‘Print is Much Safer than MS’: The Fate of Folklore and Folk Song Collections in the Isle of Man

Authors

  • Stephen Miller Isle of Man

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/kula.26

Keywords:

Isle of Man, Folklore, Folk Song, Celtic Revival, Lost Collections

Abstract

The Isle of Man in the 1890s saw remarkable activity in the collecting of folklore and folk song, both in English and Manx Gaelic. This was followed by a further wave of collectors in the next decade, enthused by the Celtic Revival. Much of the material collected has now been lost for a variety of reasons detailed in this article. The most significant loss was that of the cylinder recordings made by the Manx Language Society between 1905 and 1913. Several collectors expressed concern in their lifetime about the survival of their papers, but this did little to prevent the loss of the collections they amassed. Such a fragmented record has consequences in researching what does now survive.

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References

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Manuscripts:

Manx National Heritage Library (Douglas, Isle of Man).

First Series

MS 221 A. A.W. Moore, Manx ‘Odds & Ends’.

MS 448/1–3 A. Dr John Clague Collection.

MS 449 B. Dr John Clague Collection.

MS 450/1–24 A. Notebooks compiled by Dr John Clague.

MS 1086 C. Letters from Sophia Morrison to J.J. Kneen (1904–14).

MS 1185 A. Letters from Rev. John Kewley to G.W. Wood (1911–17).

MS 1277 A. Letters from T.E. Brown to A.W. Moore (1892–97).

MS 1513 B. Letters from Sophia Morrison to J.J. Kneen (1908–15).

MS 5606 A. Letter from John Nelson to William Cubbon (28 November 1906).

New Series

MS 09495, Sophia Morrison Papers, Boxes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.

MS 09702, Deemster J.F. Gill Papers, Box 2.

Photographic Archive

File Persons, Gill I.

Scrapbooks

J48-13XF

Yn Cheshaght Ghailckagh (Thie ny Gaelgey, St Jude’s, Isle of Man)

Minute Book [1899–1913].

Manchester City Archives (Manchester, England)

M277/12/1–65. Scrapbook compiled by Karl Roeder.

In Family Hands

C.I. Paton, Personal Diary (1905–49).

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Published

2018-11-29

How to Cite

Miller, Stephen. 2018. “‘Print Is Much Safer Than MS’: The Fate of Folklore and Folk Song Collections in the Isle of Man”. KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies 2 (1):6. https://doi.org/10.5334/kula.26.

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