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county:- |
Cumbria |
locality type:- |
area |
SummaryText:- |
The Lakes is so general a term as not to be very useful within the context of Cumbria.
It is also illdefined; the national park has a boundary, but that is not necessarily
contiguous with The Lakes. |
SummaryText:- |
This record is made as a home for very general notes and pictures. |
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evidence:- |
old map:- Ptolemy 1540
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source data:- |
Map, copy, uncoloured lithograph? Anglia II Nova Tabula, New Map
of England, scale about 50 miles to 1 inch, data in the
Geographia by Claudius Ptolemy, engraved by Sebastian Munster,
Basle, Switzerland, 1540. click to enlarge PTY4Cm.jpg hillocks; mountains, but no lakes item:- private collection : 131 Image © see bottom of page
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evidence:- |
fiction:- Austen 1813
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source data:- |
In this scene, Elizabeth and her aunt, Mrs. Gardiner, are at a play. Elizabeth is
speaking of a young man, Wickham, who seemed to like her, but then transferred his
attentions to a rich young woman. Her aunt invites her to go with her and Mr. Gardiner
on their tour to the Lake District. ""Oh! if that is all, I have a very poor opinion of young men who live in Derbyshire;
and their intimate friends who live in Hertfordshire are not much better. I am sick
of them all. Thank Heaven! I am going to-morrow where I shall find a man who has not
one agreeable quality, who has neither manner nor sense to recommend him. Stupid men
are the only ones worth knowing, after all."" ""Take care, Lizzy; that speech savours strongly of disappointment."" "Before they were separated by the conclusion of the play, she had the unexpected happiness
of an invitation to accompany her uncle and aunt in a tour of pleasure which they
proposed taking in the summer." ""We have not determined how far it shall carry us," said Mrs. Gardiner, "but perhaps
to the Lakes."" "No scheme could have been more agreeable to Elizabeth, and her acceptance of the invitation
was most ready and grateful. "My dear, dear aunt," she rapturously cried, "what delight!
what felicity! You give me fresh life and vigour. Adieu to disappointment and spleen.
What are young men to rocks and mountains? Oh! what hours of transport we shall spend!
And when we do return, it shall not be like other travellers, without being able to
give one accurate idea of anything. We will know where we have gone-we will recollect
what we have seen. Lakes, mountains, and rivers, shall not be jumbled together in
our imaginations; nor when we attempt to describe any particular scene, will we begin
quarreling about its relative situation. Let our first effusions be less insupportable
than those of the generality of travellers."" Later, Elizabeth looks forward to her trip to the Lakes. "Her tour to the Lakes was now the object of her happiest thoughts; it was her best
consolation for all the uncomfortable hours which the discontentedness of her mother
and Kitty made inevitable; and could she have included Jane in the scheme, every part
of it would have been perfect." Mr. Gardiner's business schedule later prevents their travel taking them as far north
as the Lakes, to Elizabeth's great disappointment. "The time fixed for the beginning of their northern tour was now fast approaching,
and a fortnight only was wanting of it, when a letter arrived from Mrs. Gardiner,
which at once delayed its commencement and curtailed its extent. Mr. Gardiner would
be prevented by business from setting out till a fortnight later in July, and must
be in London again within a month, and as that left too short a period for them to
go so far, and see so much as they had proposed, or at least to see it with the leisure
and comfort they had built on, they were obliged to give up the Lakes, and substitute
a more contracted tour; and, according to the present plan, were to go no farther
northwards than Derbyshire. In that county there was enough to be seen to occupy the
chief of their three weeks; and to Mrs. Gardiner it had a peculiarly strong attraction.
The town where she had formerly passed some years of her life, and where they were
now to spend a few days, was probably as great an object of her curiosity as all the
celebrated beauties of Matlock, Chatsworth, Dovedale, or the Peak." "Elizabeth was excessively disappointed; she had set her heart on seeing the Lakes,
and still thought there might have been time enough. But it was her business to be
satisfied--and certainly her temper to be happy; and all was soon right again."
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evidence:- |
old text:- Gents Mag
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source data:- |
Magazine, The Gentleman's Magazine or Monthly Intelligencer or
Historical Chronicle, published by Edward Cave under the
pseudonym Sylvanus Urban, and by other publishers, London,
monthly from 1731 to 1922. goto source Gentleman's Magazine 1868 part 1 p.639 "THE ENGLISH TRAVELLER." "ONE of the most marked features in these times of progress is the persistence with which English people take their annual holiday. We are not now speaking of the professed traveller, who, discarding civilisation and beaten tracks, flings himself into the wilds of unknown prairies and primaeval forests, as if the one object of his life was to carve out a way hitherto unknown to the Geographical Society, but rather of the great mass of easy-going middle-class folk, who, as the summer draws near, expreience a feeling of restlessness, only to be mitigated by Alpine climbs and canoe voyages, or the less exciting but safer visits to Scotland or the Lakes. There is no country in which this peculiar longing is so periodic, or so habitually satisfied, as it is in England. Perhaps, of all others, Russia sends the most polished, and America the greatest number of travellers; but these, albeit met with in most places, are the very salt of their class, bent either on pleasure or with some political object. In France, too, the Baths of Bigorre and Biarritz attract great numbers; but these are nearly all fashionables who go to avoid the heat of Paris, and because it is en regle. None of these countries have anything to compare with that great Hegira which the English summer and autumn call forth; nor does there seem to be that love of travel, for travel's sake, which is so innate in the Anglo-Saxon. One reason is, that in England we work hard for our livelihood and our amusement. Whether we are statesmen, merchants, or professional men, we stick to our last for nine months in the year at the least, before we consider that we have earned the right to our holiday; and when we do take it, we take it with the same desperate earnestness with which we have worked for it." "With most Englishmen of the present day, a holiday is relaxation, but not repose -
relaxation simply of the head and mind, which have been for many months at high pressure
and which require the remedy of stimulant - the stimulant of change and active exertion.
What the Sunday walk is to the bleached, asphixiated weaver, the annual holiday is
to the over-worked middle-class man, who gains in a short time more benefit from his
outing than he would from a year's dosing with quinine and iron. To the mind the restorative
action is still greater, and were it not for this opportunity of discarding for a
time all worry and anxiety, by becoming as it were dead to business, many a"
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evidence:- |
old text:- Gents Mag 1868 item:- guide book; Murray's guides
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source data:- |
goto source Gentleman's Magazine 1868 part 1 p.640 "father of a family would soon be a candidate for the lunatic asylum. Happy is the man who has the determination and the power of leaving no address behind him, so that letters, and what are still worse, telegrams, cannot be sent after him to poison his pleasure and disturb his mental recovery; though in the complicated relations of the present day, very few can afford thus to isolate themselves for a whole month. Some day a future Macaulay will point out the extraordinary effect that this travelling habit has had, not only upon our domestic matters, but upon society at large: and the work has yet to be written which treats on this particular phase of English locomotion. The present generation has little conception of the changes that have taken place since the day when the mail-coach was the only medium of communication between town and country. To the bulk of quiet villages, the arrival of a Londoner was a thing to talk about, while few members of a family ever looked upon the metropolis as a place of resort, except for a state visit once or twice in their lives. But now London is identical with the country, as far as the intercourse of society and public opinion go; and, au contraire, the country is too often London. The great cause of this change is the facility of locomotion, which, like the effects of the penny postage on correspondence, has induced people to leave their homes so much, that it has now become a confirmed habit. ... But, even with improved roads and excellent coaching, the Englishman, except when bent upon business, was a fixture at home; and it was not until after the full development of the railway system, that the excursionist became a person of importance, and a class to be conciliated. With the excursionist came the guide-book; but whether the former was instrumental in the appearance of the latter, or whether improved guide-books helped to create the excursionist, is immaterial; no doubt the one influenced the other." "There is the same difference between the handbook of the present day and the old post-chaise
companion, as there is between an express train and the carrier's waggon. Amidst the
cloud of local guides that beset the traveller to any place of general resort, it
is often perplexing which to choose; but taking the country as a whole, it may be
said that there is but one handbook, and "Murray" is its name. Not that we mean to
ignore the claims of others, ..."
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evidence:- |
old text:- Gents Mag 1868
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source data:- |
goto source Gentleman's Magazine 1868 part 1 p.641 "... Probably the first thought that occurs in glancing over these volumes is the extraordinary
extension of the railway system, and the changes it has produced in the outward appearance
of the land. Highways, such as the Great North road or the Holyhead road, which once
teemed with traffic, and swarmed with coaches, might now have grass growing on them
so far as the traffic is concerned. Villages situated on these roads, which contained
coaching-inns of repute, are comparatively deserted, and the inns shut up. But the
balance of compensation is seen in the creation of entirely new centres of habitation
... From the same cause, monster hotels have sprung up, in some cases without any
apparent object but to make a railway to them, and thus attract a residential population;
while our towns and cities are inhabited by a daily ebbing and flowing crowd, which
for the most part shuns them at night as though they were infected with a plague.
Whether the beau-"
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evidence:- |
old text:- Gents Mag 1868
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source data:- |
goto source Gentleman's Magazine 1868 part 1 p.642 "[beau]tiful pleasure spots in England are any the better for the influx, daily, weekly,
or monthly, of these spasmodic residents, is a question which will probably be answered
in the negative by those to whom the softness and silence of nature are so dear. Fortunately
nothing can spoil our mountains, and we certainly are indebted to the railways, not
only for taking us to them without loss of time, but for putting in the power of so
many to visit them, who otherwise could not do so, so that we must take the good with
the bad, ..." "But the railway system has done more than bring this scenery to our doors, it has
given us some of the highest triumphs of modern days. The art of building bridges,
which, when road-making was in vogue, was brought to the height of perfection by Telford,
is now-a-days joined with the most astonishing originality and boldness; and the English
railway-bridges may fairly challenge the world. ... To these, and such as these, will
our future historians point as instances of the prodigious growth of the country in
ideas and riches, ..."
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evidence:- |
old text:- Gents Mag 1868
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source data:- |
goto source Gentleman's Magazine 1868 part 1 p.643 "..." "To the thoughtful observer all these sights and sounds, modern as they are, have an
additional interest when compared with the relics of former ages; and although the
antiquary will naturally prefer to linger over the quiet spots where the latter sleep
undisturbed, he will never shut out from his mind the comparison between the past
and the present. Nor, indeed, taking our engineering works as an example, can we afford
to sneer at the engineering knowledge or capacity of the old builders ..."
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evidence:- |
text:- Mason 1907 (edn 1930) item:- tourist; climbing
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source data:- |
Text book, The Ambleside Geography Books bk.III, The Counties of
England, by Charlotte M Mason, published by Kegan Paul, Trench,
Trubner and Co, Broadway House, 68-74 Carter Lane, and the
Parents' Educational Union Office, 26 Victoria Street, London,
edn 1930. MSN1P016.txt Page 16:- "CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORELAND." "I." "THE LAKE DISTRICT." "The lake district lies within the southern half of Cumberland, the western half of
Westmoreland, and the piece of Lancashire known as Furness." "This is the playground of England, whither the young men go to climb mountains, and,
young and old, to be refreshed by the ever-changing beauty of lake and fell. In the
season there are always tourists about, knapsack on shoulder, who make their way on
foot, or by the pleasant old stage-coach; railways have only penetrated into the beautiful
valleys in a few places as yet; but motor-cars have come into use." MSN1P023.txt Page 23:- "..." "There are fewer people in the Lake District than in any other part of England of the
same size. Men cannot till the fells, or live upon them; and these great rugged mountain
masses spread over the whole district. They do not run in chains, but are grouped," MSN1P024.txt Page 24:- "rising behind and around one another like huge land-billows" "Between each pair of long mountain ridges is a dale, long and narrow, with green meadows
and trees. The villages are in these dales, and the lowest part of each dale, or valley,
is usually filled with water, forming a lake, set like a gem in the green vale, bright
and clear and glittering in the sunshine. A river brings water to the lake, and a
river carries to the sea what water there is to spare when the bed of the lake is
full; that is, when the water in the lake rises nearly as high as the land of the
valley around it."
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evidence:- |
old painting:-
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, Fell Scene with River and Farm, Cumbria, England, 1880s-90s. click to enlarge PR1023.jpg A shallow rocky river flows to right of composition beside a wood to left of which,
on a patch of flat grassland, a solitary female figure pauses beside a cow. A small
farmhouse stands in middle distance. The road to left of composition rises towards
the distant moors beyond. item:- Tullie House Museum : 1968.61.1 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
old painting:- item:- sheep
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, View in the Lake District, a Lakeland Farm, Cumbria, by William
Henry Nutter, 1863. click to enlarge PR0800.jpg Autumn scene of sheep grazing on and beside the track leading to a low farmhouse sheltered
by a stand of trees to right of composition. Beside it stand several pointed haystacks.
To the left of the track there lies a wide expanse of open farmland beyond which lie
distant hills and mountains. The sky is filled with light pastel coloured sunset clouds. signed &dated at bottom left:- "W H Nutter 1863" item:- Tullie House Museum : 1895.53 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
old painting:-
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, Lake District Cottages, Cumbria, by William James Blacklock,
1850-58? click to enlarge PR0942.jpg Beyond stony grey foreground stand two whitewashed cottages and their outhouses; one
is single storey, the other has an upper floor. Behind them rises a wooded hillside. item:- Tullie House Museum : 1946.67.10 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
probably old painting:-
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, Hill Scene with Cottage, Cumbria, by William James Blacklock,
1850-58? click to enlarge PR0950.jpg Beyond foreground of water and rocky shoreline a small cottage nestles at the base
of a wooded hillside; barren fells rise beyond. item:- Tullie House Museum : 1946.67.19 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
old painting:- item:- fishing
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, River Scene with Fisherman and Woman, Cumbria, by Thomas Harper,
about 1850. click to enlarge PR1042.jpg In middle distance a couple walk beside a winding river flanked on both banks by autumnal
trees; he carries a fishing rod over his shoulder. A distant farmhouse stands in centre
of composition; hills rise beyond. item:- Tullie House Museum : 1970.33.28.1 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
perhaps old painting:- item:- pig; donkey; cart; street lamp
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, Landscape with a Farmyard Scene, Cumbria, perhaps by Robert
Carlyle snr, 1790s. click to enlarge PR1032.jpg In the foreground, beside a lampost, an agricultural worker wearing a smock sits astride
one of the two ponies pulling his cart in which stand a donkey, a cow and two calves?.
He looks over towards a thatched pigsty to extreme left of composition outside which
stand a pig and two boars. To right of composition stands a barn. In the distance,
beyond a military looking building, lie distant hills beneath a blue sky. A farmer going to market? item:- Tullie House Museum : 1970.33.9 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
old print:- item:- cattle; snow; volcano
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source data:- |
Print, uncoloured woodcut, Down to the Snow Capped Volcanoes of the Lake Country,
by Tunnicliffe, 1940s. click to enlarge PR0661.jpg On page 107 of Going Fishing, by Wesley Parson; a somewhat fanciful title! printed at bottom right:- "Down to the snow-capped volcanoes of the lake country" item:- Dove Cottage : 2008.107.602 Image © see bottom of page
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evidence:- |
perhaps old drawing:- item:- pele tower
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source data:- |
Drawing, Pele Tower and Farm, Cumberland? by Thomas Bushby, 1914. click to enlarge PR1334.jpg In the foreground a farmer and his dog leave a fenced field in which a small flock
of sheep and lambs is gathered. Beyond, in centre of composition, stands a farm and
its outbuildings beside which a pele tower stands. Wintry trees grow inside the fence.
A distant church spire is glimpsed to far left of composition and houses to far right. dated at bottom left:- "Mar 21 1914" signed &dated at bottom right:- "Thos; Bushby 1914" item:- Tullie House Museum : 1996.252.18 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
perhaps old painting:- item:- stile; stepping stones
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, The Way through the Wood, Cumberland, by William James Fairlie,
1855. click to enlarge PR1309.jpg Single figure in landscape; a young woman approaches the edge of a shallow rocky river
flowing horizontally across lower plane of composition, a pail balanced on her head.
Behind her stands a drystone wall with inbuilt stile over which she has climbed. Thick
woodland lies beyond. inscribed & signed &dated at bottom left:- "The way through the Wood Wm J Fairlie /55" item:- Tullie House Museum : 1981.29 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
old painting:-
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, Bridge over River in Fells, Cumbria, by Thomas Harper, 1846. click to enlarge PR1044.jpg Two figures approach a bridge in centre of composition which spans a shallow river.
Beyond rise barren fells, the summit of the highest obscured by low cloud. dated &signed at bottom right:- "1846 T HARPER" inscribed at reverse:- "[ ton] by Harper" item:- Tullie House Museum : 1970.33.28.4 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
perhaps old painting:- item:- sunset
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source data:- |
Painting, watercolour, View in Cumberland, by Thomas Harper, 1846. click to enlarge PR1043.jpg Sunset scene; to left of foreground a tall tree casts a lengthy shadow across the
track it stands beside. To right, the solitary figure of a woman carrying a basket
over her left arm, her back to the viewer, approaches brow of hill. Distant hills
lie beyond. signed &dated at bottom right:- "T HARPER 1846" item:- Tullie House Museum : 1970.33.28.2 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
old drawing:-
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source data:- |
Drawing, The Old Lodor and Salutation Inn, by William Havell, 1800s-10s. click to enlarge PR1391.jpg View of the Old Lodor and Salutation Inn framed by trees with Lake District hills
in the background. One of a set of twenty views of the lake district executed by the
artist on one sheet of paper. at bottom:- "The Old Lodor and Salutation Inn" item:- Tullie House Museum : 2009.89.35 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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evidence:- |
perhaps old painting:-
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source data:- |
Painting, oil painting, Rural Scene, Cumbria? attributed to Julius Caesar Ibbetson,
1800s. click to enlarge PR1287.jpg Summertime; a man wearing the dress of an agrigultural worker waves goodbye to a woman
standing in the doorway of a tiny ramshackle house in centre of composition. A second
man lies in front of the building, a horse grazing nearby. To extreme right of composition
stands a gnarled oak tree; between the tree and the house the rolling landscape unfolds
in the distance. item:- Tullie House Museum : 1978.108.147 Image © Tullie House Museum |
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