusty (Hutchinson Publishing Group) on possibly publishing the English edition of 'William Blake and the Age of Revolution'.
Comprises notes and annotated photocopies [used to prepare the bibliography of a biography of William Blake that Bronowski wrote for the Encyclopaedia Britannica].
Comprises correspondence relating to a biography of William Blake that Bronowski wrote for the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Also includes annotated galley proofs and a typescript of the article, and copies of articles on Blake by other authors.
Contains biographical information including article from the Daily Telegraph, 9th November 1991 and extract from 'Ackerley: A life of I. R. Ackerley', London, 1989 by Peter Parker.
Includes three letters written to John William Whittaker of St. John's, two concerning the death of Jesus student Charles William Atkinson who died on 17th March 1815. The first, dated 15th March 1815, is from Charles Atkinson's sister Eliza Sarah Atkinson and she asks for Whittaker to inform her of any change in condition of her brother's health. The second, dated 25th March 1815, is from Atkinson's father William Atkinson (also Jesus, matriculated 1775), writing to Whittaker concerning his son's death and recounts those who attended the funeral including Dent, Edward Peacopp (Queens) and Caldwell. Also describes his sons burial place as being in the Chapel on the right as you enter and adjoining the wall of the cloisters. Atkinson further mentions that ten or eleven other students in Cambridge appear to have died from the same fever as his son at the same time and that students were discouraged from attending the funeral for fear of spread of the disease. The third letter, dated 17th October 1824, is written by William Atkinson to Whittaker asking if he could 'inroduce' his second son, Joseph Milner Atkinson of Catherine Hall into the church.