Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dx-dxiv. Appointments journals (first series) of John Taylor Coleridge; 1808-1814. As well as containing a record of his daily activites and some information on money matters, these journals contain information about his reading, studies and aspirations, particularly relating to his Oxford career. In the journal for 1812 he also begins what would become his habitual practice of summing up the achievements of the past year and outlining his hopes for the futu...
Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dxv-dxxxii. Appointment journals (second series) of Sir John Taylor Coleridge; 1855-1874. These volumes were used as brief reminders of appointments, birthdays and other anniversaries, and typically include a brief note of where the day was spent (e.g. 'Home', 'Court N[isi] Pr[ius]'). Eighteen volumes.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dxxxiii-dlxvi. Journals of Sir John Taylor Coleridge; 1814-1876. From 1 June 1814 until the end of his life, Coleridge maintained an unbroken series of journals in which he recorded his private and professional activities, with many reflections on his life and work and much information about his family, friends and colleagues. The journals also contain notes on his reading and a detailed record of his opinions on religion, literature and politics. Each year ...
Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dlxxvii-dcxiii. Appointments diaries of Mary Frances Keble Coleridge; 1876-1892. All the diaries are copies of The Churchman's Almanack with two pages of writing space per month, so the entries are necessarily terse. Printed, with manuscript additions. Seventeen volumes. Blue paper binding. 120 x 78mm.
Coleridge Family Papers. Vols. dxcviii-dxcix. Journals of George R. Mackarness; 1845-1852. The identification in both cases is tentative, the first volume being inscribed 'G.R.Mackarness' and the latter containing no owner's name at all. Mackarness later became Bishop of Argyll and the Isles; his brother John Fielder Mackarness married Alethea Coleridge, daughter of John Taylor Coleridge.