Wednesday, 26 December 2018

LOVE AND BETRAYAL IN NORTHERN IRELAND: DEATH AND NIGHTINGALES

I often find BBC dramas rather depressing, and this was certainly the case with Death and Nightingales, recently aired on BBC1 and starring Jamie Dornan. However the 3-parter, which was set and filmed in Northern Ireland, made the most of the natural beauty and historical heritage of this part of the UK. Although the story is set in County Fermanagh, two of the main filming locations are the National Trust property Springhill in County Londonderry and the grounds of Myra Castle near Strangford, County Down.

The drama, a story of love and betrayal set in 1885 in the Fermanagh countryside and based on the novel by Eugene McCabe, has as its main focus the home occupied by Billy Winters (Matthew Rhys) and his stepdaughter Beth (Ann Skelly). The property used for the filming of the interior house scenes was Springhill, a 17th-century plantation home in Moneymore, County Londonderry. The National Trust closed the property for the filming, which it must have done with some reluctance, as the filming took place during the busy months of May and June.

The house was apparently chosen because its history would have reflected the history of the Winters family in the story, in which the Protestant grandfather of Billy Winters would have bought his house around 1800, and the architecture would have been similar to Springhill’s. 12 spaces within the house were used during the filming, including the apartment used by National Trust staff, who had to move out to make way for the filming of Beth’s quarters. Springhill is home to no less than 8 species of bats, and the film crew had to wait until the bats had roosted each evening before commencing night shoots.

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Springhill House, Moneymore. Photo by Kenneth Allen, via Wikimedia Commons

The dairy scenes and the boating scenes were filmed at the site of Myra Castle to the west of Strangford, County Down. The original castle, named Walshestown Castle, was built in the 16th century, but nowadays all that remains is a Landcape Park, where visitors can enjoy features including the Summerhouse, the Gate Lodge and the Pond among others.

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Walshestown Castle Geograph-3036259-by-Mike-Searle. Via Wikimedia Commons


Monday, 3 December 2018

THE REAL HOWARDS END: PEPPARD COTTAGE, OXFORDSHIRE

The Merchant Ivory classic Howards End, based on the novel of the same name by E M Forster, is a story set in the early 1900s exploring relationships spanning three classes: the Wilcox family (headed by Anthony Hopkins as wealthy businessman Henry Wilcox), the bourgeois and philanthropic Schlegels (with Emma Thompson and Helena Bonham-Carter as the Schlegel sisters), and the working class Basts. The film takes in numerous UK locations, most notably in Oxfordshire and London, with a bit of Italy thrown in.

Howards End, a property which forms a focal point in the plot of the film, is a delightful red-brick country house clad in wisteria and surrounded by flower-strewn woodlands. The real-life house is called Peppard Cottage, a 14th-century country house overlooking Peppard Commond in Rotherfield Peppard, near the pretty riverside village of Sonning, between Reading and Henley-on-Thames. It was once owned by Lady Ottoline Morrell, who used to entertain members of the Bloomsbury group there. The cottage was still privately owned at the time of filming and after, but that did not stop fans of the film flocking to take pictures of it. In 2017 it was reported that the property was up for sale, for a cool £3.95 million. Howards End is not the only screen appearance by Peppard Cottage: it was also seen in Poirot, Inspector Morse and Midsomer Murders.

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"Howards End" - geograph.org.uk - 558062. Photo by Graham Horn, via Wikimedia Commons

Howards End is in the fictional village of Hilton, and some of the village scenes were filmed in nearby Dorchester-on-Thames, but others were filmed a long way away in Worcestershire. One such featured Bewdley Station, one of the stops on the charming heritage railway line known as the Severn Valley Railway. Prunella Scales as Aunt Juley is seen in front of the City of Truro locomotive at the station. The George Tavern of the film is actually in the village of Upper Arley, between Bewdley and Bridgnorth.

Bewdley Station
Map of Oxfordshire

Monday, 19 November 2018

BETJEMAN'S VISITS TO A PIECE OF EXOTICA IN OXFORDSHIRE: SEZINCOTE

When John Betjeman was a student at Oxford University he used to visit the family home of his friend John Dugdale. The home in question, nestled in the rural idyll of the East Cotswolds, was Sezincote, a riot of Indian-inspired exotica commissioned by Charles, the brother of Colonel John Cockerell, grandson of the famous diarist Samuel Pepys, who had amassed a fortune at the East India Company. The brief Charles Cockerell set his architect brother Samuel was for a grand house in the Rajasthan Mogul style. The house must have made an impression on the Prince Regent, who visited in 1807, as he was inspired to change his plans for the Royal Pavilion in Brighton following his time there.

As for Betjeman, the house and grounds provided the inspiration for a poem forming part of the Summoned By Bells collection, covering his early life from childhood to student years. Describing his visits to the house for Sunday lunches, he waxes lyrical about the Cotswold lanes being “heavy with hawthorn scent”, while the house itself is “Indian without and coolest Greek within”. In the grounds, the lake “was made to seem a mighty river-reach”, and included “The bridge, the waterfall, the Temple Pool”. Betjeman’s friends parents were Colonel Dugdale, whose “eyes looked out towards the hills”, and Mrs Dugdale “In trailing and Edwardian-looking dress”. He concludes by declaring that “Sezincote became a second home”. Sezincote is open to visitors with the house open in the afternoon from May to September inclusive on Thursdays, Fridays and Bank Holiday Mondays, while the garden is open from January to November.

Map of the area.

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Sezincote House - geograph.org.uk - 1577252. Photo by Cameraman, via Wikimedia Commons.


Tuesday, 9 October 2018

AN AMERICAN BILLIONAIRE IN ESSEX: TRUST/AUDLEY END


The American-born oil tycoon and billionaire J. Paul Getty was born in Minnesota, but in later life transferred to England, setting up home in the sumptuous 16th century Tudor manor house Sutton Place near Guildford, Surrey, where he lived for the last 17 years of his life.  Getty was notorious for his sex drive, going through several wives, and even in his eighties there was a collection of what the New York Times described as “desperately hopeful women” hanging around his living quarters.  However, despite his enormous wealth and vast collection of art and antiques, he was less generous with his money than with his physical offerings, and the only female companion to receive more than a derisory amount in his will after his death was Penelope Kitson, an interior designer he developed a relationship with after hiring her for her decorating prowess. 

When Getty’s grandson John Paul Getty III was kidnapped in 1973 the mean side of his grandfather again came to light.  Believing that the kidnap was a ploy to extract money from him, he refused to pay a penny, not unreasonably since payment of a ransom in this case could have led to further kidnappings of members of the family. It was only the loss of an ear that finally moved grandfather Getty into action.  This is the backdrop of the stylish TV series Trust, with Donald Sutherland magnificently cast as J. Paul Getty and the elegantly turned out Anna Chancellor as Penelope Kitson.  Added to which, the role of Sutton Place is admirably played by the Essex property Audley End House near Saffron Walden, Essex.

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AudleyEndHouse. Photo by Paul Wells, via Wikimedia Commons

The current owner of Sutton Place is a Russian oligarch, which meant the property could not be used for the filming, so the production team came up with Audley End as an alternative, and what a great choice it was.  In fact the production team are on record as believing that Audley End gave more gravitas to the filming than Sutton Place would have done.  Moreover, the extensive art collection contained in the property reflects the massive collection held by Getty at Sutton Place.

The property is a 17th-century Jacobean estate located a short distance to the west of the attractive market town Saffron Walden.  The estate is run by English Heritage and consists of the house itself, a third of its original size, and the gardens which were designed by Capability Brown.  Highlights of the house are the Great Hall, the state apartments, dressing rooms and libraries, as well as an 18th-century Gothic-style chapel.  One of the pivotal scenes in the series, in which Getty announces to the press that he will not pay the ransom, was shot in a long hall within the property.

However, not all the scenes were filmed at Audley End.  Some of the scenes, for example the scenes showing Getty dining with his bevy of ladies, were filmed at Hatfield House in Hertfordshire, a property which has been used many times for filming, for example in My Week With Marilyn (see my previous blog post).  The reason for the change in location was that the dining room at Audley End was considered too small to make the necessary impact.

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Dining room at Hatfield House-19478173458. Photo by Matt Brown, via Wikimedia Commons




Monday, 1 October 2018

THE DA VINCI CODE: THE LINCOLNSHIRE CONNECTION


The Da Vinci Code, based on the novel by Dan Brown and starring Tom Hanks as Professor Robert Langdon, divides its time between France and the UK, with a little bit of Malta thrown in.  The UK scenes are divided between England and Scotland, with the county of Lincolnshire providing some of the key moments.  Hanks and his co-stars Sir Ian McKellen and Audrey Tautou all stayed in Lincoln during the shoot, which took place in 2005.  I once visited Lincoln with my husband, where we went on an excellent ghost tour.  According to the tour guide Tom Hanks came on the same tour while there, which must have provided a suitably creepy real-life diversion from the events of the film.
Lincoln Cathedral was chosen as a stand-in for Westminster Abbey in the film, as the real Westminster Abbey denied permission to film on religious grounds.  The production team went to the trouble of creating a model of the tomb of Isaac Newton, who happens to hail from nearby Grantham, to replicate the real one in London.  Incidentally, the cathedral was also used to portray Westminster Abbey in the film The Young Victoria.  The cathedral gained some much needed extra revenue as a result of its role in The Da Vinci Code, both from the increase in visitor numbers and the money paid for its use in the film, and because paintings and statues used in the film were auctioned to raise money for the cathedral.  The 900-year old building costs several million pounds a year to run, so the money was much needed.

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Lincoln Cathedral from Broadgate footbridge - geograph.org.uk - 281923. Photo by Richard Croft, via Wikimedia Commons

Another Lincolnshire location used in the filming was the magnificent Burghley House near the attractive market town of Stamford.  The house was used to portray a French chateau in some of the scenes, with the stable courtyard being transformed into a 14th-century French village.  Meanwhile, the interiors with their Italian-style furnishings were used as a stand-in for the inside of the Papal Palace of Castel Gandolfo in the town of the same name near Rome.  The garage scene at Chateau Villette, where the police chase took place was also filmed at the property.  Burghley House is generally regarded as England’s greatest Elizabethan house, and it includes eighteen State Rooms and a huge art collection including one of the most important private collections of 17th century Italian paintings.

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Burghley house U.K. Photo by Sreejith K, via Wikimedia Commons




Monday, 10 September 2018

WHERE WAS THE REAL MANSFIELD PARK? THE CASE FOR NORTHAMPTONSHIRE


Part of the fun of analysing the works of one of Britain’s most famous female authors, Jane Austen, is trying to work out what actual locations might have been the inspiration for the aristocratic properties which feature so heavily in her novels.  In the case of Mansfield Park, it has been necessary to apply some skilled detective work to the job. An examination of the available clues leads to the conclusion that the geographical setting for Mansfield Park was the county of Northamptonshire.  Not least the fact that, while writing Mansfield Park, Austen wrote to her sister Cassandra and asked her whether Northamptonshire was a “county of hedgerows” – a curious thing to ask unless she was looking for an accurate description of the setting for her novel.  The question is, where in Northamptonshire?  Following the letter to her sister, Jane’s enquiries about the county went the rounds of a number of her acquaintances, leading to further clues.


The first, and seemingly most popular, contender is Cottesbrooke Hall.  Two of the individuals in Jane’s circle who were involved in the enquiries about the area were Henry Sandford and Sir James Langham, who were among those asked for their opinions of the finished novel.  The Langham family were the owners of Cottesbrooke Hall, which matches some of the details of Mansfield Park such as the breakfast rooms and the library with adjoining billiard room.  It is not known whether Jane herself ever visited the property, but she could have got the description and/or plans from her contacts there.  The one fly in the ointment is the fact that Mansfield Park is described as a spacious modern-built house, whereas Cottesbrooke was built over a century before Mansfield Park was written.

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Cottesbrooke Hall Northamptonshire. Photo by Cj1340, via Wikimedia Commons

However, a few years ago an academic threw doubt on Cottesbrooke as the real Mansfield Park, and came up with an alternative suggestion, arguing that Cassandra’s connection with the county was her friend Elizabeth Chute, sister of the Marchioness of Northampton, whose husband Charles Compton was the cousin of Spencer Percival, the only British Prime Minister to have been assassinated, and an active supporter of the abolitionist movement.   The Marchioness himself lived at Castle Ashby in the county, making this a likely contender for the role of Mansfield Park.  Mansfield Park’s Sir Thomas Bertram had a slavery plantation in Antigua, and it is believed that Austen used the story as a roundabout way of paying tribute to Perceval’s anti-slavery campaign.  Could this be a sign that Castle Ashby was the inspiration for Mansfield Park?  It is true that Castle Ashby is even older than Cottesbrooke, but as is so often the case with these large properties, many alterations have been made since the original construction.

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Castle Ashby (35571730485). Photo by Airwolfhound, via Wikimedia Commons

Either way, both properties are open to visitors and make a worthwhile detour when in the area, although in the case of Castle Ashby it is only the gardens which can be visited.  Cottesbrooke Hall and Gardens lies roughly midway between Northampton and Market Harborough. The Hall, a Queen Anne house dating from 1702, can be visited on a 45-minute tour in the afternoons and the house and gardens are open to visitors from early May to late September.  The landscaped park includes lakes which are visited by Canada Geese, and there are both ‘wild’ and more formal gardens to wander around.  Castle Ashby, a short distance to the east of Northampton, is the ancestral home of the 7th Marquess of Northampton, and there are 35 acres of gardens set within a 10,000-acre estate, including an arboretum, an orangery and the Italian Gardens.  The gardens are open year-round, except for days when there are extreme weather conditions.

Map of Northamptonshire.


Monday, 27 August 2018

THE REAL HOME OF MIDSOMER MURDERS: THAMES AND CHILTERNS

The area to the east of Oxford, especially the River Thames and the Chilterns, is characterised by quaint towns and villages with genteel red brick buildings, village greens, pretty pubs, cricket and horseriding. In short, not the sort of place one would expect to be a hotbed of murder and mayhem. However, in the TV world this is the county of Midsomer, home of the Midsomer Murders series, and there have been enough murders over the years for the series to clock up a staggering 20 seasons since its launch in 1997. The poor soul charged with solving all these murders is Detective Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby, formerly played by John Nettles, who has more recently been replaced by Neil Dudgeon.

The fictional village at the heart of all this bloodshed is Causton. As is often the case, more than one real life location has been used for the filming of the Causton scenes. The three main locations are Wallingford, Thame and Henley-on-Thames, all of them market towns in South Oxfordshire.

In the Thameside town of Wallingford, the market square features in the series and the Corn Exchange plays the role of Causton Theatre. Inspector Barnaby is often seen driving across the bridge which spans the River Thames. The Midsomer Worthy Choir of the series has singers from the local choir in Wallingford. Visitors to the town who are fans of the series should head to the museum, which has displays about the filming in the town, along with scripts and some of the props.

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Wallingford Town Hall. Photo by Tom Bastin, via Wikimedia Commons
The town of Thame (named after the River Thame rather than the more famous Thames) has provided a number of locations for the series, for example the former tourist office, which is depicted as Causton’s library, the Town Hall as Causton Town Hall in Shot At Dawn (season 11) and others, the Market House, Rumsey’s Chocolaterie as Madrigal's Camera Shop in Picture of Innocence (season 10) and three of its inns, The Swan, The Black Horse and The Spread Eagle. Thame Museum was used in Secrets and Spies (season 12).  Last year the town started offering walking tours of the locations used in the series.

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Upper High Street, Thame, with the Swan Hotel - geograph-4126457-by-Stefan-Czapski, via Wikimedia Commons

In Henley-on-Thames, the Town Hall serves as Causton’s court house in Last Year’s Model (season 9) and The Argyll pub features in the same episode. The butcher’s shop Gabriel Machin is seen in The Magician’s Nephew (season 11), playing Anton Thorneycrofts butcher’s. Henley is best known for its annual Royal Regatta, and this fact is put to good use in Dead in the Water (season 8), which features the Midsomer Regatta. One of the town’s restaurants, CAU (formerly La Bodega at the time of filming), is seen in Down Among the Dead Men (season 9), with Inspector Barnaby buying drinks in the garden of the establishment, renamed Cafe Vinters. No Oxfordshire market town would be complete without a ramshackle antiques shop, and in Henley it is Tudor House Antiques which was chosen as a location in A Sacred Trust (season 14).

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Hart Street, Henley-on-Thames - geograph.org.uk - 526487. Photo by Colin Smith, via Wikimedia Commons

This part of the country is full of pretty villages which were used in the series, too many to mention in full. Moulsford, near Wallingford, features in Dead in the Water. Warborough, set back a bit from the river, is the home of the The Six Bells, where Barnaby and his sidekick Sergeant Troy are sometimes seen having a pint while discussing the latest case. The exterior of the pub has been renamed several times for different episodes, as The Quill Inn, The Black Swan and The Luck in the World. Further afield, just outside Maindenhead, the village of Holyport is the focal point of Harvest of Souls (season 18), its picturesque pub The George on the Green on the village green being renamed The Black Dog for the filming.

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The Six Bells, Warborough - geograph.org.uk - 1392017. Photo by Jonathan Billinger, via Wikimedia Commons

For a comprehensive compendium of information on the series and the locations used, head over to the Visit Midsomer website.


Monday, 20 August 2018

MAN ALIVE!: WAKING NED


Cregneash, on the British Crown Dependency Isle of Man, is well known in tourist circles as the home of the National Folk Museum, an outdoor museum showcasing the Manx way of life in past times.  For the makers of the 1998 comedy film Waking Ned, also known as Waking Ned Devine, the compact and traditional nature of the village provided the perfect backdrop for this amusing tale about the fictional Irish village of Tullymore, where two friends from the village embark on a quest to find out the identity of a lottery winner believed to be living among them, but who turns out to have died with winning ticket in hand, prompting the friends to devise a plot to impersonate the winner.  The nature of the film has been compared to Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero, with similarly stunning scenery.

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Cregneash HarryKelly'sCottage. Photo by Andy Stephenson, via Wikimedia Commons

The scene in which a chicken dinner is organised with the aim of finding out who the winner is was filmed in the Old Mill, in Glen Road, Laxey. The main attraction for visitors to Laxey is the enormous water wheel called the Lady Isabella, and from here there is a walk down to the sea front, which takes in the mill buildings where the scene was filmed.

Laxey

The thatched one-storey cottage where the Ned of the title is discovered dead in bed was filmed not in Cregneash, but in a location near Niarbyl, Dalby, on the west coast between Peel and Port Erin. The scene in the phone kiosk done up in green to look Irish, where the two friends phone the lottery organisers to make their claim, was filmed on Marine Drive, a scenic road to the south-west of Douglas, leading to Douglas Head.  Visitors using the road are taken through a distinctive castellated ‘gateway’, which used to be a toll gate.  The beach at Niarbyl, below Cregganmooar, is where the two pensioners go for a skinny dip prior to the arrival of the man from the lottery, who swoops in by helicopter, with some attendant fine views of the coast.

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Cottages Niarbyl - geograph.org.uk - 777580. Photo by Chris Gunns, via Wikimedia Commons

James Nesbitt has the unenviable role of a pig farmer known as Pig Finn, whose lingering pig smells make it difficult to woo the ladies.  The real life location of Finn’s farm is at Raby Mooar, just north of Glen Maye, and Lizzie’s house is also there.  Glen Maye is typical of the beautiful leafy glens found in various parts of the island, with a waterfall and paths leading down to the beach.  Another glen seen in the film is Glen Mona, one of various locations featured in the nude motor-cycle ride.

The Isle of Man can be reached by ferry from the mainland, and also from Belfast, and it has an airport linking it to various destinations in the UK and to Dublin.

Map of the island


Monday, 30 July 2018

EDINBURGH ECCENTRICS: ALEXANDER McCALL SMITH'S 44 SCOTLAND STREET SERIES


The series of novels by Alexander McCall Smith known as the ’44 Scotland Street Series’, which started out as a series in The Scotsman, presents us with an interesting collection of characters who inhabit the address of the title, among them the child prodigy Bertie and his insufferable mother, Angus Lordie and his beer-loving dog with a gold tooth Cyril, always with one eye on tempting ankles to bite, and the anthropologist Domenica MacDonald.  Although the stories are fictional, the street and the favourite hangouts of the characters  are real places in the elegant New Town district of Edinburgh.



New Town is something of a misnomer, since this part of Edinburgh, considered to be a masterpiece of city planning, was actually built in the mid-to-late 18th century.  The part of Edinburgh now known as Old Town had become intolerably overcrowded, necessitating an overspill of the population into another area.  Although the stone used in the construction of the buildings has a rather dour, dark appearance, the architectural styles make up for it, with the neo-classical style prevailing and the inclusion of Grecian pillars on the outsides as well as other embellishments in the interiors.  Moray Place, which features in the series, is a typical example.

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Moray Place, Edinburgh New Town. Photo by Kim Traynor, via Wikimedia Commons

So where do the characters hang out?  The delicatessen Valvona and Crolla in Elm Row is a favourite source of upmarket edibles.  The deli has a cafe bar attached and is an institution in Edinburgh.  The goods on sale there include a variety of coffee called Scotland Street in homage to its role in the series.  Angus and Cyril like to visit The Cumberland Bar in Cumberland Street, which describes itself as a classic Victorian New Town bar.  It has been reported that the owner of the bar once ran up to McCall Smith in Waitrose to thank him for the extra business his bar’s new found fame had brought him.  The Cafe St Honore in Thistle Street was the scene of an intimate lunch in The World According to Bertie.  Another cafe called Glass & Thompson, in Dundas Street, which was visited by the Glasgow gangster Lard O’Connor, has sadly closed recently.



Cyril the dog gets about a bit, especially on the occasion when he is stolen and manages to escape from his captor.  The canal where he has his encounter with a group of eider ducks is presumably the Union Canal which links Glasgow and Edinburgh, while the river which reminds him of his early life in the Hebrides would be the nearby Water of Leith, which flows out into the sea at Leith.  Drummond Street Gardens is the scene of a brief canine love affair which results in six puppies, an event which elicited a huge response from readers worldwide.  

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Water of Leith01. Photo by Christian Bickel, via Wikimedia Commons





Fans of the books who want to visit these and other places written about may be interested to know that in 2016 an app was launched by Global called the Alexander McCall Smith App, which features walking trails and quizzes.

Map of the city


Saturday, 21 July 2018

POLDARK REVISITED: THE GRAND HOUSES


The latest Poldark series is now upon us, and for this second piece on the locations used in the filming, rather than the gorgeous Cornish coastline, which I have already extensively covered in a previous piece, I thought I would focus on the grand houses occupied by the more well-to-do characters.  There are principally three of these, none of which are in Cornwall.

One house which has been seen since the start of the first series is the home occupied by Elizabeth and her family, Trenwith.  The property which was used for filming the interior and exterior scenes of Trenwith is Chavenage House, an Elizabethan house located near Prince Charles’ Highgrove in Tetbury, Gloucestershire.  The interior of the chapel at Chavenage was used to represent Sawle Church.  The house has a fascinating history; one of its former guests was Oliver Cromwell and his general Ireton, who stayed there in 1648.  Visitors to the house will get a guided tour included in the ticket price, during which, as well as the history of the property, they will hear about the various ghosts lurking in its darkest recesses.

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Chavenage House 3 - geograph - 3507432. Photo by Philip Halling, via Wikimedia Commons.


Another imposing property inhabited by members of the Poldark upper crust is the house known as Killewarren, home to the Penvenen family, formerly the now deceased uncle of Caroline, Ray Penvenen, and more recently by Caroline and her husband Dr Dwight Enys.  The house portraying Killewarren is Great Chalfield Manor, a short distance west of Melksham in Wiltshire, owned by the National Trust.  The 15th century moated manor house was built for a clothier who was a member of the local landed gentry.  Visitors to the property must join a guided tour in order to explore the manor house.  The garden, in the Arts and Crafts style, includes features such as topiary and a rose garden.  The southern aspect, with its grassy expanse leading down to the tranquil pond, will be familiar to Poldark fans.  This is where Caroline and Dwight were seen enjoying a moment together in a recent episode.

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Great Chalfield Manor - 11. Photo by Stuart Buchan, via Wikimedia Commons.

In the more recent series of Poldark we have unfortunately been increasingly exposed to the odious George Warleggan, whose Georgian town house is filmed at Dyrham Park, a National Trust property in South Gloucestershire, just to the south of the M4 motorway.  Convenient for Bath, this 17th century mansion with its garden and deer park will take up the best part of a day out.  The house itself is full of artistic treasures, while the grounds offer extensive walking and the Orangery offers an insight into an 18th century greenhouse.  The deer park is home to some 200 fallow deer.   The estate has been used before for filming, including for the film version of Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Remains Of The Day.

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Dyrham Park lower park. Photo by Rwendland, via Wikimedia Commons.

Thursday, 5 July 2018

OTTER PARADISE: RING OF BRIGHT WATER/ISLAND OF SEIL


Ring of Bright Water, based on a true story which was the subject of a book by Gavin Maxwell, was made in 1969, but the story it is based on has a timeless appeal, as do the locations used in the film.  The story begins in London, where an office worker called Graham Merill is drawn to an otter in a pet shop (Did they really sell otters in pet shops?).  He takes it home and names it Mij, but quickly realises that a flat in London is no place for an otter, so he buys a ramshackle old house in the wilds of West Scotland and sets up home there with his new friend.



As Merill makes his way to his new home by train we get a glimpse of the Glenfinnan Viaduct, made famous in the Harry Potter films and one of the key points along the Jacobite Steam Train route.  On arrival, the village nearest to the house is a typical little Scottish fishing hamlet, with rows of simple one-storey houses.  In real life the village is Ellenabeich on the Island of Seil, not entirely an island, being connected to the ‘mainland’ by the Atlantic Bridge, or the “Bridge Over the Atlantic”.  One of the most prominent businesses in the village is The Oyster Bar; this was the M. A. Cameron General Stores in the film.  

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The Oyster Brewery, Ellenabeich. - geograph.org.uk - 457322 Photo by Steve Partridge, via Wikimedia Commons

Oban, which lies 10 miles to the north, also plays a role in the film, when Mij’s owner goes to buy fish for the otter.  The Railway Pier in Oban is the location of the fishing port where the fish sale takes place.  Another location featured in the film is the Firth of Lorne, where the scene depicting the hunt for the Basking Shark was filmed.  The Firth occupies an area of sea off the south-east edge of the island of Mull.



And what of the real story of Gavin Maxwell and his otters?   The writer named the place where he brought them up Camusfearna in the book, in order to hide the true location, which was in fact Sandaig near Glenelg on the mainland opposite Skye.

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Beach at Sandaig - geograph.org.uk - 916465. Photo by Peter Jones, via Wikimedia Commons

The Island of Seil is the northernmost of the Slate Islands.  Finding your way here from the A816 from Oban can be confusing – you need to follow the sign pointing to Easdale.  Easdale is another island just offshore, but this whole area is often referred to as Easdale.  As well as sampling the delights of The Oyster Bar, visitors can take a boat trip with Seafari Adventures, who have a base in the village.  There is also a large gift shop called Highland Arts next to the car and coach park.



Tuesday, 26 June 2018

SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE: THE SOMERSET YEARS


The poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in 1772 in Ottery St Mary in Devon, and he died in Highgate, Middlesex.  However, it was during the short time he spent in Somerset, in 1797-1798, when he lived at what is now known as Coleridge Cottage in Nether Stowey, that he produced some of his most famous work.  



File:Coleridge Cottage - Nether Stowey - Somerset, England - DSC01217.jpg
Coleridge Cottage - Nether Stowey - Somerset, England - DSC01217. Photo by Daderot, via Wikimedia Commons

Probably the most well known of his works is The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner.  The story goes that Coleridge was walking in the Quantock Hills with William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy, who were staying at nearby Alfoxton Park, when the conversation turned to a book Wordsworth was reading about a round-the-world sea voyage, and that this provided the inspiration for The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner, which features an albatross which helps the ship and its crew out of an Antarctic ice jam.  There is a statue in nearby Watchet commemorating the poem, depicting the mariner with the albatross looped around his neck as described in one of the verses.

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The Ancient Mariner, Watchet - geograph.org.uk - 1707049. Photo by Nigel Chadwick, via Wikimedia Commons

Another work conceived during this time was the poem Kubla Khan.  Coleridge started the poem in 1797 following a vision in a dream – possibly opium-induced, as Coleridge was in the habit of using opium to ease his health issues.  However, the poem was never completed because while he was composing it he had an unwelcome visitor from Porlock who interrupted his train of thought.  Since then the phrase “person from Porlock”, or just Porlock, has been used as a reference to an unwanted visitor who interrupts the writer’s creative flow. 



It was also during his time in Somerset that Coleridge composed a trio of poems known as the “conversation poems”: This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison, Frost at Midnight and The Nightingale.  In 1798 he teamed up with his new chum Wordsworth to produce a joint volume of poetry called Lyrical Ballads.  This is widely recognised as marking the birth of the English ‘romantic age’.  The Lime-Tree Bower My Prison includes an entrancing description of the charms of the Quantocks, referring to: “the many steepled tract magnificent”; the view towards the Bristol channel with “the slip of smooth clear blue betwixt two isles”; the elms whose “branches gleam a darker hue through the late twilight”; and the birds – “the bat wheels silent by, and not a swallow twitters”.  In fact, Coleridge wrote this passage from the point of view of one of his friends, who had gone off to enjoy the hills while Coleridge was forced to stay behind at Nether Stowey after an accident involving boiling milk.

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Newton, Bicknoller, and Quantock Hills - geograph.org.uk - 93580. Photo by Martin Southwood, via Wikimedia Commons

The village of Nether Stowey lies midway between Watchet and Bridgwater, just below the eastern flank of the Quantocks.  Coleridge Cottage, in Lime St, is now run by the National Trust and open to visitors.  There is a pub opposite called The Ancient Mariner in a nod to the famous poem.  Another point of interest in the village is the ancient Nether Stowey Castle, of which only the foundations of the keep remain.  It is believed that the castle was destroyed during the 12th Century Civil War.



Thursday, 31 May 2018

SCOTLAND IN SUSPENSE: ARDGOWAN HOUSE/ORDEAL BY INNOCENCE


No public holiday period would be complete without an Agatha Christie adaptation on the telly, and this past Easter we were treated to an adaptation of Christie’s Ordeal By Innocence, a star-studded murder mystery based around the murder of the Argyll family’s matriarch Rachel, played by Anna Chancellor.  Rachel’s adopted son Jack is arrested for the murder, wrongly as it turns out, and as is usual in such murder mysteries, during the course of the 3-part series we discover that pretty much most of those close to Rachel had a reason to be tempted to do her in, and we do not finally find out who dunnit until the end of the final episode.



The main focus of the action is a grand Scottish family home belonging to the Shaw-Stewart family, which in real life is Ardgowan House near Inverkip in Inverclyde, in the historic county of Renfrewshire.  The house is part of the Ardgowan Castle, House and Gardens, forming the Ardgowan Estate, which styles itself on its website as Scotland’s leading film location.  The estate is also used for weddings and there is a distillery on site. 



From humble beginnings as a solitary watchtower, the estate has evolved over the years via the building of the house in 1797 to its present-day role as a ‘pleasure dome’ for its visitors.  However, things have not always been so calm.  The estate and surrounding area has had an eventful history, ranging from a siege of the castle by Robert the Bruce during the 2nd Battle of Inverkip in 1314 and the founding of the Stewart Dynasty the following year, to the Inverkip Witch Hunts in the 1630s, and the use of the house as a hospital during the two World Wars, making it a target for German bombs.  A more detailed history can be found on the estate’s website.



Ardgowan offers a range of tours and courses and there is accommodation on site.  In addition to which, since the showing of Ordeal by Innocence, the estate has begun hosting Murder Mystery evenings and weekends.


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Ardgowan House - geograph - 5672498. Photo by Thomas Nugent, via Wikimedia Commons.


Monday, 14 May 2018

WHEN IS GUERNSEY NOT GUERNSEY? THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL SOCIETY


A seemingly inoffensive little film about post-war Guernsey and a writer who takes an interest in what it was like during the occupation has become the unlikely focus of a spat between the island and a Devon aristocrat.  The trouble has arisen because the island of Guernsey is gleefully cashing in on the film, which has enraged the owner of Hartland Abbey in North Devon, where much of the filming took place.  Some scenes were also shot in nearby Clovelly, a picturesque village famous for its steep main street leading down to a pretty harbour.  The corner of North Devon featured in the film is missing out on its share of the publicity, hence the outrage.



So let’s take a look at the actual locations used in the film.  Hartland Abbey is a former monastery dating from the 12th century, and it sits in beautiful grounds including glorious gardens.  The present-day building bears no resemblance to the original monastery, the remains of which can be seen in the basement.  As well as the Abbey itself, there are wonderful grounds to explore.  This time of year is particularly good being bluebell time, as the woodland walk going down towards the sea is redolent with bluebells.  Earlier in the year the Abbey holds a ‘Daffodil Day’ to celebrate the appearance of the yellow lovelies.

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Hartland Abbey - panoramio - PLMarriott. Photo by PJMarriott, via Wikimedia Commons



Clovelly is a privately owned village, which unfortunately means having to pay an entrance fee to go in.  However, the fee does include parking, and it would be a shame to miss out on this delightful place when visiting the area.  On the way down you pass the Donkey Stables, donkeys being a longstanding feature of the village, having been used in the past to transport fish from the harbour.  The writer Charles Kingsley, author of The Water Babies, used to live in the village, and there is a museum dedicated to him.  For refreshment there are a couple of pubs and some tea rooms, or at the top next to the entrance area there is a cafe with wonderful views along the North Devon coast.

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Clovelly harbour (0942). Photo by Nilfanion, via Wikimedia Commons

Other North Devon locations which feature in the film include the nearby town of Bideford and Saunton Sands, which was used for a scene in which a Dakota aircraft comes in to land.


Map of Clovelly.