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George Beresford (1864–1938) and Lionel
Dunsterville (1865–1946) were friends and contemporaries of Kipling
and, respectively, the models for M’Turk and Stalky in his Stalky & Co
(1899) collection of stories. The three met at United Services College
and these two collections provide an intimate and authoritative picture
of Kipling’s schooldays which throws light on how the writer
was regarded by his school companions as the years passed.
George Beresford’s relationship with Kipling is recorded in his
memoir, Schooldays with Kipling (1936), written shortly after Rudyard’s
death. Beresford’s papers contain documentation relating to its
publication, ten letters and cards from Kipling, papers and photographs
concerning the United Services College, and documents of the Kipling
Society from the 1930s. Beresford’s papers were purchased from
his grandson, Nick Wilson, in 1998.
Lionel Dunsterville attached great importance to his association with
Kipling and, over the years, amassed a collection of letters and documents
relating to his schooldays and friendships. He went on to become the
first president of the Kipling Society in 1927. In 1943, Dunsterville
sold many of the letters he had received from Kipling to Elsie Bambridge,
Kipling’s daughter, and many of these can be found in the main
Archive. The Kipling–Dunsterville Letters, however, contain those
items with which Dunsterville could not bear to part in his lifetime.
These comprise the present collection which was bought at auction in
December 1996. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Library purchased the letters
with the help of the Heritage Memorial Fund and an anonymous donor.