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		<filedesc>
			<titlestmt>
				<titleproper>Wilfrid Ewart:</titleproper>

				<subtitle>An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center</subtitle>
				<author encodinganalog="245$c">Finding aid created by Elspeth Healey</author>

			</titlestmt>
			<publicationstmt>
				<publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Harry Ransom Center, </publisher>
				<date encodinganalog="260$c" calendar="gregorian" era="ce">2010</date>
			</publicationstmt>
		</filedesc>
		<profiledesc>
			<creation>Finding aid encoded by Elspeth Healey, <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">27
					August 2010</date>
			</creation>
			<langusage>Finding aid written in <language>English</language></langusage>
		</profiledesc>
	</eadheader>
	<archdesc level="collection">
		<did>
			<repository encodinganalog="852$a">
				<corpname>The University of Texas at Austin, <subarea> Harry Ransom
				Center</subarea></corpname>
			</repository>
			<origination label="Creator:">
				<persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="100">Ewart, Wilfrid, 1892-1922</persname>
			</origination>
			<unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" label="Title:">Wilfrid Ewart Collection</unittitle>

			<unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian"
				label="Dates:" normal="1907/1967">1907-1967</unitdate>
			<physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300$a">
				<extent>2 document boxes, 1 scrapbook, 1 oversize folder (OSF) (0.95 linear
				feet)</extent>
			</physdesc>

			<abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520$a">The Wilfrid Ewart Collection consists
				of materials accumulated by John Gawsworth (Terence Ian Fytton Armstrong) for his
				posthumous volumes of Ewart's writing. These materials include a small number of
				typescripts and manuscripts by Ewart, research notes, copies of Ewart's
				correspondence with his family, clippings and copies of Ewart's published articles
				(often with corrections in Gawsworth's hand), and Gawsworth's own emended drafts of
				writings by Ewart. Also present are clippings about Ewart and a scrapbook containing
				reviews of and articles about Gawsworth's volumes of Ewart's writing. The collection
				is arranged in three series: I. Works, 1907-1967; II. Correspondence and Works by
				Others, 1924-1967; and III. Scrapbook and Clippings, 1912-1937.</abstract>

			<langmaterial label="Language: ">
				<language langcode="eng">English</language>
			</langmaterial>
		</did>
		<bioghist encodinganalog="545">
			<head>Biographical Sketch</head>
			<p>
				<emph render="underline">Wilfrid Ewart, 1892-1922</emph>
			</p>
			<p>World War I novelist and essayist Wilfrid Herbert Gore Ewart (1892-1922) was born on
				May 19, 1892. His father, Herbert Brisbane Ewart, came from a noted military family
				and served as comptroller to the widow of a Russian nobleman. His mother, Lady Mary
				"Molly" Ewart, was of aristocratic birth, the youngest daughter of the third Earl of
				Arran. Despite growing up in the fashionable neighborhood of Belgravia in London,
				Ewart did not have an easy childhood. He was blind in one eye and had poor eyesight
				in the other. Moreover, though his father was supportive, his mother would at times
				fly into rages. For this reason, Ewart and his younger sisters, Angela and Betty,
				were often sent to stay at the home of their mother's cousin in Buckinghamshire. At
				nine, Ewart was sent to St. Aubyn's boarding school in Rottingdean, Sussex. There,
				he grew introverted and acutely sensitive to criticism. He was next educated by a
				private tutor in Bournemouth before, at the age of fourteen, going to learn of
				agriculture at a Bottisham farm in the Cambridge fens.</p>

			<p>At Bottisham, Ewart began to write about the English rural life around him and
				developed a love for the writings of Thomas Hardy. While still in his teens, he
				became one of the country's leading experts on hens. He collaborated with John
				Stephen Hicks on a book titled <title render="italic">The Possibilities of Modern
					Poultry Farming</title> (1909), based on his previously serialized articles for
					<title render="italic">Farm Life</title>. He also began writing satirical pieces
				about the London society and manners he encountered on his visits back to the city. </p>

			<p> Despite his bad eyesight and general poor health, Ewart joined the army in the
				summer of 1914. He obtained a commission, serving as a captain in the Scots Guards.
				During his wartime service, Ewart met writer Stephen Graham, then a soldier in
				Ewart's battalion. As an officer, Ewart would have not typically associated with
				Graham, a conscript who was ten years his senior. But, the two bonded over their
				mutual interest in literature and writing since, as Graham would recall, the Scots
				Guards was "not a literary regiment." During the war, Ewart wrote articles,
				sometimes pseudonymously, about the Scots Guards and combat. After the war, he
				published a novel, <title render="italic">The Way of Revelation; A Novel of Five
					Years</title> (1921), which drew on his wartime experiences. <title
					render="italic">The Way of Revelation</title> became a bestseller and was highly
				praised even at a time when readers were becoming weary of war memoirs and novels. </p>

			<p> In 1921, Ewart travelled through Ireland, penning articles for the <title
					render="italic">Times</title> about the civil strife between the British and
				Irish nationalist forces. He then gathered and expanded these pieces for the volume
					<title render="italic">A Journey in Ireland, 1921</title> (1922). He also
				continued writing reviews and articles for periodicals and newspapers. In April of
				1922, Ewart suffered a mental and physical collapse, which included the partial
				paralysis of his fingers. Historian Hugh Cecil suggests that Ewart's always fragile
				psychology might have been further unbalanced by a combination of the aftereffects
				of the war, his immersion in the London literary scene, overwork, and personal
				disappointments. At the urging of Stephen Graham and his wife, Ewart set out to
				visit the couple and recover with them in Santa Fe, New Mexico. </p>

			<p> Ewart embarked for the United States in September of 1922. He took with him notes
				for the history of the Scots Guards during the First World War that he was
				composing. In New Mexico, Ewart recovered the use of his fingers and began to write
				again. Though he had planned to spend the Christmas holidays in New Orleans, at the
				last minute he decided to delay his visit to Louisiana and travel to Mexico first.
				It was in Mexico City that, having survived the First World War, Ewart met his
				tragic early death. Near midnight on December 31, 1922, Ewart stepped out onto his
				hotel balcony to observe the New Year's festivities. He was killed by a stray bullet
				fired by a reveler celebrating below. </p>

			<p> In spite of his death, Wilfrid Ewart's literary career continued. In 1924, Stephen
				Graham commemorated his friend and fellow writer in his volume <title
					render="italic">The Life and Last Words of Wilfrid Ewart</title> (1924). Ewart's
				own opening chapters on the Scots Guards were gathered alongside material by F.
				Loraine Petre and Major-General Cecil Lowther in a volume titled <title
					render="italic">The Scots Guards in the Great War, 1914-1918</title> (1925). In
				the early 1930s, John Gawsworth (the pen name of Terence Ian Fytton Armstrong) began
				editing and publishing posthumous volumes of Ewart's writing, first <title
					render="italic">When Armageddon Came: Studies in Peace and War</title> (1933)
				and then <title render="italic">Scots Guard</title> (1934), an autobiographical
				account of Ewart's war and post-war years based on Ewart's letters to his family and
				published articles. These were followed by two additional posthumous volumes, <title
					render="italic">Love and Strife</title> (1936), a novel Ewart had written before
					<title render="italic">Way of Revelation</title>, and <title render="italic"
					>Aspects of England</title> (1937), a collection of Ewart's essays on English
				rural life. </p>
			<p>
				<emph render="underline">John Gawsworth, 1912-1970</emph>
			</p>
			<p> British editor, anthologist, and poet John Gawsworth (1912-1970) was a bohemian and
				bibliophile who worked assiduously to revive the reputations of writers he felt were
				unduly neglected. Gawsworth was born Terence Ian Fytton Armstrong on June 29, 1912.
				His parents, Frederick Percy and Ethel Jackson Armstrong, were divorced when
				Gawsworth was still a child, and he was raised in London where he attended Merchant
				Taylors' School. </p>

			<p> Following his graduation in 1928, Armstrong began working at the bookstore of Andrew
				Block in the Soho region of London. Gawsworth was zealous about collecting books and
				manuscripts and soon met several writers through his various positions in the book
				trade. He fashioned himself as a "Man of Letters," adopting the nom-de-plume "John
				Gawsworth." He also wrote and published poetry, including his early volumes <title
					render="italic">Confession: Verses</title> (1931) and <title render="italic"
					>Fifteen Poems, Three Friends</title> (1931). In 1929, he began corresponding
				with and eventually met writer Arthur Machen, about whom he wrote an unpublished
				biography. He next focused his attention on the horror and fantasy writer, M. P.
				Shiel, who was a friend of Machen's and whose reputation was then similarly in
				decline. When Shiel died in 1947, he bequeathed to Gawsworth the title of "King Juan
				I of Redonda." Shiel's father had staked a claim on the miniature Caribbean island
				and had fancifully crowned his son king. In this manner, the already multiply-named
				Gawsworth received another moniker, the King of Redonda. </p>

			<p> In the early 1930s, Gawsworth began publishing horror, mystery, and fantasy
				anthologies, such as <title render="italic">Strange Assembly: New Stories</title>
				(1932), <title render="italic">Full Score: Twenty-five Stories</title> (1933) and
					<title render="italic">New Tales of Horror by Eminent Authors</title> (1934),
				which contained stories by Machen, Shiel, and others. The Gawsworth-edited anthology
					<title render="italic">Masterpiece of Thrills</title> (1936) is notable for
				being one of the earliest book appearances by writer Lawrence Durrell. Gawsworth's
				efforts on behalf of fantasy, mystery, and horror writing helped draw renewed
				attention to this genre. </p>

			<p> In his editing, Gawsworth would at times undertake collaborations, revising and
				completing story fragments by authors such as E. H. Visiak, M. P. Shiel, and Edgar
				Jepson. During the 1930s, Gawsworth edited four posthumous volumes of Wilfrid
				Ewart's writing: <title render="italic">When Armageddon Came: Studies in Peace and
					War</title> (1933), <title render="italic">Scots Guard</title> (1934), <title
					render="italic">Love and Strife</title> (1936), and <title render="italic"
					>Aspects of England</title> (1937). Gawsworth's editing of Ewart's work entailed
				revising previously published essays, and even, in the case of <title
					render="italic">Scots Guard</title>, drawing on Ewart's correspondence to
				produce a first person episodic narrative. Gawsworth also edited volumes of writing
				by M. P. Shiel, Theodore Wratislaw, E. H. W. Meyerstein, and others. </p>

			<p> In the late 1930s, Gawsworth began receiving recognition for his literary and
				editorial efforts. He became first a member in 1933 and then a Fellow in 1938 of the
				Royal Society of Literature, before winning its Benson Silver Medal in 1939. </p>

			<p> Gawsworth founded <title render="italic">The English Digest</title> in 1939 and
				served as its editor until 1941. Following his service in both the Royal Army and
				the Royal Air Force during World War II, he resumed his work on periodicals. He
				edited <title render="italic">Enquiry</title>, a journal of parapsychology and
				philosophy, <title render="italic">The Literary Digest</title>, and, most notably,
				from 1949 to 1952, <title render="italic">The Poetry Review</title>. The late 1940s
				also saw the publication of <title render="italic">The Collected Poems of John
					Gawsworth</title> (1948), a high point in his poetic career. </p>

			<p> Gawsworth's personal life took a difficult turn in the late 1940s. In 1948, he
				divorced his first wife Barbara Kentish, whom he had married in 1933. He
				subsequently entered into unsuccessful marriages with Estelle Gilardeau and Doreen
				Emily Ada (Rowley) Downie, whom he called "Anna." This time period also saw a
				decline in his literary reputation and his health (he was diabetic and a heavy
				drinker). By 1969, with little money, he was living an itinerant lifestyle, staying
				with friends when he could, traveling some, and passing in and out of hospitals. In
				July of 1970, he was honored in a BBC tribute hosted by Lawrence Durrell, but died
				soon after of a pulmonary embolism at the Brompton Hospital in London on September
				23, 1970. </p>
		</bioghist>
		<bibliography>
			<head>Sources:</head>
			<p>Cecil, Hugh. <title render="doublequote">Noblesse Oblige: Wilfrid
					Ewart.</title>&#160;<title render="italic">The Flower of Battle; British
					Fiction Writers of the First World War</title>. (London: Secker &amp;
				Wargurg, 1995): 119-153.</p>
			<p>Eng, Steve. <title render="doublequote">John Gawsworth.</title>&#160;<title
					render="italic">Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 255: British Fantasy
					and Science-Fiction Writers, 1918-1960</title>. http://www.galegroup.com
				(accessed July 31, 2010). </p>
			<p>Eng, Steve. <title render="doublequote">John Gawsworth…Pioneer
					'Collaborator.'</title>&#160;<title render="italic">Shiel and His
					Collaborators: Three Essays on William Thomas Stead, Louis Tracy, and John
					Gawsworth</title>. John D. Squires and Steve Eng, eds. (Kettering, Ohio: The
				Vainglory Press, 2004): 37-42. </p>
			<p>Graham, Stephen. <title render="italic">The Life and Last Words of Wilfrid
				Ewart</title>. (London: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1924). </p>
		</bibliography>
		<controlaccess>
			<head>Index Terms</head>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>People</head>
				<persname encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf">Gawsworth, John (Armstrong, Terence
					Ian Fytton), 1912-1970</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf">Graham, Stephen (1884-1975)</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf">Lowther, Hugh Cecil,
				1857–1944</persname>
			</controlaccess>

			<controlaccess>
				<head>Subjects</head>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Authors, English 20th century</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Great Britain. Army. Scots
					Guards--Officers</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">World War I--Great Britain--Personal
					Narratives</subject>
			</controlaccess>

			<controlaccess>
				<head>Document Types</head>
				<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">black-and-white photographs</genreform>
				<genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">scrapbooks</genreform>
			</controlaccess>
		</controlaccess>
		<scopecontent encodinganalog="520">
			<head>Scope and Contents</head>
			<p>The Wilfrid Ewart Collection consists of materials accumulated by John Gawsworth
				(Terence Ian Fytton Armstrong) for his posthumous volumes of Ewart's writing. These
				materials include a small number of typescripts and manuscripts by Ewart, research
				notes, copies of Ewart's correspondence with his family, clippings and copies of
				Ewart's published articles (often with corrections in Gawsworth's hand), and
				Gawsworth's own emended drafts of writings by Ewart. Also present are clippings
				about Ewart and a scrapbook containing reviews of and articles about Gawsworth's
				volumes of Ewart's writing. The collection does not include draft materials for the
				two books that Ewart published during his lifetime: his bestselling novel <title
					render="italic">The Way of Revelation</title> (1921) and <title render="italic"
					>Journey in Ireland, 1921</title> (1922), although photocopies of some of the
				articles Ewart wrote on Ireland for the <title render="italic">Times</title> are
				among the research materials Gawsworth used in compiling <title render="italic"
					>Scots Guard</title> (1934). The collection is arranged in three series: I.
				Works, 1907-1967; II. Correspondence and Works by Others, 1924-1967; and III.
				Scrapbook and Clippings, 1912-1937.</p>

			<p>Series I. consists of works by Wilfrid Ewart, including manuscripts and typescripts
				(some produced by Gawsworth) with handwritten corrections by both Ewart and
				Gawsworth. Research notes and copies of Ewart's correspondence are also present.
				This series is organized alphabetically by the title of each work. The series'
				drafts and emended article clippings document the extent of John Gawsworth's
				editorial interventions. Of the four posthumous volumes of Ewart's writing edited by
				Gawsworth, only Ewart's novel <title render="italic">Love and Strife</title> (1936)
				is not represented here. Drafts for this novel do, however, appear in the Harry
				Ransom Center's Terence Ian Fytton Armstrong collection.</p>

			<p>Materials for <title render="italic">Scots Guard</title> (1934), an autobiographical
				account of Ewart's experiences from the First World War up until his death, constitute
				the largest collection of documents in the Works series. Gawsworth drew on Ewart's
				correspondence and published articles to produce the book's first person narrative.
				Materials for this volume include Gawsworth's typescript and manuscript copies of
				over eighty letters from Ewart to his family, beginning during the war and dating up
				until a few days before his death. Other <title render="italic">Scots Guard</title>
				materials include article proofs with Ewart's emendations; clippings, photostats,
				and Gawsworth's manuscript and typescript copies of Ewart's published articles; an
				advance proof of the volume with minor corrections, and publicity materials.
				Articles interleaved in the advanced proof copy have been removed to box 1, folder
				14, though their original positions are indicated with paper flags.</p>

			<p><title render="italic">When Armageddon Came</title> (1933) is represented by article
				clippings, manuscript fragments in Ewart's hand, and manuscript and proof versions
				of John Gawsworth's preface. <title render="italic">Aspects of England</title>
				(1937) is represented by proof, typescript, and manuscript fragments (in Gawsworth's
				hand). Additional materials in this series include Gawsworth's file of uncollected
				articles by Ewart, as well as additional individual article drafts and fragments,
				some of which contain corrections in Ewart's hand. Also present is a composite draft
				for an unpublished volume of Ewart's journalism titled Impressions and Reactions.
				Gawsworth abandoned this volume when a kit bag containing additional manuscripts was
				discovered by Ewart's father, Herbert. These newly-discovered materials formed the
				basis of <title render="italic">Love and Strife</title> (1936) and <title
					render="italic">Aspects of England</title> (1937).</p>

			<p>The Works series also includes research notes, drafts, and correspondence from
				Ewart's fellow officers for the book on the Scots Guards in the First World War that
				Ewart was preparing at the time of his death. This work was later completed,
				incorporating chapters by Ewart, by F. Loraine Petre under the title <title
					render="italic">The Scots Guards in the Great War, 1914-1918</title> (1925).</p>

			<p>Series II. Works by Others consists of letters from Ewart's father, Herbert, and
				sister, Angela, to John Gawsworth; a letter from Herbert Ewart to writer Stephen
				Graham, and a typescript for an unpublished article on Ewart by his friend Henry
				Williamson, titled A Wild Goose Chase with Gawsworth.</p>

			<p>Series III. consists of clippings of published articles on Ewart and his writing. The
				folder of press clippings includes over forty-five articles and notices written
				about Ewart during his lifetime, five photographs of the countryside, a copy of
					<title render="italic">The White Wyandotte Club Year Book, 1912</title>
				containing Ewart's <title render="doublequote">The Minor Points of a White
				Wyandote,</title> and Ewart's <title render="italic">Times</title> obituary notice.
				A scrapbook contains John Gawsworth's collection of press clippings for <title
					render="italic">When Armageddon Came</title> (1933), <title render="italic"
					>Scots Guard</title> (1934), <title render="italic">Love and Strife</title>
				(1936), and <title render="italic">Aspects of England</title> (1937).</p>

			<p>Materials in the collection are in English and are in good condition, with the
				exception of the clippings scrapbook, which is fragile. A digital copy of the
				scrapbook is available for access.</p>

		</scopecontent>
		<acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
			<head>Acquisition: </head>
			<p>Purchase, 1968 (R4350)</p>

		</acqinfo>
		<accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
			<head>Access: </head>
			<p>Open for research</p>
		</accessrestrict>
		<processinfo encodinganalog="583">
			<head>Processed by: </head>
			<p>Elspeth Healey, 2010</p>
		</processinfo>
		<relatedmaterial encodinganalog="544 1">
			<p>The Ransom Center's collection of Terence Ian Fytton Armstrong (John Gawsworth)
				contains a significant amount of Wilfrid Ewart material, including drafts of over
				seventy articles, seven chapters of <title render="italic">Scots Guard</title>, and
				a composite manuscript of <title render="italic">Love and Strife</title>. Additional
				Ewart materials are located in the Center's collections of Sir Compton Mackenzie and
				Alec Waugh.</p>

			<p>An additional collection of Wilfrid Ewart's papers is located at the University of
				California, Los Angeles's Charles E. Young Library. A major collection of Gawsworth
				is held by the Special Collections &amp; University Archives at the University
				of Iowa. Further collections of John Gawsworth materials are located at Reading
				University and the University at Buffalo, State University of New York Special
				Collections. Drafts of Gawsworth's unpublished biography of Arthur Machen reside at
				the University of California, Los Angeles's Charles E. Young Library.</p>


		</relatedmaterial>
		<dsc type="combined">
			<head>Container List</head>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle>Series I. Works, <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"
							type="inclusive">1907-1967</unitdate>
					</unittitle>
				</did>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<unittitle><title render="italic">Aspects of England</title>
						(1937)</unittitle>
					</did>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">1.1</container>
							<unittitle>Manuscript (in John Gawsworth's hand) and typescript draft
								fragments, undated </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">1.2</container>
							<unittitle>Advanced proof fragment, with photograph of Jordan's Meeting
								House with graves of the Penn family, 20 November 1936, undated
							</unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">1.3, OSF</container>
						<unittitle>'Impressions and Reactions,' composite draft with article
							clippings and foreword in John Gawsworth's hand, undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">1.4, OSF</container>
						<unittitle>London, typescript fragment with two corrections in Wilfrid
							Ewart's hand, and printed versions under variant titles with notes in
							John Gawsworth's hand, undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">1.5</container>
						<unittitle>The Meaning of Christmas, carbon typescript with corrections in
							Wilfrid Ewart's hand, undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<unittitle><title render="italic">Scots Guard</title> (1934)</unittitle>
					</did>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<unittitle>Correspondence</unittitle>
						</did>
						<c04>
							<did>
								<container type="Container">1.6</container>
								<unittitle>Camphuis &amp;Co. (Laredo, TX), typescript copy, 27
									December [1922] </unittitle>
							</did>
						</c04>
						<c04>
							<did>
								<container type="Container">1.7</container>
								<unittitle>Dewar, George A. B. (George Albemarle Bertie) ("George"),
									handwritten original and typescript copy, 6 September 1920.
								</unittitle>
							</did>
						</c04>
						<c04>
							<did>
								<container type="Container">1.8</container>
								<unittitle>Ewart, Betty , typescript copies, 31 May 1916, 17
									December 1917 </unittitle>
							</did>
						</c04>
						<c04>
							<did>
								<unittitle>Ewart, Herbert Brisbane and Mary</unittitle>
							</did>
							<c05>
								<did>
									<container type="Container">1.9</container>
									<unittitle>Copies in Herbert Brisbane Ewart's hand,
										February-March, 1915 </unittitle>
								</did>
							</c05>
							<c05>
								<did>
									<container type="Container">1.10-11</container>
									<unittitle>Typescript copies, 1915-1922</unittitle>
								</did>
							</c05>
						</c04>
						<c04>
							<did>
								<container type="Container">1.12</container>
								<unittitle>Waddington, Angela [Ewart] (Ginger), typescript and
									manuscript (in John Gawsworth's hand) copies, 22 February 1915,
									1 August 1918 </unittitle>
							</did>
						</c04>
						<c04>
							<did>
								<container type="Container">1.13</container>
								<unittitle>Typescript correspondence copies, duplicates, 1915-1920
								</unittitle>
							</did>
						</c04>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">1.14</container>
							<unittitle>Clippings of published articles (pseudonymous and credited),
								removed from advance proof copy, 1915-1921 </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">1.15, OSF</container>
							<unittitle>Article galley proofs, with minor corrections in Wilfrid
								Ewart's hand, 1920 </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.1</container>
							<unittitle>Clippings of articles from the <title render="italic"
								>Times</title>, (published anonymously and later expanded in <title
									render="italic">A Journey in Ireland</title>, 1921), Photostat
								copies, 17-22 May 1921 </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.2</container>
							<unittitle>Transcription in John Gawsworth's hand of <title
									render="italic">Country Life</title> article, I: The Coast,
								undated </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.3</container>
							<unittitle>Typescript copies of passages from <title render="italic"
									>Land and Water</title> and <title render="italic">Country
								Life</title> articles, with John Gawsworth's corrections and
								additions, undated </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.4</container>
							<unittitle>Advance proof copy of first edition, with corrections and
								additions in John Gawsworth's hand, circa 1934 </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.5</container>
							<unittitle>Publicity materials, undated</unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.6</container>
							<unittitle>Note by John Gawsworth describing the present collection of
									<title render="italic">Scots Guard</title> manuscript materials,
								24 February 1967 </unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.7</container>
						<unittitle><title render="italic">The Scots Guards in the Great War,
								1914-1918</title>, research notes, with correspondence to Wilfrid
							Ewart from his fellow officers, 1922, undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.8</container>
						<unittitle>Tale of Crimea, with John Gawsworth's handwritten corrections,
							undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.9</container>
						<unittitle>True Story of a Wood, typescript with handwritten corrections in
							Wilfrid Ewart's and John Gawsworth's hands, circa 1916, undated
						</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.10-11, OSF</container>
						<unittitle>'Uncollected Articles,' manuscript (in John Gawsworth's hand) and
							typescript copies and clippings, 1907-1923 </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.12</container>
						<unittitle>War, carbon typescript with Wilfrid Ewart's handwritten
							corrections, undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<unittitle><title render="italic">When Armageddon Came</title>
						(1933)</unittitle>
					</did>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.13</container>
							<unittitle>Article clippings, 1920-1922</unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.14</container>
							<unittitle>Manuscript fragments in Wilfrid Ewart's hand, undated
							</unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
					<c03>
						<did>
							<container type="Container">2.15</container>
							<unittitle>'Note,' manuscript preface draft in John Gawsworth's hand and
								printed proofs with Gawsworth's handwritten corrections, undated
							</unittitle>
						</did>
					</c03>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.16, OSF</container>
						<unittitle>'Fragments,' manuscript, typescript, and printed fragments, with
							corrections in Wilfrid Ewart's hand, undated </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle>Series II. Correspondence and Works by Others, <unitdate era="ce"
							calendar="gregorian" type="inclusive">1924-1967</unitdate>
					</unittitle>
				</did>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.17</container>
						<unittitle>Ewart, Herbert Brisbane. Letters to John Gawsworth and Stephen
							Graham, 1924, 1931-1937 </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.18</container>
						<unittitle>Waddington, Angela [Ewart]. Letter to John Gawsworth (Terence Ian
							Fytton Armstrong), 8 September 1934 </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.19</container>
						<unittitle>Williamson, Henry. A Wild Goose Chase with Gawsworth, carbon
							typescript, with corrections in John Gawsworth's hand, circa 1962, 1967
						</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
			<c01 level="series">
				<did>
					<unittitle>Series III. Scrapbook and Clippings, <unitdate era="ce"
							calendar="gregorian" type="inclusive">1912-1937</unitdate>
					</unittitle>
				</did>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">2.20, OSF</container>
						<unittitle>Clippings and photographs, including a copy of <title
								render="italic">The White Wyandotte Club Year Book</title>, 1912,
							containing Wilfrid Ewart's <title render="doublequote">The Minor Points
								of a White Wyandote,</title> 1912-1923 </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
				<c02>
					<did>
						<container type="Container">*</container>
						<unittitle>Scrapbook Album, John Gawsworth's press clippings for <title
								render="italic">When Armageddon Came</title> (1933), <title
								render="italic">Scots Guard</title> (1934), <title render="italic"
								>Love and Strife</title> (1936), and <title render="italic">Aspects
								of England</title> (1937), circa 1933-1937, undated [* use digital
							copy for access] </unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>

		</dsc>
		<odd type="index">
			<head>Index of Correspondents</head>
			<p>Box and folder numbers are followed by parenthetical notations indicating the number
				of letters to or from a particular correspondent.</p>
			<list>
				<item><corpname>Camphuis &amp; Co.</corpname>--1.6 (1 from Ewart), 1.13 (1 from
					Ewart [duplicate])</item>
				<item><persname>Dewar, George A. B. (George Albemarle Bertie)</persname>--1.7 (1
					from Ewart)</item>
				<item><persname>Ewart, Betty</persname>--1.8 (2 from Ewart), 1.13 (1 from Ewart
					[duplicate])</item>
				<item><persname>Ewart, Herbert Brisbane</persname> and Mary--1.9-1.11 (79 from
					Ewart), 1.13 (50 from Ewart [duplicates]), 2.17 (16 to John Gawsworth), 2.17 (1
					to Stephen Graham)</item>
				<item><persname>Gawsworth, John (Armstrong, Terence Ian Fytton),
					1912-1970</persname>--2.17 (16 from Herbert Brisbane Ewart), 2.18 (1 from Angela
					[Ewart] Waddington)</item>
				<item><persname>Gill, A. M.</persname>--2.13 (1 from Ewart)</item>
				<item><persname>Graham, Stephen (1884-1975)</persname>--2.17 (1 from Herbert
					Brisbane Ewart)</item>
				<item><persname>Lowther, Hugh Cecil, 1857-1944</persname>--2.7 (4 from Lowther)</item>
				<item><persname>Mackenzie, Victor</persname>--2.7 (1 to Jack [J. A. Stirling])</item>
				<item><persname>Stair, Lord</persname>--2.7 (1 to Ewart)</item>
				<item><persname>Stirling, J. A. (Jack)</persname>--2.7(1 to Bill [Ewart])</item>
				<item><persname>Waddington, Angela [Ewart] (Ginger)</persname>--1.12 (2 from Ewart),
					1.13 (1 from Ewart [duplicate]), 2.18 (1 to John Gawsworth)</item>
				<item><corpname>War Office</corpname>--1.10 (1 to Herbert Brisbane Ewart), 1.13 (1
					to Herbert Brisbane Ewart [duplicate])</item>
				<item>[Unidentified]--2.7 (1 to Bill [Ewart]), (1 to Meat)</item>

			</list>
		</odd>

		<odd type="index">
			<head>Index of Works</head>
			<list>
				<item><title>Always the Army!</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Amiens in War Time</title>--1.14</item>
				<item><title>Apaches at Play</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">April</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>The Archives of London</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Armistice Day, 1920. Epitome</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Army of Ulster</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="italic">Aspects of England</title>--1.1-2</item>
				<item><title>The Assassination of Sir Henry Wilson</title>--see <title
						render="doublequote">An Episode in Belgravia</title></item>
				<item><title>At a Police Court</title>--1.1</item>
				<item><title>At Southampton Docks</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Autumn on Old Battlefields</title>--1.3, 2.16</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Autumn on the Somme Battlefield</title>--1.14, 2.3</item>
				<item><title>Autumn Sp[ur]</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Backyard London</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Bygone Cricket</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">British Foreign Policy</title> (Review of <title
						render="italic">Old Diplomacy and New: From Salisbury to Lloyd
					George</title> by A. L. Kennedy)--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">By-Paths of the Riviera</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title>Children of the Slaves</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title>Christmas Mistletoe</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>The Comedy of London</title>--see <title>At a Police Court</title></item>
				<item><title>The Compleat Cricketer</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Concerning Pins</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Country Racing in France</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Cricket Oddities</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Derby Day</title>--1.1</item>
				<item><title>The Derby</title>--see <title>Some Memorable Races</title></item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Dinner in Soho</title>--1.4</item>
				<item><title>Downland</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Earrings</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>East Anglia: A Voyage of Discovery. I. The Coast</title>--2.2</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">East Anglia: A Voyage of Discovery--One. II. Wild
						Geese</title>--1.15</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">East Anglia: A Voyage of Discovery. III.
						Longshoremen</title>--1.14</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">East Anglia: A Voyage of Discovery. IV. Marsh and
						Mere</title>--1.14-15</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">An Episode in Belgravia</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title>Europe – Wither Bound?</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title>Exmoor</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Fox-Hunting and Poultry-Keeping</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Fox Ways</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title>Granville</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">A Haphazard Parliament</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Housing in the Village</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="singlequote">Impressions and Reactions</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title>In Both Camps</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">In the Market Square</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">In Rebel Hands. An English Officer's Impressions.
						Tullamore Road</title>--2.1</item>
				<item><title>In Staple Inn</title>--1.1</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Interrupted Lives. The Problem of the
					Ex-Officer</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Life in Cork. An English Officer's Impressions.
						Increasing Criminal Element</title>--2.1 </item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Life in Dublin. An English Officer's Impressions.
						'A. E.'s' Proposal</title>--2.1</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Life in Mallow. An English Officer's Impressions.
						Put Under Arrest</title>--2.1 </item>
				<item><title>London</title>--1.4</item>
				<item><title>London Cameos</title>--see <title>At a Police Court</title></item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Londoners</title>--1.3, 1.4</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Lure of London. Realms of Unknown to the Cockney.
						Saturday Afternoon Pilgrimage</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>The Marshes</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>The Meaning of Christmas</title>--1.5</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Men Who Are England</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Minor Points of a White Wyandote</title>--2.20</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Night City</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">A Night in the Salient</title>--1.14, 2.3</item>
				<item><title>The Old Bailey</title>--1.1</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">On the Road to Ulster. The English Officer's
						Impressions. Suspicious Curiosity</title>--2.1</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Passing of a Victorian</title>--2.13</item>
				<item><title>The Passing Year. A Sketch</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>The Past in Picardy</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">A Pilgrimage</title>--2.13</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Return to Paris</title>--2.13</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">'The Return of the Native' at
					Dorchester</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Royal Artillery War Commemoration Book</title>
					(Review)--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="italic">Scots Guard</title>--1.6-2.6</item>
				<item><title render="italic">The Scots Guards in the Great War,
					1914-1918</title>--2.7</item>
				<item><title>A Second Lapse into Fiction</title>--see <title render="doublequote"
						>Londoners</title></item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Seen at the Front. I. Night on the
					Hill</title>--1.14</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Seen at the Front. II. London to the Firing
					Line</title>--1.14</item>
				<item><title>Some Memorable Races</title>--2.10</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Some Young Women of Modern England</title>--2.13</item>
				<item><title>Sport in Ireland</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>Spring after Sunrise. An Early Morning Wandering</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>Tale of the Crimea</title>--2.8</item>
				<item><title>Tale of the West Country</title>--see <title>Tale of the Crimea</title></item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Tan Hill Fair</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Thomas Hardy and Our Own Time</title>--1.14</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">To the Dressing Station</title>--1.14</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Tragedy of London</title>--1.1</item>
				<item><title>Trench Life</title>--1.3, 2.11</item>
				<item><title>True Story of a Wood</title>--2.9</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">The Turkey and the Goose</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>Turkeys</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>The Unsimple Life</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title>A Village Secret</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title>Wanted – A Leader!</title>--1.3</item>
				<item><title render="italic">When Armageddon Came</title>--2.13-15</item>
				<item><title>A Word on Mistletoe</title>--2.11</item>
				<item><title render="doublequote">Wounded on a Battlefield</title>--1.14</item>

			</list>
		</odd>
	</archdesc>
</ead>
