- NLW MS 21021A.
- File
- 1799-1801.
Kearsly's Pocket Ledger, with entries of payments possibly by a Cardigan solicitor. English. Leather. Donated by Roderick P. Waldo Lewis, Earley, October 1972.
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Kearsly's Pocket Ledger, with entries of payments possibly by a Cardigan solicitor. English. Leather. Donated by Roderick P. Waldo Lewis, Earley, October 1972.
Keats House and Museum, Wentworth Place, Hampstead. : Historical and descriptive guide.
Includes manuscript notes and two letters in Welsh, 1980.
Keats House Committee, Hampstead.
Kemeys & Kemeys-Tynte families,
Miscellaneous letters and accounts, 1688-1831, relating to the Kemeys and Kemeys-Tynte families of Cefnmabli, co. Glamorgan, including letters, 1740-1752, to and from Sir Charles Kemeys-Tynte, 4th bart, and two letters, 1751, relating to the illness of Lady Mary Kemeys.
Kenneth Milligan's 'Corner of Wales'
A copy of the late Kenneth Milligan's incomplete typescript work 'Corner of Wales. An historical account of the country west of the River Conway...from the earliest times to the present day'.
Material from manuscript and printed sources compiled largely by William Fowler Carter, Maidsmere, near Bromsgrove, towards a study of the early genealogy of the family of Kenrick of Nantclwyd, Cerniogau, etc., and of the associated family of Wynn. Accompanying the material are letters largely to W. F. Carter from G. J. Murray Atkins, Diocesan Registry, Lichfield, 1935, J. C. Ballantyne, University of Glasgow, 1913 (autograph), J. Harvey Bloom, Upper Tooting, [1922]-3, W. Ll. Davies, National Library of Wales, 1935 (autograph), Crayford Edwards, barrister, Burbage, near Hinckley, 1918, C. T. Flower, Public Record Office, 1935 (autograph), A. Ranken Ford, Gray’s Inn, London, 1917 (autograph), Thomas Allen Glenn, Meliden, etc., 1911-22 (one autograph), Frederick Wm. Hackwood, Balham, 1917 (to Sir Geo. Kenrick), Strachan Holme, Bridgewater [Collieries & Ellesmere Estates] Office, Walkden, Manchester, 1915 (autograph), Cyril C. C. Kenrick, Westgate-on-Sea [1922], [Sir] Geo. H. Kenrick, Edgbaston, 1908- 35 (with copy replies), Bernard Kettle, Guildhall Library, London, 1915, J. B. Marsland, Wyberton Rectory, Boston, 1923, H. H. Meakin, Longnor Vicarage, Shrewsbury, 1918 (to [ ] Blackett), D. C. Lloyd Owen, Four Oaks, 1915 and undated, Alfred Neobard Palmer, Wrexham, 1911, William Rees, University College . . ., Cardiff, 1935, Mary Sampson Smith, Llangollen Fechan, 1911, A. H. Stanton, Hambleden Rectory, Henley on Thames [1922], W. B. Stewart, Birkenhead, 1912 (to Sir George Kenrick), Ethel Stokes, London, 1935, Annie Wynn, Llanfihangel, near Borth, 1911, and Edward W. Wynne, Aberystwyth, 1917. There are also typescript copies of letters to the Kenrick family from R. Obbard, Redhill, 1901, Greene Kendrick, Waterbury, Conn., U.S.A., 1901-02, and Henry Rigg, Bayswater, London, 1901 and undated.
Carter, W. F. (William Fowler), b. 1856
Miscellaneous notes written by Robert Kenrick, Aberystwyth, together with letters to him from several correspondents; poetry; a copy of the resolution, 1847, by which the school at Penparke, near Aberystwyth, was united to the National Society; press cuttings; etc.
A pedigree, 1680, of the Kerry family of Binweston, Worthen, Shropshire, containing twenty-five coats of arms, all emblazoned and painted. It is a copy, with continuation, apparently by Thomas Fr[ancis, of Montgomery], from a Lewys Dwnn original of 1598. The pedigree is traced from Gwrgene, Lord of Yal and Bromfield [?Gwernen ap Gwaeddgar], Llyr ap Maenyrch, King of Gloster [Llyr Marini], and King Pelenaur [Pellinore or Pelinor], as well as Cadell ap Rhodri Mawr and Severus [ap Cadwr Wynwyn].
Comparison with NLW MS 23219G, a 1792 copy of the pedigree, suggests that the present roll was created as the pedigree and achievement of Edward Kerry (d. c. 1698) of Binweston, the original achievement now having been lost from the foot of the roll. Several arms originally emblazoned 'or, a lion rampant regardant gules, armed and langued azure' seem subsequently to have been over-painted 'party per saltire, azure and ermine' (NLW MS 23219G shows the latter arms); all the arms have suffered from the loss of pigment.
Francis, Thomas, of Montgomery.
Pedigree and achievement of Edward Kerry (d. ca. 1698), Binweston, parish of Worthen, Shropshire, traced from Gwernen ap Gwaeddgar, lord of Bromfield and Iâl, Llyr Marini, king of Gloucester, and King Pelinor, with twenty-five other coats of arms, all emblazoned and painted, apparently copied by Joseph Patrick, 1792.
Patrick, Joseph, fl. 1792.
Kerry Mutual Improvement Association,
Minute book, November 1898 - February 1906, of the Kerry [co. Montgomery], Mutual Improvement Association. Inset are letters from [Doctor] F[rederick] Wilson, Newtown, to Mr. [Alexander] Anderson [secretary of the Association ], [19]05 (a promise to give a magic-lantern lecture on 'Infection'), and from John Naylor, Leighton Hall, Welshpool, to [ ], [19]05 (accepting the presidency of the Association for the ensuing year).
Kerry Mutual Improvement Association,
A register, 1898-1903, of members of the Kerry [co. Montgomery], Mutual Improvement Association, with a record of their attendances at meetings. At the reverse end of the volume are incomplete lists of officers of the Association during the same period.
Kidwelly & Llanelly Canal Company: Letter-book,
Letter-book of Thomas Bowen of Pen-bre, co. Carmarthen, superintendent of the Kidwelly and Llanelly Canal and Railway Co., comprising an inventory of the company's records, 1831 (ff. 1-4), copy and draft letters, 1838-1840 (ff. 5-136 verso), a humorous poem on the failures of an anonymous colliery proprietor (ff. 151-5) and an arithmetical problem in Welsh, English and Latin (ff. 155 verso-6).
Bowen, Thomas, Company superintendent
King Arthur. An Heroick Poem ...
A copy of Richard Blackmore: King Arthur. An Heroick Poem ... (London, 1697), with manuscript notes explaining the numerous names (some of which are veiled) and classical references in the text.
A letter dated 26 August 1665, signed by King Charles II (1630-1685) and sent, per the Earl of Carlingford [d. 1677], from Salisbury, whither the English Court had removed owing to the plague, to 'Mon Cousin, L'Euesque de Munster', i.e. Christopher Bernard von Ghalen, prince-bishop of Munster, Westphalia, ally of England in the Anglo-Dutch war.
Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685
King Edward VII Hospital chaplaincy subscription. Donated by J. Penry Thomas, Cardiff, May 1950,
Knighton churchwarden's accounts. English. 3/4 morocco,
Knitting and crocheting instructions
Instructions for knitting and crocheting lace.
Kyffin and Cyffin : old and rare family names,
A copy of the donor's genealogical research.
Kyffin, Tony.
Kyffin genealogy in Ceredigion
Research, 1993-1994, compiled by Dr Glyn Rhys concerning the Ceredigion ancestry of Sir Kyffin Williams.
Rhys, Glyn, Dr.