from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
Sunday, 31 January 2016
Comments - thank you!
I'd like to thank everyone who sends me such kind comments about this blog - they are much appreciated! Today I publish one from Andrew, who is related to both the Fawcetts of Crathorne and the Honeymans of Hutton Rudby.
William Orton, forger of Hutton Rudby
On 27 January 2013 I told the story of William Orton of Hutton Rudby, who was found guilty at the York Assizes in March 1821 of forging and passing a counterfeit banknote and was sentenced to be transported to New South Wales.
Geoff Royle, his descendant, followed up the trail and within a very short time reported to this blog (see "William Orton of Hutton Rudby and New South Wales") that William had gained an excellent character in the first 24 years of his time in Australia but in 1845 at the age of 67 had been caught out once again in a matter of forgery and been sentenced to two years in Parramatta Gaol.
Geoff has now discovered that William's first years in New South Wales were not without incident. He tells me (and you can find more details of the family on his website)
Geoff Royle, his descendant, followed up the trail and within a very short time reported to this blog (see "William Orton of Hutton Rudby and New South Wales") that William had gained an excellent character in the first 24 years of his time in Australia but in 1845 at the age of 67 had been caught out once again in a matter of forgery and been sentenced to two years in Parramatta Gaol.
Geoff has now discovered that William's first years in New South Wales were not without incident. He tells me (and you can find more details of the family on his website)
1829 Dec/1830 Jun In more hot water! In June 1830 he had a "ticket of leave" cancelled as he was found guilty at Paterson Plains, NSW, of receiving stolen property.For reference : A "ticket of leave" allowed convicts to work for themselves on condition that they remained in a specified area, reported regularly to local authorities, and if at all possible, attend divine worship every Sunday.
William must have won his excellent reputation after 1830!
Saturday, 12 December 2015
'Lines written on a visit to Leven-Grove in Cleveland, the seat of Lady Amherst' 1817
Leven Grove was the early 19th century name for Skutterskelfe Hall. It's the subject of this poetic tribute, by an author writing under the pseudonym of LEO:-
Nov. 12, 1817.
Published in The Northern Star or Yorkshire Magazine: A Monthly and Permanent Register of the Statistics, Literature, Biography, Arts, Commerce, and Manufactures of Yorkshire, and the Adjoining Counties (Volume 2)
There's something rather unexpected in the way that the writer begins sentimentally with primroses, violets, greenswards and glades - and ends in a snap with agonising mourning, bleakness and "frequent deaths" ...
An account of Skutterskelfe Hall can be found earlier on the blog, here
Note: Foley-Hill is present-day Folly Hill.
When rosy Spring, with fingers bath'd in dew,
Unfolds the primrose pale and violet blue,
And many a blooming flowret that supplies
Joy to the smell and pleasure to the eyes,–
Soothes with her smiles the fury of the north,
And breathes and bids the tender buds burst forth –
When soaring high on never-wearied wings,
To charm his mate the lark enraptured sings;
Balmy the air; above, the sky serene;
The meads, below, soft, fragrant, fresh, and green;
O be it mine at peaceful evening time,
When the sun decks his western throne sublime,
O be it mine with tempted feet to rove
Along thy flowry paths, fair Leven Grove!
There deep concealed amid thy shady bowers,
The Thrush and Blackbird charm the careless hours,
And every bird its melody essays
To pour to bounteous Heaven its humble praise.
Hail, lovely scenes, that ever can impart
A sense of genuine pleasure to my heart!
O sweet thy greensward bents and sunny glades,
Thy crystal streams and murmuring cascades!
Here, while I gaze, each earthly trouble flies,
My soul expands, my thoughts ascend the skies:
Soft, as I stray thy fragrant haunts among,
Comes the lone murmur of the ring-dove's song;
She, faithful bird, her lover's stay deplores,
His absence long from her whom he adores;
Or, 'reft of him that never will return,LEO.
Pours to the echoing woods her agonizing mourn.–
Lo, as I gain sweet Foley-Hill, are seen
Fair Cleveland's plains with future harvests green;
And lengthening far, and towering to the skies,
Her mountains dark in solemn grandeur rise:
There, bleak and bare, which every blast assails;
Here, cloth'd with woods that scorn the blustering gales.
Now, while the western breezes curl the stream,
And clouds obscure the sun's unfavouring beam,
Across the brook, with keen and ready eye,
The patient angler throws his feather'd fly;
With restless arm attempts each prosperous guile,
And frequent deaths reward his pleasing toil.
Nov. 12, 1817.
Published in The Northern Star or Yorkshire Magazine: A Monthly and Permanent Register of the Statistics, Literature, Biography, Arts, Commerce, and Manufactures of Yorkshire, and the Adjoining Counties (Volume 2)
There's something rather unexpected in the way that the writer begins sentimentally with primroses, violets, greenswards and glades - and ends in a snap with agonising mourning, bleakness and "frequent deaths" ...
An account of Skutterskelfe Hall can be found earlier on the blog, here
Note: Foley-Hill is present-day Folly Hill.
Thursday, 10 December 2015
"On the wondrous trail of Alice"
Alice in Wonderland, that is.
To celebrate the 150th anniversary of the publication of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Chris Lloyd (deputy editor of the Northern Echo) wrote a beautifully concise and evocative account of Carroll's links to the North East and the ways in which his years spent here may have provided inspiration for Alice.
He mentions, too, Henry Savile Clarke whose story, and that of his wife and daughters, can be found earlier on this blog, and who created the first stage adaptation of the books.
You can find "On the wondrous trail of Alice" here on the Northern Echo website.
(I think you can get 10 free articles a month before a subscription is needed).
I don't know why we let Oxford take all the credit, when both Lewis Carroll and the Liddells (Alice Liddell being the main inspiration for the books) had such firm roots here!
To celebrate the 150th anniversary of the publication of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Chris Lloyd (deputy editor of the Northern Echo) wrote a beautifully concise and evocative account of Carroll's links to the North East and the ways in which his years spent here may have provided inspiration for Alice.
He mentions, too, Henry Savile Clarke whose story, and that of his wife and daughters, can be found earlier on this blog, and who created the first stage adaptation of the books.
You can find "On the wondrous trail of Alice" here on the Northern Echo website.
(I think you can get 10 free articles a month before a subscription is needed).
I don't know why we let Oxford take all the credit, when both Lewis Carroll and the Liddells (Alice Liddell being the main inspiration for the books) had such firm roots here!
Friday, 13 November 2015
Papers deposited at NYCRO
I have now deposited all the papers relating to John Richard Stubbs with the North Yorkshire County Record Office.
The deposit includes his diaries and also family letters mainly from the 1870s. The letters from Ellis Macfarlane of Helensburgh written during their engagement and in the early years of their marriage are particularly lively and interesting, as are the letters from John's mother.
Anne Weatherill's diary from 1863 – which is such a tiny scrap of a document that over the years the family has had several moments of fearing we had lost it – is now also safely at NYCRO, I'm glad to say!
The deposit includes his diaries and also family letters mainly from the 1870s. The letters from Ellis Macfarlane of Helensburgh written during their engagement and in the early years of their marriage are particularly lively and interesting, as are the letters from John's mother.
Anne Weatherill's diary from 1863 – which is such a tiny scrap of a document that over the years the family has had several moments of fearing we had lost it – is now also safely at NYCRO, I'm glad to say!
Monday, 9 November 2015
Lewis Carroll & the North East
Don't miss Alice in Teesside, Simon Farnaby's programme on Lewis Carroll, author of Alice in Wonderland!
It was broadcast on Radio 4 last Thursday and is now on iplayer.
I can't help but think that their shared roots in the North East must have made for an extra bond between Carroll and Henry Savile Clarke, who wrote the first stage adaptation of the Alice books.
For the remarkable story of Henry Savile Clarke, go to my earlier blog posts - there are four of them, and this is the first.
It was broadcast on Radio 4 last Thursday and is now on iplayer.
I can't help but think that their shared roots in the North East must have made for an extra bond between Carroll and Henry Savile Clarke, who wrote the first stage adaptation of the Alice books.
For the remarkable story of Henry Savile Clarke, go to my earlier blog posts - there are four of them, and this is the first.
Wednesday, 23 September 2015
'The Live Bait Squadron Remembrance Book'
Henk van der Linden is the founder of the the Live Bait Squadron Society and the author of The Live Bait Squadron: three mass graves off the Dutch coast.
Henk is now proposing to produce a commemorative volume called The Live Bait Squadron Remembrance Book.
It would be a large, high quality hardback book in colour. It would include a DVD of the moving documentary film The Live Bait Squadron made by Dutch diver & filmmaker Klaudie Bartelink (the film's in English!) and a DVD of the centenary commemoration at Chatham Historic Dockyard last year, which Klaudie also filmed. The book would include accounts of the disaster, its historical context, stories of the men (sent to Henk by their families and descendants), and details of the memorials erected to their memory ...
In order to get this book published, Henk needs to guarantee to his publisher that it will achieve a certain number of sales. So he needs a list of subscribers who will engage to buy the book when it becomes available. The price will be £40.
So if you are interested, contact Henk!
His email address is h.van.der.linden@tip.nl
(The only thing that might put you off is that I feature rather more in Klaudie's film than I ever expected when filming took place! I try not to think about it too much ...)
Henk is now proposing to produce a commemorative volume called The Live Bait Squadron Remembrance Book.
It would be a large, high quality hardback book in colour. It would include a DVD of the moving documentary film The Live Bait Squadron made by Dutch diver & filmmaker Klaudie Bartelink (the film's in English!) and a DVD of the centenary commemoration at Chatham Historic Dockyard last year, which Klaudie also filmed. The book would include accounts of the disaster, its historical context, stories of the men (sent to Henk by their families and descendants), and details of the memorials erected to their memory ...
In order to get this book published, Henk needs to guarantee to his publisher that it will achieve a certain number of sales. So he needs a list of subscribers who will engage to buy the book when it becomes available. The price will be £40.
So if you are interested, contact Henk!
His email address is h.van.der.linden@tip.nl
(The only thing that might put you off is that I feature rather more in Klaudie's film than I ever expected when filming took place! I try not to think about it too much ...)
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