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LANSDOWNE (Henry, 1818-1866, Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Foreign Office, from 1863 4th Marquis of Lansdowne)

Signature on an envelope front addressed to Earl Russell, K.G., circa

Item Date:  1865
Stock No:  53973      £15

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LANSDOWNE (Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1780-1863, M.P. for Calne, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Abolitionist, 3rd Marquis)

Autograph Letter Signed to the Bishop of Oxford Samuel WILBERFORCE (1805-1873, Bishop, son of William Wilberforce) saying he has his note and “assure you that the subject to which it relates has not failed to engage my attention. Finding that a misapprehension had arisen out of your former conversation with Mr Shuttleworth relating to the school of Biddeston & that the application to the extent to which your lordship it appeared intended to carry it involved an entire departure from the practice of the office, I thought it better to lay the whole matter before a committee which was attended by Lor J. Russell & nearly all the members, by whose direction I believe the secretary must by this time have written to you, & acquainted you with this application but if he has not done so already, I will take care that the letter is immediately forwarded. I propose going abroad the end of next week...”, 4 sides 8vo., London, 21st July, no year but watermarked

Item Date:  1846
Stock No:  42189      £145

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LANSDOWNE (Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1780-1863, M.P. for Calne, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Abolitionist, 3rd Marquis)

Secretarial Autograph Letter isigned to ‘My Lord’ telling him that “altho’ the new Parliament is summoned for the 18th instant, it is not expected that it can proceed to the dispatch of any business, before the 23rd, on or before which day I trust it may be convenient to your Lordship to attend and take your seat...”, 1 side 4to., Whitehall, 3rd November

Item Date:  1847
Stock No:  42484      £125

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LANSDOWNE (William Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, 2nd Earl of Shelburne, 1737-1805, Prime Minister)

Fine Autograph Letter Signed to an unnamed correspondent saying that he is “very glad to hear that a most worthy Father & Mother with 7 or 8 children have escaped all the perils by sea & land... I must do justice to the inhabitants of Tenby to say that we found them in great anxiety - the least you and Mrs Smith can do is to return there next summer & make good the engagements you have fail’d to fulfil this year, among which I hope Bowood will not be omitted a second time. I have had some indirect communication about Dr Crawford’s Epitaph, & am taught to expect that I shall find a Lady at Bath, with whom I can finally settle it - my own opinion is decidedly in favour of the simplest but I know by experience how difficult it is to persuade my family to adopt that taste, and I shall certainly conform to their wish. All accounts both foreign & domestic preclude all idea of peace on the part of this country, as long as the War can be protracted. It is provoking that the people of this country should be branded with the reputation of boundless avarice & ambition, when we all know that the War is contrived from quite different motives. Miss Vernon & Miss Fox desire their compliments to Mrs Smith...”, 2 sides 4to, Bowood Park, 26th October

Item Date:  1800
Stock No:  42642      £2250

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LANSDOWNE (William Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, 2nd Earl of Shelburne, 1737-1805, Prime Minister)

Rare Autograph Letter Signed “Lansdowne” to an unnamed correspondent saying that he is “very sorry that you should have the trouble of calling at my door so frequently as you mention without finding me, but I have been latterally out of town, and when I am in town I always go out at one o’clock unless prevented. I have the honour to inclose to you a draft to pay my subscription to Dr Cromford’s family, and I took the liberty of sending you the different epitaphs which have been sent me. I never rec’d the Latin Epitaph which is mentioned nor do I think there would be any propriety in a Latin Epitaph to be read in a retir’d Country Churchyard. If it depended upon me I should prefer the simplest of them, or one perhaps still more simple, but whatever epitaph Mrs Cromford and her friends preferr, I will take care to have properly executed this summer when I go into Hampshire...”, 2 sides 4to, Berkley Square, Sunday night, no date annotated in another hand

Item Date:  1795
Stock No:  43262      £1250

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