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RU-PCCL/Storrs/III/2 · Файл · 1920-1921
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

The box contains two folders of papers from the Jerusalem period covering years 1920 and 1921.

The 1920 folder has various officials reports: there are bi-monthly reports for Jerusalem District and extracts from the local press. There is an apologia after riot. Of particular interests are reports from Haifa on the arrival of King Faisal after his expulsion from Damascus. There is also a letter written to Storrs by Sir Herbert Samuel after his appointment as High Commissioner but before his arrival. There are also letters from Allenby, C R Ashbee, N Sokolow, Cecil Dormer and others.

The folder of 1921 contains an account of Storrs' reception by the Pope and the discussion of Zionism and the Vatican's attitude to it. There is the new customa justification after riots, letters from Allenby, George Lloyd, the Archbishop of Canterbury and press reports.

RU-PCCL/Storrs/VI/17 · Файл · Undated
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

This box contains mainly newspaper cuttings dealing with the Middle East. It seems to have chiefly things that Storrs thought would be useful for his lectures on the Middle East. There are some hand outs from the Jordanian Minister of Information: a pamphlet: "The image of America in the Middle East" by Nbih Faris; Correspondence about possible post with Iraqi Data Monopoly; a file about Armenians; a pamphlet "Mespot again" by J A de C Hamilton; Notes on Middle East History for Staff College; an article: "Modern literary Movement in Egypt" 1956; An envelope marked "Oil" containing cuttings and Company handouts; and a file "Portugal to Persia" containing drafts of speeches made on his war-time tour.

RU-PCCL/Storrs/III/3 · Файл · 1922
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

This box contains papers from the Jerusalem period covering the year 1922.

Official documents include secret police resumés of events, secret minutes of meetings of Governors, fortnightly reports from Jerusalem district and police orders for possible riots.

The folder is mainly filled with social letters. Writters include C R Ashbee, Gertrude Bell, Mary Berenson, Bernard Berenson, Lord Allenby, Lord Milner, Shane Leslie about Mark Sykes, Weizmann and Sirri Pasha.

Storrs had a close friendship with Gertrude Bell, having walked with her in the desert and exchanged views on the local people and architecture. They exchanged many chatty letters.

Jerusalem. Press cuttings.
RU-PCCL/Storrs/III/5 · Файл · Undated
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

Press cuttings about Jerusalem Period. Covers a range of papers including The Daily New and Leader, The Sphynx, Bourse Egyptienne, The Palestine Weekly, Jerusalem News, The Jewish World, The Near East, The Tablet and African World.

Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs
RU-PCCL/Storrs · Фонды · 1904 - 1950

These sources describe the events, and the manoeuvrings behind the events, in Middle Eastern Politics and Diplomacy between 1904 and 1950. Storrs’ own observations are enriched by letters from Amir Abdullah, Allenby, Leo Amery, Gertrude Bell, Norman Bentwich, Bernard Berenson, Violet Bonham-Carter, Curzon, King Faizal, Prince Ibrahim Hilmi, Sharif Hussein, Kitchener, T E Lawrence, Rose Macauley, Milner, Nashab Pasha, Sirri Pasha, Theodore Roosevelt, Herbert Samuel, Ethel Smythe, Arnold Toynbee, Robert Vansittart, Chaim Waizmann and others.

The papers describe in detail the various troubled areas in which Storrs served:

EGYPT, 1904-1917. Storrs began his career in the Egyptian Civil Service, holding a variety of posts before his appointment as the Oriental Secretary ("the eyes, ears, interpretation and intelligence" of the Consul) under Gorst, Kitchener and McMahon. He was present at the time that the Coptic Premier was assassinated, during the ministerial crisis of 1914, and played a major role in steering Egypt away from Turkish or German alliances during World War I.

WITH LAWRENCE OF ARABIA DURING THE ARAB REVOLT, 1914-1917. Storrs was involved in the planning and diplomacy that preceded the Revolt in the Desert, shuttling back and forth between Sharif Zaid, Aziz al-Masri, Sharif Abdullah, King Faisal and King Hussein. He gathered intelligence in Hejaz, Jeddah, Cairo, Aden, Basra, Baghdad, Muscat, Oman and Kuwait and it was during this period that he became a close friend of T E Lawrence.

JERUSALEM, 1917-1926. From 1917 to 1920 Storrs served as Military Governor in Jerusalem; and from 1920 to 1926 he was Civil Governor of Jerusalem and Judea. He was present at the time of the "Balfour Declaration," during the 1921 riots, and when King Faisal was expelled from Syria. He attempted to unite Arabs and Jews and brought together The Mufti of Jerusalem and Musa Kazem Pasha al Husseini with Theodore Herzl and Chaim Weizmann. He also promulgated the work of the Pro-Jerusalem Society, bringing together hostile groups to safeguard antiquities.

CYPRUS, 1926-1932. Storrs was appointed Governor of Cyprus in 1926 and gained early popularity by engineering the cancellation of the Cypriot share of the Turkish debt. Tensions soon resurfaced, with the Enosis movement pressing for unification with Greece, and both Greeks and Turks protesting at his attempts to keep religion out of education. Anti-British sentiments were symbolised by the burning of Government House in 1931, destroying his library and art collection.

NORTHERN RHODESIA, 1933-1934. At the expiry of his normal term of Governorship in Cyprus, Storrs was appointed Governor of North Rhodesia. He organised the building of a new capital in Lusaka and toured Barotseland, Congo, South Africa and Zanzibar, before retiring due to ill health.

TOURIST, LECTURER AND MIDDLE EAST COMMENTATOR, 1934-1950. After he had regained his health, Storrs pursued an active retirement - writing, lecturing and travelling the world. His diaries describe visits to Tunisia, Canada, USA, Italy, Spain, Poland, the Balkans, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq, Palestine, Iran, Libya, Abyssinia, and Sudan. There is a fine World War II diary and a he kept in touch with Arab opinion through meetings with ibn Saud, Aga Khan, King Faisal, Aziz al-Masri, Prince Muhammed Ali, Albert Hourani and King Abdullah.

Без названия
RU-PCCL/Storrs/VI/15 · Файл · Undated
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

This contains papers dealing with Israël. It consists mainly of newspapers cuttings from the Jewish Outlook, International Affairs, The New Judea, Review of the Foreign Press, The Hibbert Journal, Palestine and The Times.

There are many notes in Storrs' handwritting for his speeches. Other items include : Two Colonial Office publications; A reply to Dr Lowdermik's Jordan Valley Scheme from Dr Hussain al-Khabir; A statement by Sir Edward Spears; Several pamphlets "Palestine" of 1936; A large file marked "Jewish solution" which still contains the papers put in by Storrs; Letters from Deedes, Bentwich, Newcombe, and C Jarvis; Notes on desertion of Jews from Polish forces; An album of photographs of the demonstration of 1933.

RU-PCCL/Storrs/III/1 · Файл · 1918-1919
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

The box contains papers from the Jerusalem period covering 1918 and 1919.

The 1918f folders contains some letters from Storrs to his family giving sidelights on affairs. There are also minutes of Conference of Military Governors. There are, as in all the Jerusalem papers, documents dealing with churchs affairs and petitions. Similarly there are letters from friends in Egypt which contains some comments on public affairs.

The 1919 folder contains a secret draft report on disturbances and there is also a justification of his policy. There is also a letter from Gertrude Bell.

The box includes a statement concerning the Balfour Declaration.

RU-PCCL/Storrs/III/4 · Файл · 1923-1926
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

This box contains folders from 1923, 1924, 1925 and 1926 and another of undated papers from the Jerusalem period.

The 1923 period has a quite remarkable letter from Henry Ford, offering to buy the Tutankhamon treasures, a letter from Lloyd George and press extracts.

The 1925 folder has a letter from Amir Abdullah, and others from T Z Cox, George Lloyd, Gilbert Murray, Stephen Gaselee and Blanche Lloyd.

The 1926 folder has confidential letters about the Latin Patriarch and one from Herbert Samuel.

The undated folder has articles on administration, an account of an interview given by ibn Saud to Mt Crane and some writings on Zionism.

There is also much on a 3 week trip to America by Storrs.

RU-PCCL/Storrs/VI/16 · Файл · Undated
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

This box contains lectures, broadcasts and articles on the Middle East.

There are lectures on the following subjects:
T E Lawrence
Three books on the Arabs (1946)
Transjordan (1946)
Britain and Egypt (1946)
Middle East revisited (1945)
Development of Egypt since 1904
Palestine (1938)
Portugal to Persia and back in wartime (1945)
Near East (1937)
Christmas in the Holy Land (1953)
Arab Ambassadors
Arabs in the USA
World Affairs (1946)
Italian wars in the Middle East
Bahai
Arab countries (1928)
King Faruq
Kitchener (1939)
Mediterranean rumours (1941)
Great English books on the Middle East (1949)
England and the Arabs
Jerusalem (1919)
English litterature on the Middle East
Arab World (1948)
Propaganda on the Middle East
Holiday in Turkey
Shifting sands in the Middle East (1938)
Doughty

There are articles on : Kitchener; Lawrence; Cyprus; past, present and future; and King Abdullah.

There are newspaper articles and reviews of Middle Eastern books.

Diary. 1946-1947. Palestine
RU-PCCL/Storrs/VI/7 · Файл · 1946-1947
Part of Papers of Sir Ronald Storrs

This box contains the diary for 1946-1947.

By now Storrs appears to have given up all hope of further employment and led a much less active life. He was frequently complaining about his health.

He continued to interest himself in the Palestine situation and occasionally reports conversations about it or comments on the news.

He kept touch with Arab opinion, seeking King Abdullah and King Faisal, and often met Arab diplomats and Albert Hourani.

Other people of note mentioned in this period are Lord Gowett, Louis Golding, Rab Butler, Arthur Koestler, Edward Gridd, Ivone Kirkpatrick, Lord Winster, Beecham, Leo Amery and Lord Alexander of Hillsborough.