- ‘The Drift. Sannah's Post. Col. M. Smyth V.C’.
- ‘Ditto’.
- ‘LadySmith’.
- ‘36 Gun Hill and Bulwana’.
- ‘80L. Under Ceasar Hill.’
- ‘41 Artillery horses undercover in the river bed’.
Note on page: 'Photographs from R.H. Lowe late Adams Chemist Ladysmith.
- '42 Untombi Camp with Caesar Hill in background’.
- ‘Lombards kopdry Gun Hill Ladysmith 752’.
- ‘149. Boers in camp’.
- ‘28. Our Sleeping Quarters’.
Personal and military papers of William Edward Parsons, Major Lord Oxmantown, (from 1908 the fifth earl of Rosse) including commissions; illuminated addresses from the Heaton and Shipley tenants on his coming-of-age, 1894; and from the Birr Parish Vestry on his marriage, 1905; a fairly savage attack on him in The Midland Tribune at the time of his return from the Boer War in 1900 to join the newly formed Irish Regiment; letters from him to Toler R. Garvey during the Boer War and the first World War; a page recording the signatures of Lord Oxmantown and other Irish notabilities who attended a shoot at Ashford, Cong, Co. Mayo; during a visit by the Prince of Wales, 1905; and the fifth earl’s London address book, 1911.
Also includes copy of his birth certificate (1873); commissions and applications to Officers’ Reserve (1908); appeal to be allowed to appear before Medical Board in Dublin, not London (1916); detailed medical reports on the extent of his wound, by shell to the head, where a palm-sized piece missing, damage to his speech, comprehension and gait causing 80% disability with epileptic attacks; his death certificate plus further obituary of the fifth earl by Michael Pegum prepared for the Kildare St and University Club for publication in a book of memorials to those members of the Club who gave their lives in WWI and WWII (2010).
Includes letters to Toler R. Garvey (‘Rob’) from the front describing poisonous gas attacks in the trenches (26 April 1915 and 11 May 1915).
Untitled- ‘The Drift. Waterworks. Sannah's Post’.
- ‘The Drift near Waterworks’.
- ‘Sangar on Ceasar Hill for Naval Gun’.
- ‘Capt. Walton Natal Carabiniers. Another view of same position. Our position was on Ridge, behind the monument. The open plateau in between (a couple of hundred yards) separated this contestants and it was across it that the final charge of the Devons was made. This picture shows well the cover the rocks provided for the Boers’.
- ‘122. Spion Kop proper’.
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- Majuba and the Railway’.
- ‘Spion's Kop Natal Jan 24th. 1900, 107 our dead on Spion Kop’.
- ‘35 Hospital on Market Square’.
- ‘The drift Sannah's post. Col. Neville Smyth V.C. Comd. The Carabiniers’.
- ‘Ditto’.
- ‘The Ridge Waggon Hill. Lady Smith. It was on this slope - behind these boulder rocks - facing towards the monument that the Boers made their attack and held out all day till driven back by the famous charge of the Devons. Had the Devons failed, the Boers would have captured Waggon Hill and Ladysmith must have fallen. It is therefore one of the most classical lots of ground in S. Africa. My friend Captain Walton Natal Carabiniers is shown emerging from behind a rock’.