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Garvey letters and Clinoe agreement
IE OCL P131/1/2 · Sous-série organique · 15 December 1807- 7 March 1871
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

Letters and documents relating to George Garvey's work as agent for Benjamin Bloomfield.

Sans titre
Letters to George Garvey, land agent
IE OCL P131/1/2/2 · Dossier · 20 October 1842-9 March 1873
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

File of letters from the Bloomfields to their land agent George Garvey. Letters cover both business and personal topics.

Sans titre
IE OCL P131/2 · Série organique
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

This series contains personal records relating to the Trench family.
Included in this series are family history papers concerning the Trench family's pedigree and related families, personal correspondence and diaries.

Sans titre
Dora Turnor
IE OCL P131/2/2/3 · Sous-série organique · 17 April 1866-17 April 1898
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

Letters sent to and sent by Dora Trench (née Turnor) between 1866 and 1898.

Sans titre
Bertha Turnor's time in Australia.
IE OCL P131/2/2/3/3/2 · Dossier · 20 March 1890-10 May 1891
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

Letters sent by Bertha Turnor to Dora Trench regarding her life in Bolingbroke and Branscombe, Australia.
She discusses topics such as educating children, making Kangaroo soup, the guests who pass through her home, white ants eating the school books, moving in with the Davidson family, her trips to the sugar field with Mr. Davidson and the extreme weather.

Sans titre
Bertha's trip to North America and Cuba.
IE OCL P131/2/2/3/3/3 · Dossier · 1894-1895
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

During 1894 and 1895 Bertha visited North America and Cuba, this file contains the letters she sent to her sister Dora Trench during this time.

In a letter dated 4 November 1894 she writes about Niagra falls,' Friday was a glorious day day, warm & bright. I spent all of it sitting in the sun, looking at the Falls from various points of view. I was not disappointed in them. They are grand in spite of everything having been done to spoil the place. There are great factories close by, worked by the water, the banks are linded with lifts & railways of all sorts to pull you up & down. You are pursued by guides & drivers & men selling shell boxes, photos & mugs with "Niagara" on there, as mementos & a huge advertisement of "Carters little Liver pills" is just above one fall!..'

She also writes of her disappointment with Cuba, ' ... I am much disappointed in Havana. There is nothing to remind one, one is in the tropics except the heat. It is just like Marseilles are one of the Sout European towns the same narrow ill paved streets, & the same street houses with the plaster peeling of & muels with bells and tassels, only there are no beautiful mountains & no interesting buildings & hardly any trees, which most tropical towns have...'

Sans titre
Bertha's trip to Mexico.
IE OCL P131/2/2/3/3/4 · Dossier · 4 February 1895-22 March 1895
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

File of letters from Bertha Turnor to Dora Trench. The letters are written from Mexico and the United States.
In the letters Bertha discusses her travels around Mexico to places such as Puebla and Merida. She states her delight at visiting a place free from tourists yet also expresses her disappointment with the poverty and sub-par facilities she encountered.

Sans titre
Letters from Bertha from Stockholm 1897.
IE OCL P131/2/2/3/3/5 · Dossier · 10 January 1897-1897
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

Letters sent to Dora Trench by Bertha Turnor during Bertha's time in Stockholm Sweden.

In one letter of note Bertha writes about a visit to the Swedish palace, '....A servant footman there showed us into a room where a lot of ladies, all in black with white sleeves were standing about & talking. Tea was being handed around but as Mrs P did not take any, I thought I had better not. I did not see anyone I know except for [Countess] Wachtmeister the Mistress of the Robes, who we had called on at the Palace. She shook hands, & then asked us to follow her into a little room next door. That is where the diplomats are received. There were only 9 of us there. The German minister's wife with a daughter & friend- Mrs P. niece & Sue the American [?] wife Mrs O'Neill with 2 daughters. We stood in a row on one side . After a few minutes waiting the doors were thrown open & the Queen came in followed by a [?] & 2 or 3 gentlemen. She was dressed in a high purple velvet gown with a headdress of feathers & lace & diamonds about. We all curtsied. She first talked for sometime in German to the 3 Germans. Then in excellent English to Mrs P. She asked if she had got into her flat yet & about the weather, skating, [?], including miss P & I. I made a remark about the skating but Mrs P did most of it..'

Sans titre
1928-1932
IE OCL P131/2/2/4/5 · Dossier · 19 March 1928-16 June 1932
Fait partie de Loughton Papers

Letters sent to Theodora Trench from 1928 until 1932.

The majority of the letters within the file are from family members.
Examples include a letter from Sheelah Lefroy dated 19 March 1928 which was sent aboard the S.S Rawalpindi. In this letter she discusses her difficulty with sea sickness.

Also contained within the file are letters from Blanche Trench, Hurst House, Berkshire, England, the letters are of a personal nature covering health issues and birthdays.