Folder 1
Container
Contains 44 Results:
To Mrs. Gaskell. Writing that Mrs. Smith is ill, June 1843
Item — Folder: 1
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection includes correspondence, two portraits of Sydney Smith and a sonnet, Sonnet to a Friend. The letters are handwritten and most are signed. The bulk of the letters are from Sydney Smith to Francis Wrangham, both Church of England clergymen. Subjects covered in their correspondence include comments on sermons, writings and political topics, namely the Catholic Emancipation Bill which eventually passed in 1829, enabling Catholics to sit in the...
Dates:
June 1843
To Mrs. Twiss. (sister of Sarah Siddens) Accepts an invitation, n.d.
Item — Folder: 1
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection includes correspondence, two portraits of Sydney Smith and a sonnet, Sonnet to a Friend. The letters are handwritten and most are signed. The bulk of the letters are from Sydney Smith to Francis Wrangham, both Church of England clergymen. Subjects covered in their correspondence include comments on sermons, writings and political topics, namely the Catholic Emancipation Bill which eventually passed in 1829, enabling Catholics to sit in the...
Dates:
n.d.
To Francis Wrangham. Writes of admiration for Wrangham, n.d.
Item — Folder: 1
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection includes correspondence, two portraits of Sydney Smith and a sonnet, Sonnet to a Friend. The letters are handwritten and most are signed. The bulk of the letters are from Sydney Smith to Francis Wrangham, both Church of England clergymen. Subjects covered in their correspondence include comments on sermons, writings and political topics, namely the Catholic Emancipation Bill which eventually passed in 1829, enabling Catholics to sit in the...
Dates:
n.d.
To Unknown. Sonnet to a Friend.
, n.d.
Item — Folder: 1
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The collection includes correspondence, two portraits of Sydney Smith and a sonnet, Sonnet to a Friend. The letters are handwritten and most are signed. The bulk of the letters are from Sydney Smith to Francis Wrangham, both Church of England clergymen. Subjects covered in their correspondence include comments on sermons, writings and political topics, namely the Catholic Emancipation Bill which eventually passed in 1829, enabling Catholics to sit in the...
Dates:
n.d.