Edward Collingwood Papers
Introduction
Biography
Contents
Arrangement
Related material - here
Bibliography

Catalogue

Reference code: GB-0033-CWD
Title: Edward Collingwood Papers
Dates of creation: 1921-1988
Extent: 13 metres
Held by: Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections
Origination: Edward Foyle Collingwood (1900-1970)
Language: English

Biography

Sir Edward Foyle Collingwood (1900–1970), mathematician and medical administrator, was born at Lilburn Tower, near Wooler, Northumberland, on 17 January 1900, the eldest of the four sons of Colonel Cuthbert George Collingwood (1848–1933), landowner, of Glanton Pyke, and his wife, Dorothy, daughter of the Revd William Fawcett of Somerford Keynes, Gloucestershire. Fawcett's wife was a coheir of the Foyle estate at Somerford Keynes. Collingwood and his brothers all enjoyed shooting and fishing and the social life of the country. Collingwood's mother, who survived him, was always a strong influence in the family.
Collingwood went to the Royal Naval College at Osborne in 1913 and Dartmouth in 1914. A year later he joined the Royal Navy as a midshipman in the Collingwood (by special arrangement). Before experiencing any action he fell down a hatchway, sustaining serious injuries, and was in a hospital ship which followed the battle of Jutland. He was invalided out of the navy. After passing twelfth for Woolwich he failed the medical examination, whereupon he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1918 to read Mathematics. At Lilburn there were letters of Edward's great-grandfather Vice-Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood, showing his interest in the teaching of Mathematics to the young; Collingwood was much interested in these and other papers, in the small observatory built by his grandfather, and in biology, bacteria, and photographic techniques.
At Cambridge Collingwood's director of studies, G.H. Hardy, inspired him to aim at mathematical research, to the dismay of his father and uncle. He obtained a third class in part one of the mathematical tripos in 1919 and in political specials one and two in the Michaelmas term of 1920, and then took his degree the following year. This unorthodox course left him free to study those parts of Mathematics which interested him at his own pace and omit large parts of the heavy course for part two of the mathematical tripos. As an undergraduate he kept somewhat aloof from his mathematical contemporaries, and had a full, but entirely separate, social life. He used his private means to entertain well, but never ostentatiously.
When Hardy went to Oxford in 1920, J.E. Littlewood advised Collingwood on research. He obtained a Rayleigh prize in 1923, but failed to obtain a Trinity research fellowship. At the invitation of W.H. Young he went to Aberystwyth in 1922. There Professor G. Valiron of Strasbourg was lecturing in French on integral functions, and Collingwood made translations which eventually formed a book. In 1924–1925 he held a Rouse Ball travelling studentship, mainly at the Sorbonne, and thus became the only one of the Hardy–Littlewood school to have close relationships with French mathematicians.
Collingwood took his MA degree in 1925 and, returning to Cambridge, read for a PhD degree (which he obtained in 1929) for a dissertation which included material from some already published papers on integral and meromorphic functions. He was made a member of the high table at Trinity, and in 1930 steward. Most unusually for a non-fellow, he was elected to the council of Trinity College. He still entertained well. He also regularly gave two advanced courses for the mathematical faculty, but did no regular undergraduate teaching. The six mathematicians Littlewood, Collingwood, Macintyre, Clunie, Rahman, and Joyal constituted a sequence, each the PhD student of the one before.
In the 1930s Collingwood became interested in pictures, and, when a family trust fell in on the death of an aunt, he bought some fine contemporary and eighteenth-century pictures through Geoffrey Agnew, one of his earlier Cambridge friends. He also made a collection of Chinese porcelain, becoming quite an expert on the subject.
Collingwood was lieutenant in the Northumberland Hussars in 1923–1927 and became a JP in 1935. He was chairman of the bench for many years and deputy lieutenant for Northumberland in 1959. He gave much time and thought to the management of the Lilburn estate. When in 1937 he became high sheriff of Northumberland he gave up his Cambridge obligations, but continued to visit, in particular for the college commemoration feast.
In the Second World War, Collingwood joined the Admiralty minesweeping division as an officer of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, reaching the rank of acting captain. He served as director of scientific research with the Admiralty delegation in Washington in 1942, as officer in charge of the sweeping division in 1943, chief scientist, Admiralty mine design department in 1943–1945, and as one of a delegation to Moscow on a special scientific mission. His all-round ability and wide experience, backed by his determination, were effective in getting the money needed for the scientists' work; he also impressed the scientists as having a sound grasp of physical principles. In 1946 he was appointed CBE, and became an officer of the American Legion of Merit.
Collingwood's first paper in 1924 generalized Nevanlinna's second fundamental theorem from 2 to p exceptional values, a result which Littlewood had, independently, stated in a letter to Nevanlinna. Collingwood's second paper, also in 1924, developed the idea of deficient values, questioning whether they were asymptotic. During the war this was proved false. After a gap from 1932 to 1948 Collingwood returned to this subject and discussed the islands in which |f(z)-a| < σ‎ and f(z) takes no value more than p times, where σ‎ and p may tend to infinity with |a|. These later papers seem less effective than the first two but led to fruitful discussions with Weitsman in June 1970. Collingwood's wide knowledge of the literature of mathematics enabled him and the writer to develop the theory of cluster sets in a joint paper in Acta Mathematica (87, 1952) which W.K. Hayman described as the beginning of the modern subject. If f(z) takes values on the Riemann sphere in |z| < , and there exists a sequence zn → eiθ‎ such that f(zn) → w, then w belongs to the cluster set C(f, eiθ‎) of f(z) at eiθ‎. Their relationship to the range of values taken by f(z) near eiθ‎, and to neighbouring Fatou points, eiθ‎n, θ‎n → θ‎ at which f(z) tends to a limit in any angle, and so on, formed the subject matter of the rest of Collingwood's mathematical papers. The standard textbook, written by Collingwood and A.J. Lohwater (1966) includes Collingwood's important applications to prime ends.
After 1945 Collingwood actively sought mathematical contacts. In particular he attended the new British Mathematical Colloquium, where he helped to organize special sessions on the theory of functions, and thus soon became a well–known figure. In 1959 he obtained a Cambridge ScD, in 1962 he was knighted, and in 1965 he was elected FRS and made an honorary LLD of Glasgow University where in 1961 he had given the seventh Gibson lecture. He joined the council of the London Mathematical Society (LMS) in April 1959 and was treasurer from 1960 to 1969, when he became its president. Collingwood made the fullest use of the benefaction of G.H. Hardy to strengthen and widen the activities of the society—including the founding of the Applied Probability Trust for the publication of the Journal of Applied Probability, edited by J. Gani, which began in 1964. Collingwood took a large part in drafting the petition, draft charter, and statutes for a royal charter (approved by the privy council in 1964) for the LMS to mark its centenary in 1965.
An interest in bacteria, as well as in local affairs, led Collingwood into medical fields. He was an active supporter of Newcastle hospitals, vice-chairman of the Central Health Services Council (1959–1963), vice-president of the International Hospital Federation (1959–1967), a member of the Medical Research Council (1960–1968) and treasurer (1960–1967), and a member of the royal commission on medical education (1965–1968). He was made an officer of the French ordre de la Santé Publique, in 1963. He had a great effect on medicine by contributing to the technical development of the use of computers in that area. He spoke at the annual congress of the British Institute of Radiology in 1967 and at that of the British Dental Association in 1970. He also had a strong interest in history, and knowledge of it.
Collingwood was short and fair and walked with long strides. He early became very bald. He was made an honorary DSc of Durham in 1950, and was active in Durham University affairs as chairman of the Council of Durham Colleges from 1955 and the University from 1963 until his death at home at Lilburn Tower on 25 October 1970. He never married. His large mathematical library and many manuscripts were left to the Department of Mathematics at Durham, and the university's Collingwood College was named after him in 1972.

Contents

Mathematical papers of Sir Edward Collingwood (1900-1970): files of mathematical notes etc. and bound volumes of his collection of other people's mathematical papers. Comprises:
Printed pamphlets and offprints of mathematical papers from Europe and the rest of the world 1920s-1960s, c.1500 items bound in 155 numbered volumes with 4 other volumes
Printed offprints of his own published papers and articles, 49 articles in 16 files
Loose offprints and photocopies of other mathematicians' articles and papers, 1 box
Loose preprints of other mathematicians' articles and papers, 1 box
Manuscripts of his book with Valiron, 'General Theory of Integral Functions' and of his text 'The Theory of Cluster Sets', 3 files
Lectures and notes, 14 files
Conferences including the British Mathematical Colloquium 1949-1970, 25 files
Papers and reports from the department of Machine Intelligence at Edinburgh University re the development of computers in the 1960s, 1 box
Letters from Dr R.C.H. Tanner, Ryan, W. Rudin, Piranian, A.J. Lohwater, Gettring, M.L. Cartwright and general, 12 files
Photocopies of letters to Mrs C. Tanner 1929-1970, 3 files
Draft papers, lecture notes, chapters, reports, proofs, business with the London Mathematical Society, 49 files

Collingwood's runnning of the Lilburn estate, his administrative career in Northumberland as a JP and then high sheriff, his wartime naval service, any involvment in administration in Cambridge, his work for Durham, his picture collecting and his interest in Newcastle medical services are all unreflected in this collection.

Accession details

Transferred from the Mathematics Department in August 2006 (acc No Misc.2006/7:4)

Previous custodial history

Held by the creator and his family and then bequeathed to the Mathematics Department of Durham University.

Conditions of access

Open for consultation.

Copyright and copying

Permission to make any published use of material from the collection must be sought in advance from the Head of Collections (e-mail PG.Library@durham.ac.uk) and, where appropriate, from the copyright owner. The Library will assist where possible with identifying copyright owners, but responsibility for ensuring copyright clearance rests with the user of the material

Arrangement

Initially arranged by I. Grattan-Guinness in 1973 with some adjustments by Michael Stansfield in January 2022 into the following sections:
A. Other's Mathematical Pamphlets and Offprints
B. Offprints of Collingwood's Works
C. Drafts of Collingwood's Books
D. Collingwood Lectures and Notes
E. Conferences Attended by Collingwood
F. Correspondence with Collingwood
G. Research Papers of Collingwood
H. Material from Other Institutions


Processing

Summarily catalogued in XMetal by Michael Stansfield January 2022; printed material yet to be catalogued.

Appraisal

None carried out as yet.

Accruals

None expected

Related material - here

Collingwood College Archive UND/F16 (the college was named after him but has none of his papers in its archive)

Bibliography

E.F. Collingwood translation of Georges Valiron, Lectures on the General Theory of Integral Functions (1923)
E.F. Collingwood and M.L. Cartwright, Boundary Theorems for a Function Meromorphic in the Unit Circle (1952)
E.F. Collingwood and A.J. Lohwater, The Theory of Cluster Sets (Cambridge 1966)

Catalogue

Others' Mathematical Pamphlets and Offprints
Reference: CWD A1-161
Dates of creation: 1920s - 1960sc.1500 items bound in 155 numbered volumes with 4 other volumes, 2 boxes, and c.30 further items

1-159. Printed pamphlets and offprints of mathematical papers from Europe and the rest of the world, 159 volumes.
160. Loose offprints and photocopies of other mathematicians' articles and papers, 1 box.
161. Loose preprints of other mathematicians' articles and papers, 1 box.
Also c.30 further unnumbered items.

Collingwood Offprints
Reference: CWD B1-49
Dates of creation: 1920s - 1960s 49 articles in 16 files

Printed offprints of Collingwood's own published papers and articles

Book Drafts
Reference: CWD C1-3
Dates of creation: 1923, 19663 files

1. Manuscript of Collingwood's book with Georges Valiron, General Theory of Integral Functions, 1 volume (1923).
2-3. Typescript of Collingwood's book with A.J. Lohwater, The Theory of Cluster Sets, 2 files (1966).

Lectures and notes
Reference: CWD D1-14
Dates of creation: 1920s - 1960s13 files in springback binders with 1 boxfile

Collingwood's lectures and notes, apparently delivered at Cambridge, with notes for individual lectures given at meetings.

Conferences
Reference: CWD E
Dates of creation: 1949 - 197025 files

Paperwork for conferences, symposias, colloquia etc, mostly abraod, some including his papers if he delivered one, but generally papers of the conference, paperwork and correspondence about being invited, arranging tickets/travel and accommodation.

CWD E1-2   1949 - 1970
British Mathematical Colloquia, official circulars, programmes, leaflets, and some incidental correspondence, for:
1. 1949 Manchester, 1950 Oxford, 1951 Bristol, 1952 Greenwich, 1953 Durham, 1954 Cambridge, 1955 Exeter, 1956 St Andrews, 1958 Reading
2. 1959 Cardiff, 1960 Royal Holloway, 1961 Liverpool, 1962 Southampton, 1963 Shrivenham, 1964 Leicester, 1965 Dundee, 1966 Imperial College, 1967 Swansea, 1968 Leeds, 1969 Birmingham, 1970 York
2 paper files
CWD E3-7   1950 - 1970
International Congress of Mathematicians conference papers, August/September:
3. 1950 USA, Harvard
4. 1954 Netherlands, Amsterdam
5. 1958 Edinburgh
6. 1962 Sweden, Stockholm
7. 1970 France, Nice
5 paper files
CWD E8   August 1957
Finland, Helsinki, International Colloquium on the Theory of Functions August 1957, paper 'Cluster Sets and Prime Ends', correspondence and conference papers.
Paper file
CWD E9   1962
Finland, Helsinki Colloquium on Mathematical Analysis 1962, paper 'Cluster Set Theorems for Arbitrary Functions with Applications to Function Theory', typescript proofs and offprints, correspondence with I.S. Louhivaara, published 1963.
Paper file
CWD E10   December 1962 - March 1963
West Germany, Oberwolfach, Funktionentheorie einer Veränderlichen symposium March 1963, correspondence with H. Grunsky and paperwork.
Paper file
CWD E11   July 1963
West Germany, Marburg and Karlsruhe, Mathematical Colloquium, correspondence and tickets etc.
Paper file
CWD E12   1964 & 1966
Finland, Helsinki, Colloquium on Mathematical Analysis, correspondence and paperwork
Paper file
CWD E13   May 1964
Imperial College, Conference on the Classical Theory of Functions of One Complex Variable, correspondence etc.
Paper file
CWD E14   March - November 1965
USA visit, lectures at Michigan State University, correspondence, paperwork and a photo, with Edwin L. Crosby, Joe Gani, J.K. Arnold, Maurice Heins, E.L. Hill, R.P. Boas, J.E. McMillan, A.J. Lohwater.
Paper file
CWD E15   August 1965
USSR/Russia, Moscow and Erevan, correspondence and travel documents.
Paper file
CWD E16   June - July 1966
American Mathematical Society, Summer Institute on Entire Functions and Related Parts of Analysis, La Jolla, University of California, San Diego, correspondence and conference papers.
Paper file
CWD E17   1966 - 1970
University of Salford, Collection and Handling of Medical Data symposium May 1967, correspondence and conference papers, including programme for the Installation of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, as chancellor of the university 16 June 1967.
Paper file
CWD E18   August 1967 - August 1968
USA, Cleveland, Ohio, Case Western Reserve University, correspondence re a series of lectures, with A.J. Lohwater.
Paper file
CWD E19   May - August 1968
Singapore, first annual congress of the National Academy of Science August 1968, correspondence and conference papers.
Paper file
CWD E20   January 1968 - January 1969
Australia, Sydney, Tenth Commonwealth Universities Congress August 1968, correspondence and congress papers.
Paper file
CWD E21   January - August 1968
Japan, lecture tour September 1968, correspondence and paperwork.
Paper file
CWD E22   January - March 1970
West Germany, Oberwolfach, Tagung über Funktionentheorie conference February 1970, correspondence (D. Gaier) and paperwork.
Paper file
CWD E23   December 1969 - August 1970
USA, Washington DC, Classical Function Theory conference June 1970, correspondence and conference papers.
Paper file
CWD E24   August 1970
Finland, University of Jyväskylä, Colloquium on Mathematical Analysis
Paper file
CWD E25   February - September 1970
France, Menton, International Mathematical Union conference August 1970, correspondence and conference papers.
Paper file
Correspondence
Reference: CWD F
Dates of creation: 1929 - 197015 files

Letters to Collingwood generally on academic, Mathematical, topics with some papers or notes on the topics, with some copy out letters or files of drafts in response.

CWD F1   September 1949 - August 1970
Correspondence with Mary L. Cartwright.
Paper file
CWD F2   May 1960 - September 1970
Correspondence with Fred W. Gehring.
Paper file
CWD F3   February 1955 - December 1970
Correspondence with A. Jack Lohwater, including a few late 1970 with Lieu-Gen Sir George Collingwood, and Collingwood's (with J.L. Doob and F.W. Gehring) paper 'A Generalization of a Theorem of Lindelöf', and a talk of his at Chicago 1967.
2 paper files
CWD F4   October 1956 - August 1970
Correspondence with George Piranian, including 'Arcs of Julia of Functions Meromorphic in the Unit Disk' by V.I. Gavrilov, and Piranian's papers 'The Distribution of Prime Ends', 'The Boundary of a Simply Connected Domain' and (with Collingwood) 'Tsuji Functions with Segments of Julia'.
Paper file
CWD F5   June 1954 - August 1960
Correspondence with Walter Rudin, including his papers 'Non-Analytic Functions of Absolutely Convergent Fourier Series', 'On a Problem of Collingwood and Cartwright', and 'Radial Cluster Sets and Related Topics'.
Paper file
CWD F6   October 1966 - July 1970
Correspondence with Frank Ryan.
Paper file
CWD F7   July 1960 - September 1969
Correspondence with R. Cicely H. Tanner.
Paper file
CWD F8-11   1955 - 1970
Correspondence with various:
8. A-D, including J.L. Doob's paper 'Relative Cluster Values of Analytic Functions'
9. E-K
10. L-R
11. S-Z
4 paper files
CWD F12   September 1959 - September 1964
Copy Collingwood out letter books (3), with an index of recipients.
Paper file
CWD F13-15   1929 - 1970
Photocopies of letters from Collingwood to R. Cicely H. Tanner:
13. 1929-1953.
14. 1955-1967.
15. 1968-1970.
3 paper files
Research Papers
Reference: CWD G
Dates of creation: 1921 - 198849 files

Draft papers, lecture notes, book chapters, proofs, and a little correspondence with fellow academics.

CWD G1   1959 - 1960
Emile Borel, typescript MS, offprints, proofs; letters: Bosanquet, Heilbroan, Reiter.
Paper file
CWD G2   1961 - 1965
Lebesque, Cantor, Young and Blumberg material.
Paper file
CWD G3   1950 - 1952
Boundary ( Acta Mathematica) problems etc, Collingwood and Mary L Cartwright, references etc.
Paper file
CWD G4   1957 - 1959
'Structure and Distribution of Prime Ends', with George Piranian, mainly correspondence with proof sheets, annotated.
Paper file
CWD G5   1964 - 1978
The Mapping Theorems of Carathéodory and Lindelöf, with George Piranian, typescript, proofs and 2 letters.
Paper file
CWD G6   January - May 1968
James D. (Crick) Watson, DNA 2 newspapers ( Sunday Times Review) and 2 journals The Atlantic.
Paper file
CWD G7   1954
Acta Mathematica 91, early notes and drafts ('On the radial cluster sets of functions meromorphic in the unit circle').
Paper file
CWD G8   1960 - 1964
F.W. Gehring, notes on other's works, various notes.
Paper file
CWD G9   [1960s]
Notes on others' work, 'a connected set', Singapore lecture 1968.
Paper file
CWD G10   [1960s]
Book The Theory of Cluster Sets (with A.J. Lohwater), general revisions, plans and diagrams.
Paper file
CWD G11   [1960s]
Book The Theory of Cluster Sets chapter drafts.
Paper file
CWD G12   [1960s]
Book The Theory of Cluster Sets notes.
Paper file
CWD G13   1960 - 1964
Notes of Gross's Theorems.
Paper file
CWD G14   1922 - 1927
Early mathematical notes.
Paper file
CWD G15   1956 - 1967
Lecture and semniar notes, including 'Some Recent Developments in Complex Function Theory by Means of the Theory of Cluster Sets'.
Paper file
CWD G16-18   [1950s]
Book with Mary L. Cartwright: Boundary Theorems for a Function Meormorphic in the Unit Circle.
16. Manuscripts.
17. Manuscripts.
18. Proofs, typescript, pencil manuscript, correspondence with V. Stenström and J. Malmquist.
3 paper files
CWD G19   1956 - 1967
Manuscripts and typescripts of various papers by Collingwood, cross-referenced to ?CWD B, such as 'Sufficient Conditions for Reversal of the Second Fundamental Inequality for Meromorphic Functions'.
Paper file
CWD G20   1946 - 1964
Various mathematical notes, including on Ahlfors's Problem.
Paper file
CWD G21   1952 - 1964
Various mathematical notes and diagrams.
Paper file
CWD G22   [1950s - 1960s]
General mathematical notes, including on Iverson's Lemma.
Paper file
CWD G23   [1960s]
Mathematical notes.
Paper file
CWD G24-26   [1960s]
Superseded book sections.
3 paper files
CWD G27   [1966]
Book The Theory of Cluster Sets proof sheets.
Paper file
CWD G28   1955
Manuscript, typescript and London Mathematical Society (W.N. Bailey and Bosanquet) correspondence and proofs for 'A Theorem on Prime Ends'.
Paper file
CWD G29   [1948]
Typescript, proofs and correspondence with I.E. Segal and Zygmund of the American Mathematical Society for 'Exceptional Values of Meromorphic Functions'.
Paper file
CWD G30   1958 - 1960
Typescript and official letters (Bambah, Mahadevan, Ramanujan, Shah) re 'On Functions Meromorphic in the Unit Disc and Restricted on a Spiral Converging to the Boundary' in the Golden Jubilee volume of the Indian Mathematical Society.
Paper file
CWD G31   1956 - 1958
Material for Emile Borel and relevant letters from L.S. Bosanquet, A. Denjoy, D. Dugué, K.A. Hirsch, and G.E.H. Reuter.
Paper file
CWD G32   [1940s - 1960s]
Books various notes.
Paper file
CWD G33   [1940s - 1960s]
Books bibliography and references.
Paper file
CWD G34   1963
Lecture: 'Mathematical Minds', at Newcastle, 25 October 1963, for the University of Newcastle Medical Society, text, notes and some correspondence.
Paper file
CWD G35   1921 - 1922
Translation of George Valiron's Aberystwyth lecture notes.
Paper file
CWD G36   1961 - 1966
Historical notes for Collingwood's Gibson memorial lecture on '[Georg] Cantor and the analysts' delivered at the University of Glasgow 30 November 1961, unpublished, and a further lecture 'Cantor and the foundations of Set Theory' delivered to the Durham University Mathematical Colloquium 1 December 1966.
Paper file
CWD G37   1961 - 1969, 1988
Historical notes on Georg Cantor and the 1961 Glasgow lecture, with correspondence about their return by I. Grattan-Guinness 1988.
Paper file
CWD G38   1968 - 1970
Historical notes for an unfinished article on George Green commissioned by the Dictionary of Scientific Biography, including G. Green, An Essay on the Application of Mathematical Analysis to the Theories of Electricity and Magnetism (Nottingham 1828).
Paper file
CWD G39   1958 - 1960
Hayman Seminar 1958, 'On the Cluster Sets of Arbitrary Functions', text with notes and correspondence with Piranian, Weston, Dolzenko.
Paper file
CWD G40   1952 - 1954
Paper 'On the Linear and Angular Cluster Sets of Functions Meromorphic in the Unit Circle' ( Acta Mathematica 1954), manuscript and correspondence with Bagemihl.
Paper file
CWD G41   [1950s]
Notes on Noshiro's papers in Japanese Journals 1937-1940.
Paper file
CWD G42   1952
Notes on Weierstrass's Theorem Interior Transformations etc.
Paper file
CWD G43   1955 - 1956
Paper 'Applications of the Theory of Cluster Sets to a Class of Meromorphic Functions', manuscripts amd correspondence with Lohwater, Denjoy, Gauthier-Villars.
Paper file
CWD G44   1955
Papers 'A Theorem on Certain Classes of Singularities Defined by Cluster Sets' and 'On a Theorem of Eggleston Concerning Cluster Sets', manuscript and proofs.
Paper file
CWD G45   1958 - 1960
Paper 'Cluster Sets of Arbitrary Functions', lecture 24 Setember 1958, published 1960, manuscript, proofs, and correspondence with J.L. Walsh.
Paper file
CWD G46   1949
Lectures: 'Exceptional Values of Analytic Function' (Aberdeen, April 1949), 'The Distribution of Values of an Analytic Function' (British Association, September 1949).
Paper file
CWD G47   1948
Paper 'Exceptional Values of Meromorphic Functions', drafts and rough notes.
Paper file
CWD G48   1957 - 1958
'Lateral Points', with George Piranian, manuscript notes
Paper file
CWD G49   1958 - 1961
'The Radial Limits of Functions Meromorphic in a Circular Disc', published 1961, manuscript and typescript, proofs, and correspondence with Mary Cartwright.
Paper file
CWD G50   [?1960s]
Papers of I. Grattan-Guinness:
'The Unknown Origins of Mathematical Physics'
'Towards a Biography of Georg Cantor' (draft)
'Mrs Young's Later Notes on "The Theory of Sets of Points"'
Paper file
Other Institutions
Reference: CWD H
Dates of creation: 1943 - 1969Paper, 1 box & 1 file

Material concerning other institutions.

CWD H1   1965 - 1969
Papers and reports from the Department of Machine Intelligence at Edinburgh University re the development of computers, including Bulletins, reports, especially Experimental Programming Reports, papers, and seminar lists. Collingwood contributed a preface to the first volume published by the Unit in 1967.
Paper, 1 box
CWD H2   January 1943 - November 1947
Aero Research Technical Notes Bulletins 1-59, from Aero Research Ltd of Duxford, Cambridge.
Paper file