You are bidding on one handwritten, signed letter of British-Canadian theologians James M. Houston (born 1922 in Edinburgh), who emigrated to Canada in 1970 and became Professor of Spiritual Theology at Regent College in Vancouver.


He mentions his sister, the British lawyer and code breaker Ethel Houston (1924-2017).


Language: English.


Aimed at the countess Clara Ledochowska (*26. June 1911 in Sarns near Brixen), secretary at the Austrian embassy at the Holy See (Vatican).


Dated Oxford, 23rd November 1954.


Excerpts: "Dear Contesse Clara, You remember that my sisters Ethel and Lonie{?} and myself faid a visit to you while we were in Roma in 1950. I am now married and my wife and I plan to spend next summer nine in Italy [...]. We wonder if you know any one with a flat or small house in Rome or elsewhere in Italy [...]. Our house is a new one, built in 1938 on the slope of a hill, with lovely views looking towards Oxford. [...] Oxford is a beautiful city and with the University and college it has many famous buildings. [...] I am a lecturer in geography in the University [...]. With kind regards, Yours sincerely, James M. Houston."


Scope: two pages (26.8 x 20.8 cm); without envelope.


Condition: paper wrinkled and slightly stained; with water stain on the back (writing blurred there). Please also note the pictures!


Internal note: Clara L. 30 Autograph Autograph

About James M. Houston and his sister Ethel Houston (source: English wikipedia):

James Macintosh Houston (born November 21, 1922) is a British-born Canadian theologian and academic who was Professor of Spiritual Theology and the first Principal of Regent College in Vancouver.

Biography: Born on November 21, 1922, in Edinburgh, Scotland, Houston moved to Oxford in 1945 for doctoral studies in geography at the University of Oxford. He received his doctorate in c. 1950. His thesis was titled The Social Geography of the Huerta of Valencia. Houston was a fellow of Hertford College, Oxford, where he served as a geography lecturer.

Houston emigrated with his wife and four children to North America in 1970, and became one of the founders of Regent College, a graduate school of Christian studies. From 1970 to 1978, he was Principal of the college,[a] and in 1991 he was appointed to the chair. His major areas of interest include the Christian mind, the Trinity, prayer, and spiritual formation. He has published numerous articles in books and scholarly journals. His autobiography, Memoirs of a Joyous Exile and a Worldly Christian, was published in 2020.

Houston currently resides in Vancouver. In addition to his continuation of writing, Houston spends a great deal of time mentoring students. Houston has four children, nine grandchildren, and fifteen great-grandchildren. Houston was the primary caretaker for his wife, Rita, who had dementia in her older years and died on October 8, 2014, at the age of 90.


Ethel Houston OBE (19 April 1924 – 30 November 2017) was a solicitor, Enigma code breaker, and the first woman to become senior partner at a Scottish law firm. She served on the Law Society's Council between 1975 and 1981, one of the first women to hold the position. She also served on the Royal Commission on Legal Services in Scotland, and the Commission for Racial Equality.

Early life and education:Houston was born in Albacete, Spain, in 1924 to Christian Brethren parents who worked as missionaries in the country. Her mother was also called Ethel. Houston had two siblings, including an elder brother James.

Houston's parents moved to Edinburgh in 1931, and sent her to James Gillespie's High School for girls. She later attended Skerry's College, and at the encouragement of her father fitted two years of work into three months, in order to pass entrance exams to the University of Edinburgh.

In 1940, and at the age of 16, Houston entered the University of Edinburgh, along with her elder brother James. Following her graduation with an MA in 1943, she applied for a Bachelor of Laws, whilst undertaking an apprenticeship at Balfour & Manson. However, she was soon called up for military service, the University having alerted the military to her suitability.

Career:She was one of the first recruits to Bletchley Park and worked in Hut 6 during the final year of World War Two. Under Gordon Welchman's command, Houston worked to improve Alan Turing's Bombe machine and compiled lists of messages used to create its menus. After being demobbed, she returned to University, and in 1947 became a solicitor. Houston spoke about her work at Bletchley only later in life, and her name was added to the Codebreakers' Wall, a digital commemorative wall for veterans, families and supporters of Bletchley.

In 1949, Houston was made partner of Scottish law firm Balfour and Manson. She was one of only four partners at the firm, and the first woman to be made senior partner at a Scottish firm.

In 1981, she was awarded an OBE, and in 2009, honorary membership of the Law Society.

Personal life and interests:Her parents' Christian faith, which Houston inherited, shaped her sense of justice and of obligation to the less fortunate in society. Her clients included a number of charities, and she worked with doctors to set up several medical charities. Houston was also a supporter of the arts and helped to establish Leith School of Art in 1988.

Houston enjoyed travel, including to Canada, where her family lived; she owned a flat in Nice and also rented a cottage in Berwickshire. After she retired, she was one of the first women to be admitted members in their own right of the New Club, Edinburgh.

Death and legacy:Houston died in Edinburgh, aged 93 and is survived by nieces and nephews. She was described in her obituary as a “non-conformist, feisty and a fiercely independent thinker”.

Excerpts: "Dear Contesse Clara, You remember that my sisters Ethel and Lonie{?} and myself faid a visit to you while we were in Roma in 1950. I am now married and my wife and I plan to spend next summer nine in Italy [...]. We wonder if you know any one with a flat or small house in Rome or elsewhere in Italy [...]. Our house is a new one, built in 1938 on the slope of a hill, with lovely views looking towards Oxford. [...] Oxford is a beautiful city and with the University and college it has many famous buildings. [...] I am a lecturer in geography in the University [...]. With kind regards, Yours sincerely, James M. Houston." Career:She was one of the first recruits to Bletchley Park and worked in Hut 6 during the final year of World War Two. Under Gordon Welchman's command, Houston work