A young Sarah Ferguson with her family on a beach
- ITN/5/44/7
- Item
- c.1960s
Agency: Syndication International Limited
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A young Sarah Ferguson with her family on a beach
Agency: Syndication International Limited
A young Sarah Ferguson wearing a flower crown
Agency: Syndication International Limited
A young Sarah Ferguson sitting in a horse
Agency: Syndication International Limited
Sarah Ferguson pictured with her father Major Ronald Ferguson
Obit
Broadcast Date: 19 March 1986
Photographer: Desmond O'Neill
Miss Sarah Ferguson, tipped as fiancee of Prince Andrew of England, watches Prince and Princess of Wales ski on the first day of their holiday in Klosters Thursday
ITN Reference: FERG/3
Agency: Associated Press
Home After a Busy Day. Sarah Ferguson, who is being tipped with increasing confidence as the girl Prince Andrew will marry, today leaving work at the West End office of the printing firm where she is a sales executive
Agency: Press Association
Sarah Ferguson poses outside her office building in London
Royal Working Fiancée. Miss Sarah Ferguson, whose engagement was announced to Prince Andrew, arrives back at work, in St George Street, London today. She paused only briefly on the doorstep of her office building and did not answer any questions which were shouted at her by reporters who had been kept back to the other side of the road
Agency: Press Association
Sarah Ferguson, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Andrew
The balcony of Buckingham Palace, with the Queen, who celebrated her 60th birthday today, smiling at thousands of children who sang to her. Her birthday surprise to the Nation, was bringing her future daughter in law Sarah Ferguson onto the balcony with
fiancé Prince Andrew
Agency: Press Association
Photographer: Ron Bell
Sarah Ferguson and Prince Andrew at Buckingham Palace
This afternoon's Royal walkabout in the daffodil strewn forecourt of Buckingham Palace, with Miss Sarah Ferguson (left) aiding her
fiancé Prince Andrew retrieve fallen flowers thrown by children to greet the Queen (light coat, centre, back to camera) on this her 60th birthday
Agency: Press Association
Sarah Ferguson and Prince Andrew at the Guard's Club, Windsor
Prince Andrew and his fianceé, Miss Sarah Ferguson at today's polo match, at the Guard's Club, Smith's Lawn, Windsor, where Miss Ferguson made the prize presentations including the Queen's Cup
Agency: Press Association
Sarah Ferguson, the Prince and Princess of Wales, Prince Andrew and Major Ronald Ferguson
Miss Sarah Ferguson (left) enjoys a joke with her future brother in law Prince Charles after polo on Smith's Lawn, Windsor today. With them is her father Major Ronald Ferguson, the Prince's polo manager, who injured his forehead after falling off, her fiance Prince Andrew (back to camera) and the Princess of Wales
Agency: Press Association
Photographer: Ron Bell
Sketches of Sarah Ferguson's wedding dress
Royal Wedding Day. (Composite Pictures) Sketches of the front and back views of Miss Sarah Ferguson's wedding dress for her wedding today to Prince Andrew at Westminster Abbey. The dress fabric is rich ivory silk Duchess Satin with a neckline edged with pearls. The sleeves are full and square at the crown and the skirt silhouette is designed to be flat in front, widening to the sides and full at the back
Agency: Press Association
Sarah Ferguson and Major Ronald Ferguson at Westminster Abbey
Sarah Ferguson on the arm of her father Major Ronald Ferguson inside Westminster Abbey on where Sarah will marry the Duke of York. Sarah wears an ornate and Edwardian full-skirted ivory gown embellished with the naval symbols of her sailor fiancé
Agency: Reuters
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 26
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 28
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 43
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 46
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 48
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 54
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 55
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 57
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes proposed constitution for the Friends of the Dymock Poets and booking form for the annual general meeting weekend 6 - 7 October 2012
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 58
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes booking form for the Spring Day 23 March 2013
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 59
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes booking form for the Annual General Meeting weekend 5 - 6 October 2013
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 60
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes booking form for the Spring Day 22 March 2014
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 63
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes booking form for the Spring Day 21 March 2015
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 66
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes Autumn in Malvern festival leaflet 2016; Minutes for the Annual General Meeting of the Friends of the Dymock Poets 3 October 2015; Booking form and programme for the Annual General Meeting Weekend 2016; Friends of the Dymock Poets Constitution 2016
Friends of the Dymock Poets Newsletter Issue 68
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Published in The Daily Telegraph United States Supplement. A fictional debate between an American and an Englishman over the relative cultural maturity of America in which the American cites the poems of Robert Frost as evidence of that maturity
Newspaper article "Names and Faces: Vermont Medal for Frost" by William Rollins
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Published in the New York Herald Tribune. Report of the State of Vermont's striking of a memorial seal in honour of Robert Frost, Vermont's "poet laureate"
Poem "Venetian C[?]" by Clifford Bax and Herbert Farjeon
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Handwritten in pencil in Venice
Handwritten index, possibly a biography for Arnold Bax written by Herbert Farjeon
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Written in ink. References Stacy Aumonier and his wife Gertrude Peppercorn, Paul and Dolly Corder, Godwin Baynes, Edward Thomas, Bax and both Farjeons
Photocopy of letter from Myfanwy Thomas to Judy Taylor and Julia MacRae at The Bodley Head
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Letter thanking Judy and Julia for their letters after the death of Myfanwy's mother Helen Thomas. Includes a description of the funeral service
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes note from Colin to Jeff Cooper
Typescript for talk "Remembering Wilfrid Gibson" by Merryn Williams
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Includes several poems by Wilfrid Gibson
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Pen and ink drawing featuring a cottage [The Old Nail Shop?] for the 2013 edition of the journal
"An Introduction to The Dymock Poets" leaflet
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Proof copy of "Progress in Literature" by Lascelles Abercrombie
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Loose pages within a cover. Pages are stamped "University Press Cambridge: 5 Apr 1929" and initialled "ERB". Annotated on back cover by Lascelles Abercrombie. Includes pencil annotations
Proof copies of "The Sale of Saint Thomas in Six Acts" by Lascelles Abercrombie
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Loose pages. With pen and ink and pencil annotations by Lascelles Abercrombie
Audio cassette with recording of Catherine Abercrombie interview
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Interview with Catherine Abercrombie recounting her memories of the Dymock Poets. Interviewed by Jo Stewart
"An Index to Poetry in Selected British and Irish Periodicals 1900-1925" by Jeffrey Cooper
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Two volumes, loose sheets. Thesis submitted for the Fellowship of the Library Association
Christmas greeting from John and Daisy Drinkwater, probably to Wilfrid Wilson Gibson
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
A printed poem by John Drinkwater, translated from the German of Edward Morike. Includes a handwritten message by John Drinkwater "From John and Daisy Drinkwater: Christmas 1924"
Note from Wilfrid Wilson Gibson to his son Michael
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Handwritten poem written by Gibson to his son Michael
I've taken my own way through life and so
If you don't follow in my steps, dear son,
But blaze your own trail, 'twill be good to know
At least you're doing just what I have done
Letter from Christopher Hassall to Michael Gibson
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Thanking Michael for permission to publish letters from Wilfrid Wilson Gibson to Edward Marsh. Refers to trip to Wales to give recitals on Dylan Thomas and giving the Edward Marsh book to the publishers after 5 years and 1 month
Article "Wilfred [sic] Wilson Gibson: Poet of Tenement and Trench" by Reverend John Haynes Holmes
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Possibly published in "The Survey". A review of Gibson's work, focusing on the "unpretentious" Daily Bread and Battle, described by Holmes as "war poetry of the future"
Newspaper article "Narrative in Verse"
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Published in The Daily Telegraph, author unknown. A review of Coldknuckles praising its "racy narrative" and comparing his characterisation to Thomas Hardy. With pencil annotations
Newspaper article "In Good Voice" by J C Trewin
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Published in The Observer. A review of "Coldknuckles" praising it as an "uncommonly expert story-poem, own cousin to the swift, surging narratives of Masefield". With pencil annotations
Wilfrid Gibson's "Certificate of employment during the war"
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Form describing a soldier's work during military service in order to help him find employment after de-mobilisation. It lists Gibson's rank as "Private" and regimental employment as "Clerking" from January 1917 to January 1918, adding the comment that he was an "efficient and reliable clerk". The form is signed by Gibson
Photographs of Northumberland landscapes by Gibson & Son
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Scenes include Hexham, Hadrian's Wall and a Roman milestone on the Roman road at Chesterholme. One photograph annotated on reverse
Photographs of Rupert Brooke by Sherril Schell
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Mounted with pencil annotations
Photograph of the painting "Oaitepeha Bay, Tahiti" by William Hodges
Part of Dymock Poets Special Collection
Annotated on reverse "For Wilfrid from Eddie: a photograph of Rupert's favourite picture at Admiralty House"
Photographer unknown