WOLSELEY
(Garnet, Viscount, 1833-1913, Field Marshal, C-in-C of the Army)
Clerk written Letter Signed to Rev. James Marchand
saying he has “only just returned from abroad & find your letter awaiting me. I sympathize fully with your work, & wish you every possible success in the noble object you have in view...”, 1 side 8vo., 18 Lower Seymour Street, Portman Square, 21st May
Item Date:
1901
Stock No:
42660
£65
Add to Wish List
Order/Enquire
Full Details
|
|
WOLSELEY
(Garnet, Viscount, 1833-1913, Field Marshal, C-in-C of the Army)
Autograph Letter Signed to Kirkwood
saying that he has to “distribute prizes at the Masonic Boys house at 5.30 next Saturday, so I am extremely sorry to say I could not go with you to the Royal Observatory on that day. Perhaps you will kindly give me another opportunity of doing so...”, 2 sides 8vo., The Royal Hospital, Dublin headed paper, Tuesday, no date
Item Date:
0
Stock No:
42577
£75
Add to Wish List
Order/Enquire
Full Details
|
|
WOLSELEY
(Sir Garnet, 1833-1913, Field Marshal and C-in-C of the Army, from 1885 1st Viscount)
Letter Signed to Captain the Hon. E.R. Fremantle, CB, CMG,
saying he is very pleased to tell him that the appointment of Sergeant Dauncey of the 7th Dragoon Giuards to a commission "is about to be submitted for the Queen's approval", 2 sides 8vo., on black edged paper, War Office, 20th May
Item Date:
1884
Stock No:
54740
£75
Add to Wish List
Order/Enquire
Full Details
|
|
WOOD
(Sir H. Evelyn, 1838-1919, Field Marshal)
Signature & date
on a scrap with the words “new Cheque book” printed on it, 3½” x 2” max, no place, 26th October
Item Date:
1897
Stock No:
42182
£30
Add to Wish List
Order/Enquire
Full Details
|
|
WOOD
(Sir Henry Evelyn, V.C., 1838-1919, Commander-in-Chief, Egyptian Army 1882-1886, from 1903 Field-Marshal)
Fine Typed Letter Signedwith autograph subscription and corrections to Sir Robert BADEN POWELL
(1857-1941, Defender of Mafeking & Founder of the Boy Scouts) thanking him and saying that he will "live as long as I can conveniently. Perhaps I should be wiser if I stopped in doors and tried to dictate answers to some hundreds of letters I have got, than I am in going out to look for a fox in a snow storm but still as yet I have only got ninty-nine [sic] days booked and as I am unlike the American, who advised his friend, who boasted of having shot nine hundred and ninty-nine rabbits, to make it a thousand. He replied: 'Sir, do you think I would imperil my immortal soul for one rabbit.' So I am going to make up my hundred days ...", 1 side 8vo., Millhurst, Harlow, 25th March
Item Date:
1911
Stock No:
40865
£175
Add to Wish List
Order/Enquire
Full Details
|
|