Oxfordshire

Área de elementos

Taxonomía

Código

Nota(s) sobre el alcance

    Nota(s) sobre el origen

      Mostrar nota(s)

        Términos jerárquicos

        Oxfordshire

        Término General South East England (Reg.)

        Oxfordshire

        Términos equivalentes

        Oxfordshire

          Términos asociados

          Oxfordshire

            90 Descripción archivística resultados para Oxfordshire

            Photograph of Doctor John Hosford.
            IE OH OHS77/4/6/29 · Unidad documental simple
            Parte de Woodfield Papers

            Photograph of Doctor John Hosford of Stratford, "father of Janie H". Printed by Jeffray Brothers, Photographers at 45 Cornhill, London, England.

            Invitation to the Coggeshall wedding.
            IE OH OHS77/5/1/19 · Unidad documental simple · 8 Feb 1912
            Parte de Woodfield Papers

            Invitation from Mister and Mrs Walter D Coggeshall to their daughter Mary Coggeshall's wedding to Douglas Ralph Home.

            IE OH OHS77/6/1/6 · Unidad documental simple · 2 Mar 1959
            Parte de Woodfield Papers

            Envelope from the editor of the British Medical Journal at BMA House, Tavistock Square, London, England, to Reverend Francis Adam Johnston Lamb at Julianstown, Drogheda, County Louth, Ireland, containing three copies of the obituary of his father Doctor Francis William Lamb from the British Medical Journal.

            "Pillars of Surgery."
            IE OH OHS77/6/3/1/24 · Unidad documental simple
            Parte de Woodfield Papers

            Pillars of Surgery, written by Sir William I de Courcy Wheeler of 40 Walpole Street, London, England. Originally published in, Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics, Volume 56, in February 1933.

            IE OCL P131/2/2/3/1 · Unidad documental compuesta · 17 April 1866
            Parte de Loughton Papers

            File of letters between Dora Turnor and her father Christopher Turnor, her mother Lady Caroline Turnor, Bertha Turnor, Graham Turnor and Cecil Turnor.

            The majority of the letters were sent to Bertha Turnor who is addressed as 'Tuz'. The letters were sent from across Europe as Dora visited places such as Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France; Menton, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France and Genoa, Italy. Topics covered within the letters include Dora's ongoing struggle with her health as she deals with asthma, her meeting with friends, her day to day activities, her husband Benjamin Bloomfield Trench and her impressions of the places she visits.

            File also contain letters stitched into two covers from Lady Caroline Turnor (neé Finch-Hatton), Stoke Rochford, Grantham, Lincolnshire, England to her daughter Dora Trench (neé Turnor). The letters are of a personal nature informing Dora of her day to activities, news and dispensing advice. Contained with the cover are loose pages of household notes.File of letters sent to and from Dora Turnor when she was a child from family and friends. Her Friends include Josepha Martenson, Copenhagen, Denmark; Edith Holland, Kemerton court Tewkesbury, England; E. Blythe, The Vicarage, Hammersmith, England and Mrs Askew.

            Diaries.
            IE OCL P131/2/3 · Subserie · 1868 - ?
            Parte de Loughton Papers

            Diaries belonging to Dora Trench (née Turnor), Benjamin Bloomfield Trench and Theodora Trench.
            Each writer used their respective diaries to record signifcant life events, feelings and appoinments. They offer a unique insight in to their lives.

            Sin título
            Dora Trench death diary.
            IE OCL P131/2/3/1/2 · Unidad documental simple · 30 March 1899-?
            Parte de Loughton Papers

            Diary written by Benjamin Bloomfield Trench which documents his wife's death. Within the diary Benjamin records her last words, visits from her family, breaking the news to his daughters and her funeral.

            One exchange Benjamin recorded shows that Dora Trench knew her death was imminent 'When I came upstairs after dinner she said. "Come & sit near me, we shall not have more evenings together' I asked if she felt worse or had been in pain. She said "No I feel my end is near".'