Identity Statement
Title | Philip P. Graves Collection |
Archive Reference | IE BL/PP/PG |
Web Link to this Entry | https://iar.ie/archive/philip-p-graves-collection |
Creation Dates | 1941 -1944 |
Level of Description | File (An organized unit of documents grouped together either for current use by the creator or in the process of archival arrangement, because they relate to the same subject, activity, or transaction. A file is usually the basic unit within a record series)., Item (The smallest intellectually indivisible archival unit, e.g., a letter, memorandum, report, photograph, sound recording). |
Extent Medium | 12 items |
Context
Creator(s): Graves, Philip Perceval, 1876-1953
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Administrative History ↴
Philip Perceval Graves (1876-1953) was a British journalist and writer. He was a member of the Graves family of Ballylickey Manor House, Co. Cork, Ireland, a prominent Anglo-Irish family, and the elder half-brother of the author Robert Graves. He worked as foreign correspondent for The Times newspaper in Constantinople pre-World War I. He served in the British army in the Middle East during World War I, reported on the Irish War of Independence during 1919, and also worked as a foreign correspondent in India and the Balkans before returning to become editor of The Times. In 1921 he exposed The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as anti-Semitic plagiarism a series of articles in The Times. His most monumental work was a 21-volume history of World War II. Graves received numerous international awards and titles, among which are French Légion d'honneur and Order of the Crown of Italy. In his journeys, Philip Graves developed an interest in entomology and published articles in scientific journals. He was member of the Royal Irish Academy. He retired in 1946 to Ballylickey Manor and dedicated himself mainly to zoological hobbies. Here he made a study of the Irish butterflies, being especially interested in the local sub-species. He restored Ballylickey House as a hotel, which was taken over by his son after his death. -
Archival History ↴
The collection consists of material removed from a journal held in Special Collections, UCC Library, The Honourable Society of Cymmrodorian, for the encouragement of Literature, Science, and Art as connected with Wales, Vol. xlvi, entitled "The Friends of Griffith Jones, A Study in Educational Philanthropy", by W. Moses Williams (Professor of Education and Head of the Training Department, University College, Swansea), published in London by the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorian, London, 1939. -
Immediate Source Acquisition ↴
Unknown
Content & Structure
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Scope & Content: Graves, Philip Perceval, 1876-1953 ↴
The Collection contains letters and invoices sent to Graves in London during 1941-1944.
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Appraisal Destruction ↴
Permanent Retention -
Accruals ↴
No Further Additions Expected -
Arrangement ↴
Minimal arrangement.
Conditions of Access & Use
Access Conditions | Available by appointment with the Archives Service to holders of UCC Readers tickets. |
Conditions Governing Reproduction | Subject to University College Cork Special Collections and Archives’ Reading Room terms of membership and in accordance with copyright legislation. |
Creation Dates | 1941 -1944 |
Level of Description | File (An organized unit of documents grouped together either for current use by the creator or in the process of archival arrangement, because they relate to the same subject, activity, or transaction. A file is usually the basic unit within a record series)., Item (The smallest intellectually indivisible archival unit, e.g., a letter, memorandum, report, photograph, sound recording). |
Extent Medium | 12 items |
Material Language Script | English |
Finding Aids | Item descriptions via collection webpage Archive Web Link → |
Allied Materials
There are no Allied Materials
Descriptive Control Area
Archivist Note | Emer Twomey |
Rules/Conventions | ISAD(G): General International Standard Archival Description. 2nd ed. Ottawa: International Council on Archives, 2000. |
Date of Descriptions | September 2018 |