Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Revere has been accepted into the Royal Artillery and awaits orders for the instruction course. Revere and his father have the most wonderful times with books. Bob Emmons leaves for France. Lady Osler writes of the many guests she has been entertaining in her home. Mr. Penfield, who was injured on a torpedoed ship, is recovering at the Oslers' home.
Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Mr. Penfield has been visiting for a week, recuperating from an injury he sustained when the ship he was traveling on was torpedoed. Miss Baldwin, who was on the same ship, is beginning to recover. Revere remains in Oxford and is busy studying Mathematics. Mr. Warwick Green of the Rockefeller Commission and his secretary Mr. Reginald Foster have come to see about the Belgian refugees. Osler spoke at the opening of an exhibition for the Shakespeare Tercentenary celebrations at Oxford. Lady Osler writes of Campbell Gwyn, Campbell Howard, Jean, Archie, Katherine McLennan and Joan MacKenzie. She has been looking after a nice Canadian from Victoria.
Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler laments the high volume of deaths, particularly among Canadian soldiers. She asks after Mrs. Wright and her children. She thanks Chapin for sending provisions for the war. The Oslers' home is full of guests as usual. Dr. Hugh Cabot and George Shattuck stopped by on their way to France. Christ Church is sad over the death of the Senior Censor, Charles Fisher. Lady Osler will travel to Newcastle with Revere. She mentions Jack Slessor, May Osborne, Joe Revere, Taylor (Osler's Museum boy), among others.
Letter to Susan Revere Chapin from Grace Revere Osler, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler delivers news of Phoebe, Jean, Marion and Nora. Revere came for a visit and went fishing along the Thames. Lady Osler hopes to get her husband away, as he is so busy and looks weary. Arthur Howard is in hospital with a shrapnel wound. She writes of May Osborne, and Marjorie and Ottilie, who are hitting it off better.
Letter to Wilburt Cornell Davison from Grace Revere Osler, The Open Arms, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Lady Osler is glad to hear that Davison and Mr. Penfield are doing well at the Johns Hopkins. She is angry with her husband for working too hard and not resting. Osler has resigned as Consultant to the Canadian Hospitals as a result of the Canadian Army Military Corps affair. Revere is now with an Ammunition Column in France.
Letter to Harvey Cushing from Larry(?) Reynalds, Bodleian Library, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. While visiting the Bodleian, Reynalds(?) thought of Cushing and his book, "Life of Sir William Osler."
Letter to Harvey Cushing from John Johnson, University Press, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Johnson accepts Cushing's words of congratulations. He is in the process of reprinting Cushing's "Life of Sir William Osler."
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 reports on the dinner held in the Oslers' honour by Mr. Parkins and writes of the Phipps wedding. Osler met Mrs. Mackay, and was introduced to her daughter, Princess Colonna. She writes of her hectic social schedule and the many visitors at her home in Oxford.
Letter to Mrs. John Revere from Grace Revere Osler, 7, Norham Gardens, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Revere has sent photos to Ned, including one of himself and Lady Osler on the steps at Beaufort. She and Osler dined with Mr. Shadwell, whose house used to belong to the Regius Professor of Medicine. Lady Osler plans to visit with Adèle Chapin and Mary Anderson. The Oslers look forward to Miss Nichols' return from Scotland.