Skip to content

Manuscripts

Ephemera: Maggs' Brothers Brown Paper Wrappers


You might also be interested in

  • Image not available

    Ephemera: Maggs' Brothers Brown Paper Wrappers

    Manuscripts

    20 pieces

    Folder 3

  • Image not available

    Ephemera: Maggs' Brothers Brown Paper Wrappers

    Manuscripts

    18 pieces

    Folder 5

  • Image not available

    Ephemera: Ribbons, Notes and Maggs' Brown Paper Wrappers

    Manuscripts

    The collection contains letters, manuscripts and documents sent mostly to Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville (Home Secretary, Secretary of State for War, First Lord of the Admiralty) and some to his son Robert Saunders Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville (President of the Board of Control for India, First Lord of the Admiralty). The collection principally focuses on British possessions in India, the East Indies and the West Indies; relations with the United States; and hostilities, negotiations, and political maneuvers with other European powers, especially with France and Russia.

    mssDUN 1-104

  • Image not available

    Ephemera: Ribbons, String and Thread Removed from Material

    Manuscripts

    15 pieces

    Folder 1

  • Image not available

    Maggs Brothers

    Manuscripts

    The collection contains over three hundred folders of correspondence that are arranged alphabetically by correspondent in fifty-eight boxes. The collection ranges from 1878 to 1972, with the bulk of the correspondence being from the years 1900 to 1979. The correspondence includes letters, telegrams, postcards, photographs and one record disc (box 26). The correspondence is mainly related to the library collection itself or to the library as an institution. The letters include commentary on the collection, the acquisition and transfer of items, inquiries about the holdings of the library, letters of thanks and congratulations from visitors, financial transactions, and letters between members of the staff. Box 52 contains miscellaneous files labeled as crank files which are often unsolicited.

    HIA 31.1