Autograph Letter Signed to G. K. Menzies, Secretary, Royal Society of Arts.

George Herbert Whitaker [WHITAKER'S ALMANACK]

Editorial: 22 January ; on letterhead 'Office of WHITAKER'S ALMANACK | 12 WARWICK LANE PATERNOSTER ROW | LONDON E.C.', 1919
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Descripción:

Bookseller and publisher (1862-1933). One page, 12mo. Very good, docketed with the Society's stamp. 'In reply to your circular letter, I beg to apply for admission as a Fellow of your Society and herewith forward my application together with my cheque value 2 guineas, which in the event of not being elected, please return to | Yours faithfully | George H. Whitaker'. N° de ref. del artículo 3794

Detalles bibliográficos

Título: Autograph Letter Signed to G. K. Menzies, ...
Editorial: 22 January ; on letterhead 'Office of WHITAKER'S ALMANACK | 12 WARWICK LANE PATERNOSTER ROW | LONDON E.C.'
Año de publicación: 1919

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1.

George Kruger Gray (1880-1943), English artist, designer of coinage and stained glass windows [ G. K. Menzies, Secretary, Royal Society of Arts ]
Publicado por 40 Abingdon Road Kensington W8. 2 December (1921)
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Descripción 2pp., 12mo. Bifolium. In good condition, lightly aged, with strip of sunning at foot. Docketed with stamp of the Royal Society of Arts. Having 'had time to consider the question of a lecture on Heraldry' he has decided to decline Menzies's invitation, as he 'simply cannot spare the time such a lecture would require for its preparation'. Nº de ref. del artículo: 18928

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2.

Sir Walter Townley [ Sir Walter Beaupré Townley ] (1863-1945), diplomat, British Ambassador to the Netherlands at end of First World War [ Royal Society of Arts, London ]
Publicado por Autograph Letter on letterhead of 32 Eaton Square London; undated stamped date 1 March ; two other items from The British Chamber of Commerce for the Netherlands East Indies Inc. 38 Dover Street London. 20 and 30 September 1921 (1920)
Antiguo o usado Cantidad disponible: 1
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Descripción Five items in good condition, lightly aged. All items with the Society's stamp. ONE: TLS. 20 September 1921. 1p., 4to. Agreeing to the Society's request for 'an authoritative paper on the subject of trade with the Netherlands East Indies', and asking for the proposed date ('approximately'), as he will be 'in Holland in the latter part of October, when I shall be in a position to get all the latest and most reliable information obtainable upon this interesting and very important subject'. TWO: TLS. 30 September 1921. 1p., 4to. Putting forward four 'gentlemen' as possible chairmen of the meeting: Lord Emmott; F. Leverton Harris; R. de marees van Sinderen ('Netherlands Minister'); J. Crommelin ('Liberian Minister'). THREE: AN in the third person. Undated (stamp dated 1 March 1920). 1p., 12mo. He 'much regrets that owing to a previous business engagement he will not be able to avail himself of the kind invitation of the Council to attend the Lecture to be given by Mr. William James Garnett on Wednesday afternoon'. FOUR and FIVE are typed communications by Towley's private secretary , the first an ANS (28 November 1921), the second a TLS (3 December 1921), asking for an advance copy of Townley's lecture to be sent to the editor of 'Lloyd's List', W. A. Godfrey. Nº de ref. del artículo: 19662

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3.

Sir David Chadwick [Sir David Thomas Chadwick] (1876-1954), British colonial civil servant, Secretary of the Imperial Agricultural Bureaux [Royal Society of Arts, London; Sir H. T. Wood; G. K. Menzies
Publicado por Between 22 December and 11 June 1930. Eight on London letterheads of: Indian Trade Commissioner Department of Commerce and Industry Government of India 5; and Imperial Agricultural Bureaux 3. Two from Beckenham Kent (1916)
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Descripción See his entry in Who Was Who. The thirteen items in good condition, lightly aged, most with RSA date stamp and annotations. A total of 12pp, 8vo, in autograph; and 5pp, 4to, typed. The first ten signed D T Chadwick and the last three David Chadwick . The earliest letter, to RSA Secretary Sir Henry Trueman Wood on 22 December 1916, deals with the publication of Chadwick s remarks at the discussion on Prof. Todds paper before the Indian Section of the Society of Arts . On 11 July 1918 he asks if it is possible for the Department of Commerce and Industry, Government of India, to go up for Membership, as a record of the papers read are of undoubted use to this office , discussing the matter at some length. ( I want the journal to belong to this office [last two words underlined twice] & not be claimed by the Dept. Is my confrere in Calcutta - the Director General of Commercial Intelligence [named in a subsequent letter as H. A. F. Lindsay] - a member? He ought to join. ) He concludes the letter that follows No thanks are due to me for trying to help the Society. I think it is most useful. Letter of 3 September 1918 concerns the publication in the RSA journal of a lecture given by him at the British Scientific Products Exhibition, concluding I found I had omitted all mention of Indigo & of the Behar planters. For Heaven s sake don t tell anyone so. Among other letters on the same topic is one of 9 September 1918, explaining the reason for an addition he is making to the lecture: I have added this because I see from some of the brief Press extracts which have appeared that a somewhat false impression has been conveyed, namely that all classes in India were benefiting economically from the war. Such, of course, is not the case, and I think it should make it clear that my lecture was in no sense an economic survey of India in war-time, but merely a summary of some of her industrial efforts. On 29 May 1930 he writes with regard to an IAB conference of those engaged in the Empire on research in regard to fruit production , for which the RSA has agreed to rent out rooms, with payment for current used and something to the operator of the lantern. The Society would also, if necessary, provide teas, of course on payment by those attending the Conference . The last two letters also concern this Empire Horticulturists Conference . Nº de ref. del artículo: 25355

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4.

Charles William Domville-Fife (b.1886), editor of 'The Encyclopaedia of the British Empire' [ G. K. Menzies, Secretary, Royal Society of Arts ]
Publicado por On letterhead of the 'Editorial Offices' of 'The Encyclopaedia of the British Empire' Adelphi Terrace Strand London. 12 April (1924)
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Descripción 1p., 4to. In good condition, on lightly-aged paper. With the date stamps of the Royal Society of Arts. He thanks him for 'the cuttings, several of which I had not seen', and states that he will be delighted to 'present a copy of my book to your library'. He had been meaning to give one 'at the conclusion of the exhibition'. He is grateful to Menzies for offering to review the book in the Society's journal, and is 'already so much indebted to te Royal Society of Arts for kindness received'. (The Society and Domville-Fife's offices were in close proximity.) He is enclosing a copy of a book, 'which is great undertaking when one has other duties to perform. The first run is 60,000 copies and it is going all over the Empire'. The prospectus for 'The Encyclopaedia of the British Empire' ('The First Encyclopedic Record of the Greatest Empire in the History of the World.') is 4pp., 4to. With text in blue and cover strikingly printed in colour, and depicting a lantern-jawed Englishman poring over a map of the British Empire. Nº de ref. del artículo: 17058

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5.

Arthur Beresford Pite (1861-1934), English architect, Professor of Architecture, Royal College of Art, 1900-1923 [Sir Henry Trueman Wood (1845-1929), Secretary, Royal Society of Arts]
Publicado por Eleven of the items on his letterhead Royal College of Art South Kensington London SW7. The other two items from 21 Willow Road Hampstead NW. One from four from 1916 and eight from 1917 (1915)
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Descripción The thirteen items are in good condition, on lightly-aged paper. All but one bear the purple oval stamp of the Royal Society of Arts, and most are docketted. Totalling 10pp., 4to; 3pp., 12mo. The earlier letters are addressed to Wood and the later ones to Menzies. The first letter (14 August 1915), in which Pite proposes becoming a member of the Society, is the only one not to concern the course of lectures. On 7 June 1916 he asks if 'the subject of Town Planning, which owing to the operation of the Act of 1909 has increasing importance could be included in the Society of Arts series of Cantor Lectures', adding that Wood is 'probably aware of the increasing literature of the subject and that the Royal Institute of British Architects as issued directions to providers & advice to architects on town planning procedure. | The subject presents many aspects to the Student and in practice divides itself between the Surveyor and architect and naturally has many aspects of public interest and urgency.' He proposes to submit a syllabus, 'on the Architecture of Town Planning past & present', stating that he has been 'for many years a member of the Town Planning Committee of the R.I.B.A. & [has] lectured on the subject at the L.C.C. School of Building'. On 12 June 1916 he writes that he is enclosing 'a syllabus of a course of 5 lectures on Town-Planning', the 'historical aspect' of the subject being 'a large & important one', and ' this comparative study of achieved results' being 'important side by side with present day problems'. On 25 September 1916 he accepts Wood's 'proposals [.] to deliver a course of four lectures on "Town Planning" to be given weekly from January 29 next'. Among topics dealt with in the rest of the correspondence are the submission of manuscripts and authorship rights. Nº de ref. del artículo: 14915

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6.

Walter Rosenhain (1875-1934), distinguished metallurgist born in Germany of Jewish extraction, who grew up in Australia and moved to England in 1897 [Royal Society of Arts]
Publicado por 1924 3 1925 3 and 1926 2. The nine items on letterheads of the metallurgy department of the National Physical Laboratory Teddington Middlesex (1915)
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Descripción See his entries in the Oxford DNB and Australian Dictionary of Biography. The recipient George Kenneth Menzies (1869-1954) was Secretary to the Royal Society of Arts between 1917 and 1935. The nine items are in good condition, lightly aged, and are folded for postage. Each bears the stamp of the RSA, some with manuscript docketting. Letters of 4 April and 18 September 1925 are in autograph, the rest typed; all nine are signed Walter Rosesnhain . A letter of 1 October 1924 responds to a request for information about zirconium, with reference to the literature on the subject and British and American firms interested in Zirconium products . The rest of the correspondence is taken up with lecturing. The first item (ANS, 2 February 1915) is a covering note for the synopsis of my forthcoming course of Cantor Lectures . On 13 September 1924 Rosenhaim writes that he could quite well give either one lecture or a course of three during the coming Autumn and Winter. The subject I habe in mind is the Inner Structure of Alloys, on which I gave a Royal Institution Friday lecture last year. While it is possible to deal with the subject in a single lecture, it would be much more satisfactory to give a course of three lectures upon it. The subject really relates to the X-ray study of crystal structures and its application to metallurgical problems and consitutes, I think, perhaps the most important metallurgical advance which has been achieved recently. He asks for a quick response, as his Winter engagements have a way of piling up during the year . On 4 April 1925 he states that he has mentioned the matter of Cantor lectures to one or two of my colleagues & I think either Mr. Higgins or one of the others might give a course on such a subject as "Thermometers" or possibly "High Vacua , but before approaching them he would like to clarify the question of a fee. I am also interested in the matter because, although about a month has now elapsed since my recent course was finished, I have received no fee & I am wondering whether a letter may have gone astray. The matter is presumably resolved, as a few weeks later, on 30 April 1925, he sends (not present) a memorandum on the subject of a course to be entitled "Thermometry" by Mr W. F. Higgins of this Laboratory , and mentions that [t]here is also a possible suggestion of a course entitled "The Production and Measurement of High Vacua" with experimental demonstrations by Dr G. W. C. Kaye , both of which courses he thinks would be very satisfactory for your Society but that of Dr Kaye would be particularly interesting and would, I think, attract a considerable audience as the whole problem of high vacua is becoming of every [sic] increasing importance in connexion with electric lamps and radio valves . On 8 January 1926 he wonders whether Higgins s communication with Menzies regarding a proposed lecture has also gone astray , and agrees to review Sir Robert Hadfield s book on Metallurgy for the RSA journal, provided that the review may be anonymous. I very much object to writing signed reviews . On 11 February 1926 he asks for an offprint of a lecture by Sir Richard Paget: I may be able to obtain a copy by asking Sir Richard Paget himself, but I would prefer not to trouble him if it can be got from you. . Nº de ref. del artículo: 25040

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