Mare, Richard Herbert Ingpen de la, 1901-1986 (publisher)
Biography
Richard Herbert Ingpen de la Mare (1901-1986), Vice-Chairman, Faber and Faber, son of Walter
Found in 10 Collections and/or Records:
Christmas cards to Brooke and Diana Crutchley from Richard and Catherine de la Mare, 1936-1938 (Dates from children's names on the cards. .)
Three cards.
Correspondence with readers, 1946-1947
Meynell's correspondents include Noel Carrington, Harry Carter, John Carter, Sydney Cockerell, Geoffrey Keynes, Richard de la Mare, James Nicolson, A. M. Pettigrew, Oliver Simon, Ralph Straus. Some of the letters mention corrections. With the correspondence are clippings of reviews.
Correspondents D, 1935-1962
Hassall died intestate. His working papers were taken to the Royal Society of Literature by his assistant Gillian Paterson, who arranged and (presumably) listed them. They were bought by CUL from Bloomsbury Book Auctions in 1992. They were housed in paper box files 1 25 and cartons A D, as listed. They have now been re boxed, in 28 boxes and one packet, which has involved some reorganisation of the material and hence some rearrangement and re numbering of the original list.
from Richard de la Mare, Faber and Faber Limited, 24 Russell Square, London, WC 1, 14 Feb 1957
Hassall died intestate. His working papers were taken to the Royal Society of Literature by his assistant Gillian Paterson, who arranged and (presumably) listed them. They were bought by CUL from Bloomsbury Book Auctions in 1992. They were housed in paper box files 1 25 and cartons A D, as listed. They have now been re boxed, in 28 boxes and one packet, which has involved some reorganisation of the material and hence some rearrangement and re numbering of the original list.
from Richard de la Mare, Faber and Faber Limited, 24 Russell Square, London, WC 1, 13 Aug 1957
Hassall died intestate. His working papers were taken to the Royal Society of Literature by his assistant Gillian Paterson, who arranged and (presumably) listed them. They were bought by CUL from Bloomsbury Book Auctions in 1992. They were housed in paper box files 1 25 and cartons A D, as listed. They have now been re boxed, in 28 boxes and one packet, which has involved some reorganisation of the material and hence some rearrangement and re numbering of the original list.
from Richard de la Mare, Faber and Faber Limited, 24 Russell Square, London, WC 1, 21 Nov 1957
Hassall died intestate. His working papers were taken to the Royal Society of Literature by his assistant Gillian Paterson, who arranged and (presumably) listed them. They were bought by CUL from Bloomsbury Book Auctions in 1992. They were housed in paper box files 1 25 and cartons A D, as listed. They have now been re boxed, in 28 boxes and one packet, which has involved some reorganisation of the material and hence some rearrangement and re numbering of the original list.
from Richard de la Mare, Faber and Faber Limited, 24 Russell Square, London, WC 1, 9 Dec 1958
Hassall died intestate. His working papers were taken to the Royal Society of Literature by his assistant Gillian Paterson, who arranged and (presumably) listed them. They were bought by CUL from Bloomsbury Book Auctions in 1992. They were housed in paper box files 1 25 and cartons A D, as listed. They have now been re boxed, in 28 boxes and one packet, which has involved some reorganisation of the material and hence some rearrangement and re numbering of the original list.
Letter concerning the publication of ['The Weald of Youth'], 6 Feb. 1942
Letter to Sassoon from 'Dick' [Richard de la Mare] at Faber & Faber, London, concerning typescripts of chapters and a frontispiece for a book by Sassoon which Faber & Faber were to publish [?'The Weald of Youth'].
Letters from Richard De La Mare, publisher, son of Walter, (Faber & Faber, London), to Siegfried Sassoon, 15 Feb. 1930-25 Mar. 1930
Request for poems for an anthology, serialisation of [Infantry Officer], meeting with S. Sitwell, own engagement to Catherine Donaldson.
Other correspondents (D), 1933-1972
These are: Richard De La Mare, Geoffrey Dowding, Ruth Draper, John Dreyfus, Andrew Duncan, Joseph R. Dunlap, L. Dyer.