Letter to Henry Barton(?) Jacobs from Grace Revere Osler, 13, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Hughes, Alexander Barton, and Thomas McCrae have been to visit Lady Osler in Oxford. She is making an effort to keep up the young atmosphere as Osler would have wanted, but she finds it a difficult struggle. She writes of Osler's funeral. For now, his ashes lie in an old monument in Christ Church until they are sent to Montreal. She writes a brief note about Revere's Library, the Tudor and Stuart Club.
Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler relates news of family and friends, including Arthur Howard, Welch, Adami, Colonel Russell, and more. She writes of Osler's address at the Divinity School. Includes manuscript notes.
Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler describes a service at the Mansfield Chapel for the war dead. She relates news of family and friends, and writes of the numerous visitors to her home in Oxford.
Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, 13, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler writes of seeing off the American soldiers and of the Encaenia at Oxford. She feels that she was happier during the war when she was able to help; now Europe suffers from the daily horrors of strikes and fights. She relates news of family and friends.
Letter to Mr. & Mrs. H.B.(?) Jacobs from Grace Revere Osler, 13, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler expresses the difficulty of coping with the death of her husband. She describes his funeral at Christ Church and the pride she felt knowing how loved and admired he was. She will stay on at Oxford until the catalogue is finished and Osler's books are sent off to McGill University.
Letter to Wilburt Cornell Davison from Grace Revere Osler, 13, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler congratulates Davison upon his recent marriage. She is glad that the Americans have joined the war in Europe. Revere is stationed in Belgium in the midst of an awful offensive. Mr. Macdonall and Dr. Morse are going to Egypt.
Letter to Mary(?) Jacobs from Grace Revere Osler, 13, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler writes of Revere's early life in Baltimore. Osler hosted a luncheon at Christ Church for all the American doctors working in England, and afterwards he took them to see the treasures at the Bodleian Library and delivered a lecture on Radcliffe. She writes that the news of Dr. Mall's(?) death came as quite a shock. Susan Chapin is the chairman of the American Red Cross and Mrs. Whitelaw Reid is the head of the London Branch. She writes of the war and hopes that Cushing will soon come over on leave.
Letter to Mrs. John Revere from Grace Revere Osler, 7, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Revere has begun work with a tutor, Mr. Alburn [or Allenn]. She describes Osler's new duties as the Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford. She writes of Miss Nichols, Dr. Russell, Marjorie, and Archibald, a Rhodes Scholar.
Letter to Mrs. John Revere from Grace Revere Osler, 7, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler describes her first few days in Oxford. Osler's books survived the trip and he is already busy arranging his work at the Medical Department. Miss McDowell, the head of the Decorative Art [Museum] of Baltimore, paid a visit.