Mike Bignell
Cricketing Calm before the Storm: Athenaeum Club vs the Bullingdon Club, May 1914. (No.14)
Ann Bishop (transcribed)
Two Personal Recollections from Lanhydrock (No.3)
Peter Borlase
Autobiography of Martin Peter Borlase BEM (1928- ) (No.13)
A Cornwall Garden Award for Peter (No.13)
John Brenton
Family History – with a few surprises (No.11)
Joy Burden,
Winging Westward, 1974.
Geoff Burrows
The Robartes Family and their Titles (No.4)
An Eighteenth Century Document Transcribed (No.6)
The Prince and the Lady (No.10)
Alan Calder
James MacLaren Arts and Crafts Pioneer, Shaun Tyas, 2004.
Helen Charlesworth
‘His Death was Just, the Cause was Grand’: The last days of Tommy Agar-Robartes, MP (No.9)
Ian Clarke
Cricket, Lanhydrock and the Robartes: the early days (No.3)
Jacqueline Collins
The Role of the Steward as shown by the Correspondence between Anna Maria Hunt and William Jenkin (No.1)
The Signatures and Personal Inscriptions in the Lanhydrock Book Collection (No.4)
Some Early Continental Printers from a Cornish Library (No. 6)
John Cornforth
‘Victorian Lanhydrock’, Country Life, clxiii, 16 and 23 February 1978.
Ann Marie Curtis
An Accidental Heiress: The Life and Times of Anna Maria Hunt of Mollington Hall and Lanhydrock House (No.10)
Mike England
Gone the Happy Dream: The Victorian Family at Lanhydrock, Bodmin Books, 2001.
The Lanhydrock Evacuees 1940 (No.1)
And Everywhere that Henry Went: the 3rd Earl of Radnor in Europe 1724-41 (No.2)
Tommy Agar-Robartes 1880-1915: Out of the Shadows (No.2)
The Accidental Tourist at an Incidental House (No.3)
A Journey Through Time: The National Trust At Lanhydrock -a Golden Anniversary 1954-2004 (No.4)
Hard Times and World War II: Joyce– a young Housemaids story of life at Lanhydrock (No.5)
‘Spider in the Bath’: the Young Thomas Charles Agar-Robartes (No.6)
The Doodle-Bug Evacuees (No.7)
Everilda, Violet and the Ballerina (No.8)
Loyalty and Friendship: William Cole at Lanhydrock (No.10)
A Haunted Career: war and peace (1906-30) in the life of Gerald Agar-Robartes (1883-1966) (No.12)
The Ladies of Lanhydrock; the modern era (No.13)
Visiting Lanhydrock (No.14)
Julie Etheridge
Evacuee Sisters at Lanhydrock (No.14)
Ray Hingston
The Great War (1914–18) and Lord Clifden’s Tincroft Mine: a false dawn (No.9)
The Reporting of the Marriage of Thomas Charles to Mary Dickinson (No.10)
The Election Campaign of Thomas Charles Agar-Robartes (No.11)
The Great House, Truro, Cornish Buildings Group Bulletin 2016
London Tin Smelting Company (No.11)
Agricultural Depression in the 19th Century and the Increase in Financial Diversification (No.12
The Effect of the Great War (1914-18) on Viscount Clifden's Estates: the 'Home Front' at Lanhydrock and Wimpole
(No.12)
'Brotherly Love' or Protecting the family name, Charles Bodville and Russell Robartes (No.14)
An 18th Century Account Book (No.14)
The Cornish Lands of the 2nd and 4th Earls of Radnor, 1700-1800 (No.14)
Derek Holdaway
The Dowling Miniatures at Lanhydrock (No.11)
Paul Holden
The Lanhydrock Land Atlas: A Facsimile Edition, Cornwall Editions, 2010.
‘“Of Things Old and New”: The Work of Richard Coad and James M MacLaren’, in (Eds) Jason Edwards and Imogen Hart, The Aesthetic Interior, Ashgate/ Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art, 2010.
The London Letters of Samuel Molyneux, 1712-13, London Topographical Society, 2011.
‘“Is it Scientific and Safe?”: Country House Technology at Lanhydrock’ in (Eds) Paul Barnwell and Marilyn Palmer, Country House Technology, Shaun Tyas/ National Trust, 2012.
'Writing History at Lanhydrock', Journal of the Writing History Society', Autumn 2001, No. 62, pp 22-5.
'The Hunt Family, Lanhydrock House and the Regency Style', Furniture History', Vol.XXXVII, 2001, pp 20-31.
'The Owners of Lanhydrock House', Practical Family History, January 2002, No, 49
'The Transformation of Lanhydrock House, Cornwall, 1758-1829', Journal of the Cornish History Network, 2002.
'Monitoring the Book Collection at Lanhydrock House', Proceedings of Environmental Monitoring of our Cultural Heritage; Sustainable Conservation Solutions, Environmental Building Solutions / English Heritage, November 2003. (ISBN 0-9546505-0-6) (Republished in Journal of the Society of Archivists, Vol. 28, No. 1, April 2007)
'Heaven Helps Those Who Help Themselves: The Realities of Disaster Planning', Journal of the Society of Archivists, Vol. 25,
No. 1, April 2004, pp 27-32
‘A Recently Discovered Cornish Garden Design by George Truefitt (1824-1902)’ The Cornish Garden, 2005, pp 24-2
'Situation, Contrivance, Receipt, Strength and Beauty': The Creation of Lanhydrock House 1620-85' Royal Institution of Cornwall Journal, 2005, pp 32-44
‘Richard Coad: A Work in Progress’, James M MacLaren Society Journal, No.2, Autumn 2005, pp 7-18
‘Geometrical & Gothic at Lanhydrock: A Garden Design by George Truefitt’, Apollo: The National Trust Historic Houses and Collections Annual 2007, April 2007, pp 62- 66
‘Rewriting Lanhydrock’, Journal of the Federation of Old Cornwall Societies, Autumn 2007, pp. 5-20
Lanhydrock Book of the House, The National Trust, July 2007, (2nd ed, March 2009, 1st ed. in German translation May 2009, 3rd ed. September 2009)
‘Refinement and Elegance: Mrs Mary Hunt (1740-1824) and No 76 South Audley Street, Georgian Group Journal, 2009,
pp.115-124
‘James MacLaren: unscrupulous assistant or benevolent collaborator?’ James M MacLaren Society Journal, 2009, pp. 23-33
'A Very English Gentleman: The Political Career of the Hon. Thomas Agar-Robartes MP', The Journal of Liberal History, Spring 2010, pp.8-18
‘Damage limitation planning and training at Lanhydrock House, Cornwall’ in (ed) Stewart Kidd, Fire Safety Management in Traditional Buildings, Guide for Practitioners 7, Historic Scotland, Technical Conservation Group, 2010, pp.120-3
‘The Rise and Fall of the hamlet of Respryn’, Journal of the Old Cornwall Society, Spring 2013
‘Duty of Care’, Fire Risk Management, September 2013, pp.27-31. (Reproduced as ‘“Heaven Helps Them who Help Themselves”: technical protection in buildings’ in Views, 50, Autumn 2013, pp.35-38.
‘Fire Control Measures at Lanhydrock’, The Buildings Conservation Directory, Institute of Historic Building Conservation, December 2013, pp.164-67
‘“A Masterpiece of the Estate Surveyor’s work”: the Lanhydrock Atlas 1694-6’, International Map Collectors Journal, March 2014, pp.30-8
‘The Architectural Offices of Richard Coad and James M MacLaren’, The James M MacLaren Journal, Vol.13, February 2015, pp. 17-26.
‘A Journey into Cornwall by Thomas Povey in 1665’, Royal Institution of Cornwall Journal, 2015, pp.25-42.
„Nebesa pomáhají těm, kteří si pomohou sami“- organizace požární ochrany v Lanhydrock House in (Ed. Petr Svoboda) Mosty k požární ochraně kulturních památek odborná konference s mezinárodní účastí (Prague, 2015) pp.6-13 (ISBN 978-80-7480-042-9)
‘Station Drive’, Journal of the Old Cornwall Society, Winter 2016
‘Marching on: a most moving mosaic floor’, Views, 53, Autumn 2016, pp.80-1
‘Richard Coad, architect of 3 Duke Street, Adelphi’ (Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, 2017) (Runner up in the Royal Institution of Cornwall Cardew Rendall prize)
The Long Gallery Exhibition: the books of John Robartes (No.1)
The Hunt Family, Lanhydrock House and the Regency Style: four Regency inventories (No.1)
And Everywhere that Henry Went: the 3rd Earl of Radnor in Europe 1724-41 (No.2)
The Transformation of Lanhydrock House, Cornwall, 1758-1829 (No.2)
Monitoring the Book Collection at Lanhydrock House (No.3)
A Very English Gentleman (No.4)
The Beresford Ghost: a ghost story (No.5)
Richard Coad (1825-1900): A Work in Progress (No.6)
Rewriting Lanhydrock: A Bibliography (No.7)
St Hydroc’s Church, Lanhydrock (No.7)
Refinement and Elegance: Mrs Mary Hunt (1740-1824) and No.76 South Audley Street (No.8)
‘His Death was Just, the Cause was Grand’: The last days of Tommy Agar-Robartes, MP (No.9)
That Bodmin Speech: A Letter from Tommy Agar-Robartes (No.8)
‘Is it scientific and safe?’ Country house technology at Lanhydrock House (No.10)
Remembering the War Dead of Lanhydrock Parish (No.11)
Remembrance Day Lecture 2012 at Lanhydrock Church (No.12)
Fire Safety at Lanhydrock (No.12)
Tommy Agar-Robartes Coming-of-Age Celebrations 7-11 January 1902 (No.13)
A Eulogy given at Lanhydrock church for Captain, the Honourable Thomas Agar-Robartes M.P. (1880-1915), 27 September
2015 (No.14)
Henry Holinshed (Transcribed)
Lady Hester Stanhope’s Letters to Charles Yorke (No.9)
Gwyn Howells
Cobwebs in the Temple of God: the brief life of Lady Lucy Robartes1615/6- 1645/6 (No.1)
The Great Creation Ceiling in the Long Gallery (No.2)
The Earl of Radnor's Books and the Heyday of Astrology (No.3)
Herbal Medicine, Ornamental Gardens and Practical Horticulture (No.4)
Anna Maria Agar: the Restoration of the Robartes Dynasty (1798-1844) (No.5)
The Garden of Lord Gerald Agar-Robartes (No.6)
Two Documents Transcribed (No.7)
David Ingrouille (transcribed)
That Bodmin Speech: A Letter from Tommy Agar-Robartes (No.8)
David Keep
‘Works by Zurich Reformers in the Library at Lanhydrock’, The National Trust Yearbook, 1976–7, pp.73–80.
Sarah Knight
Serious Thoughts on New Year’s Day by George Hunt Esq. c.1790-98 (No.8)
Tommy Agar-Robartes Coming-of-Age Celebrations 7-11 January 1902 (No.13)
The Poetry of George Hunt (No.14)
John Lander
‘Tommy’ Agar-Robartes and the Temperance Movement (No.5)
Jim Lewis
The Lanhydrock Estate and the Granting of a New Lease at Tincroft Mine in 1804 (No.8)
Miles Macnair
A Ghost in the Archives (No.5)
William James (1771-1837), Railway & Canal Historical Society, Oxford, 2007
Peter Mortimer
Captain, the Hon. T.C.R (Tommy) Agar-Robartes MP and the Great War 1914-18 (No.14)
Neil Hanson
The Agar-Robartes Lifeboat (No.5)
Ian Norman
Thomas Charles Agar-Robartes and Christ Church College, Oxford, Oct 1862 - Jun 1866 (No.5)
The Lanhydrock Burials (No.8)
Annie Patrick
The Modern Family at Lanhydrock (No.8)
N.J.G. Pounds
‘Lanhydrock Atlas’, Antiquity, 73, March 1943;
‘The Lanhydrock Atlas and Cornish Agriculture about 1700’, Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society Annual Report, 1944.
W.D. Ravenhill,
‘Joel Gascoyne: A Pioneer of Large-Scale County Mapping’, Imago Mundi, XXVI, 1972, pp.335–41.
Robert Slack
The Lanhydrock Burials (No.3)
The Lanhydrock Clock Collection (No.7)
(Transcribed) Mrs. Agnes Bray-Housemaid at Lanhydrock during the 2nd World War: A transcription from the Lanhydrock
Oral History Library (No.8)
The Art of Conservation (No.10)
Robert Spencer
‘A Lute Book Discovery at Lanhydrock’, National Trust Year Book, 1975–6, pp.88–90.
Michael Swift
The Stained Glass Windows at St Hydroc Church, Lanhydrock (No.9)
An Anglo-Saxon medical manuscript once in the Lanhydrock library (No.10)
John R.L. Thorp,
‘The Ornamental Plasterwork of the Gallery at Lanhydrock, Cornwall: Puritan Images for Changing Times’, Apollo, April
1998, pp.30–34.
Mary Townsend (Transcribed)
That Bodmin Speech: A Letter from Tommy Agar-Robartes (No.8)
Lady Hester Stanhope’s Letters to Charles Yorke (No.9)
Michael Trinick
‘The Deer-parks at Lanhydrock and Pinsla: Lord Robartes’ Summer Cull: July to August, 1677’, Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, 1986, pp.221–52
‘A Bride Prepares for Life at Lanhydrock’, Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, 1996, pp.15–16.
‘How Lanhydrock came to the National Trust’, Transcribed by Ginnie Clotworthy (No.13)
Barbara Turrall-Kelly
Letters on Mary Dickinson’s Eighteenth Birthday (No.7)
Merlin Waterson
A Cornish Bastion: The Work of Michael Trinick, 2006.
Penny Watts-Russell
The Cornish Copper Agent’s Story (No.9)
Perran Wood
Simon Payne: Lanhydrock’s Young Pretender (No.7)
Anne Marie Woof
Springtime at Lanhydrock (No.7)