Box 13
Contains 114 Results:
GBS : Autograph Letter Signed: to Blanche Patch [initialed], Oct. 31, 1929
Ayot St. Lawrence; begins "If you can get onto Miss Lilian Dawson at the National"
GBS : Autograph Letter Signed: to Charles Graves, Dec. 14, 1929
London; includes typed transcript; begins "My dear Charles / My attendance at your wedding, or at anybody's wedding, is out"
GBS : Typed Letter: to Mr. J. Chachik, Dec. 21, 1929
London; authorizing an edition in Hebrew of "The Guide" [ An Intelligent Woman's Guide...? ] by Tarbuth Limited; begins "Gentlemen, I will accept £10 for an edition of 2000 copies of"
GBS : Typed Letter Signed: to Charles Benjamin Purdom, Jan. 12, 1930
London; envelope and photocopy of the Everyman article, "Is Shaw Played Out?" by Purdom, included; letter deals with Granville Barker and the production of Shaw's plays; begins "Dear Sir / I have to thank you for an understanding article in Everyman"
GBS : Autograph Letter Signed: to Blanche Patch [initialed], Feb. 2, 1930
Cliveden; begins "I feel sure I added something to the"
GBS : Letter: to W.E. Stafford, Mar. 28, 1930
London; included with this letter is a three-leaf manuscript in Stafford's hand concerning errors in The Admirable Bashville , and other addressed by Stafford to Byrne Lackett; with note by Bernard F. Burgunder; begins "I am much obliged to you for the correction in The Admirable Bashville / It is odd that all the most glaring"
GBS : Autograph Letter Signed: to Gene Tunney, Apr. 20, 1930
Shrewbury; Easter Sunday, 1930; begins "My dear Gene / The Cashel Byron proposals are only blind snatches"
GBS : Autograph Letter Signed: to Blanche Patch [initialed], July 23, 1930
Begins "If a Mr. Wise rings up wanting to see"
GBS : Autograph Letter Signed: to Mrs. Cecil Chesterton, Aug. 7, 1930
London; probably a reference to essay on Chesterton; See: Shaw, G.B. Typed Manuscript Introduction Cecil Chesterton's Anti-Puritanism; begins "Dear Mrs. Cecil Chesterton / Will the enclosed do? / I think your only risk of refusal lies in G.K.C.'s pro-Polish propensities."
GBS : Typed Letter: to the Editor of The Times, Aug. 29, 1930
Great Malvern; envelope addressed to G.W. Bishop; for other materials related to The Barretts of Wimpole Street , see G.W. Bishop's manuscript on the Malvern festival, and Shaw's letter to The Observerof early Sept. 1930; begins "Sir, There seems to be a good deal of the sultry West Indian"