57582511http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6qn6x3prevised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-09-20machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-16T09:44:33machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-16T09:44:33humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-28machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonHampton, John Somerset Pakington, Baron, 1799-1880presumedPakington, John Somerset, Sir, 1799-1880presumedHampton, John Somerset Pakington 1799-1880 BaronpresumedHampton, John Somerset Pakington, 1st BaronpresumedPakington formerly Russell; John Somerset, 1799-1880presumedPakington, John Somerset 1799-1880presumedPakington, John Somerset, First Baron Hampton.presumedPakington, John, Sir 1799-1880presumedPakington, John, SirpresumedPakington, John Somerset Baron HamptonpresumedRussell, John Somerset 1799-1880presumedPakington, J. Sir, 1799-1880 (John),presumedPakington, J. Sir 1799-1880presumedPakington, John S. Sir, 1799-1880 (John Somerset),presumedPakington, John S. Sir 1799-1880presumedSomerset Pakington, John, Sir, 1799-1880presumed1799-02-201880-04-09MaleClay, John, 1796-1858.Tallack, William, 1831-1908Pakington, John Somerset, Sir, 1799-1880Pakington, John Somerset, First Baron Hampton. Papers, 1867.Pakington, John Somerset, First Baron Hampton.Papers, 1867.1 item.Letter from Baroness Herbert to John Somerset Pakington, First Baron Hampton (1799-1880), member of Parliament and government official, concerning the Herbert Memorial Fund and the removal of the Army Medical School to Netley after Lord Sidney Herbert's Death. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryClay, John, 1796-1858. Correspondence : 1821-1873.Clay, John, 1796-1858.Correspondence : 1821-1873.38 items.Letters to Clay during the 1840s and 1850s and to his son, Walter Lowe Clay, in the 1860s, concerning the causes and prevention of crime, prison reform, alcoholism, the condition of the laboring classes, and the roles of the church and of secular and religious education in combating crime. Correspondents include Charles Adderly, Lord Brooke, Mary Carpenter, William Shove Chalk, Sir Smith Child, George Combe, Emily Davies, Augustus De Morgan, George Dixon, Lord Ebrington, Lord Ingestre, John Just, Lord Lifford, John Malcolm Forbes Ludlow, Lord Lyttelton, Eliza Meteyard, John Stuart Mill, Professor Mittermaier, Ogle William Morre, John Somerset Pakington, John Wilson-Patten, John Richardson Porter, Samuel Redgrave, James Harrison Rigg, Charles Savile Roundell, Lord Sandon, Robert A. Slaney, William Cooke Taylor, Georg Varrentrapp, and Sir John Eardley-Wilmot. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins LibraryJosephine Butler Letters Collection, c.1816-1907Josephine Butler Letters Collection c.1816-190712 A boxes (2,488 items)The Women' s LibraryWilliam Tallack Correspondence, 1830-1907Tallack, William, 1831-1908.William Tallack Correspondence 1830-19070.5 linear ft.Papers of the British social reformer; secretary of the Howard Association, an organization devoted to prison reform. Incoming letters on reform issues in England, particularly prison reform. Correspondents include clergymen (Davidson, Martineau, Stanley, Tait); statesmen (Balfour, R. Churchill, W.E. Gladstone, Parnell); social reformers (Booth, Bradlaugh, Bright, Carpenter, Cobbe, Ouida); philanthropists (Bass, Shaftesbury); and authors (Froude, Houghton, Lecky, MacDonald, Sala).EnglishSyracuse University. Library. Special Collections Research Center