Showing 170 results

Archival description
Letter to Mrs Buckland
NZSL/BUC/1/76 · Item · 25 Jul [1859]
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

Rhyl[l] July 25 [1859]

My dear Mrs Buckland

I shall be happy to see you at 6 Pall Mall on Wednesday next at 3pm
If you will send me a line there saying what time will suit you.

I am [?]
Most truly
Your [?]

Letter to Mrs Buckland
NZSL/BUC/1/20 · Item · [Undated]
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

To Mrs. Buckland
Ch Ch
Oxford

The Milmans
Saturday 29
Postmark 1844

My Dear Mary

I stop over tomorrow and hope to return in the evening about 10 or 11 by [mail?] for the Meeting on Monday. I go to Babbage this evening,

Ever yours

If I come not Saturday Eve I shall do so by the 1st train on Monday morning

Letter to Miss Buckland
NZSL/BUC/1/75 · Item · 31 Jul 1857
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

Grove Pl. July 31/57

Dear Miss Buckland

Sir Roderick was so good as to send me a copy of his address to the Geogr. Soc. which having read with avidity as being a very able & satisfactory paper, and having much liked the brief but telling notice of your dear father I tried to procure from the
printer a copy to send to you - and your good mother and sisters - but having failed I was about to send you my copy by this post, - my young ladies however interfered -and assure me that there is no possible doubt of Sir Rodks having already despatched one of his earliest copies to St. Leonards Is that the case or not? - If not, you shall by return of post have that belonging to Yours faithfully

[F,B.]?

Dear Mit
Your aunt has purloined my paperknife it has never arrived
Yours aff[ectionatel]y
[F.A.B.]?

Letter to Buckland
NZSL/BUC/1/14 · Item · [Undated]
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

Dear Buckland

I am sorry I cannot meet your German as I have others beside Mrs Holmes to breakfast with me.

Yours ever

[PBD?]

Tallyrand
In mind oblique, in form misshapen How many storms he stirred [?] [?]

Here lies Tallyrand
The subtle and grand
And when he died
The Devil cried

Ah Tallyrand
give us a hand

NZSL/BUC/1/4 · Item · [Undated]
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

My dear Dean

The Archaeological Meeting

This year it is to be at Norwich & not at Hereford - The [final] sermon for me, thinking of Hereford for our Fenchurch meeting was your idea of visiting the Wye, & now we find that the Bishop will be glad to receive us. The installation will be I believe on the 6th or 7th of [July]? at or possibly 5th or 8th. After that it we shall go on to Fenchurch [?] but until we know the day of the installation we can not fix the exact day. I must be back at Ashby on Monday the 19th of July, on account of the Agricultural Meeting which takes place at Northampton in that week & some of my [?] will possibly come to me on Tuesday, & possibly even on Monday- you remember you arranged to come to me I am WORD hoping that I can [?] ask Mrs Buckland at that time as my time will be full, but I hope she will when with you [?] [?] to see my Museum in its original state. The Norwich Meeting is to [?] on the 29th July. The dates then will be thus [V & Mat]? 5 to 8th July, Hereford, Fenchurch between 9th & 17th July Agriculture between 19th & 24th July. Norwich between 29th July & 5th Aug.

Yours most truly
Northampton
[?] [?] March 16 1847

I have today received a letter from the Dean of Ely - He proposed times for our excursion sent to him

NZSL/BUC/1/31 · Item · 19th century
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

Wednesday

Dear Sir

I thank you for your note and shall be glad to see the particulars of the Lease at [Harborough?] when I am next here a few days hence. I must go to Town again this morning. I inclose a Draft for you but I am obliged and [?] [Servant]

Wm Buckland

NZSL/BUC/1/58 · Item · 25 Jul 1840
Part of Non-ZSL Collections

Ch. Ch. 25 July 1840

Dear Bull
Hudson has been with me this morning and represents the difficulty of getting the best Bath stone to be now so great that he can with difficulty get the smallest quantity. The reason is obviously one which will continue to operate during the whole of the next 12 months more forcibly than in any other year from the Creation to the general conflagration viz the construction of the Works of the Great Western Railway in the midst of the Country that supplies the Bath stone. The Railway Engineers sharp fellows and always on the spot will be sure to want and to select for their own use all the best stone that can be got out and if we buy this year we shall only get their leavings and at a price exaggerated for the present year only beyond the normal amount as was the last with [Young?] Barnes Building at Ardington. Is it not prudent therefore to postpone our [conjunction?] of 100 tons of Bath Stone or more, at least for one year? by the end of which the Rail Road will be finished [for?] the extraordinary demand of 1840-41 will have passed away.

Believe me

Truly yours

W. Buckland

You will hear from Barnes respecting Col. Wood's Agent who has been here today we told him the Chapter had long and duly considered the principle of valuing their renewal where [Commutation?] has taken place according to the scale of the [Commutation?] Tables and as they had resolved to make no exception from their Rule in the case of [Enstone?] Dr Barnes and I had no authority and saw no reason to open any discussion of the principle on which Col. Woods fine out to be estimated.

To the Revd Dr Bull
Staverton
Daventry