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The Turner Letters - Letters from Home: from Milton Ernest, Bedfordshire to St Andrews, New Brunswick, 1830-1845 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R789
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The Turner Letters - Letters from Home: from Milton Ernest, Bedfordshire to St Andrews, New Brunswick, 1830-1845 (Hardcover)
Series: Publications Bedfordshire Hist Rec Soc
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The Turner Letters cover the years 1830-45 and give a lively view
of life in a rural village in times of upheaval. The Turner Letters
originated in Milton Ernest in Bedfordshire. They travelled to St
Andrews in New Brunswick, Canada, to Thomas Turner, brother of
John, the principal writer. They survived the journey by sailing
boat and later steam ship. In the 1980s they returned to England
and were bought by the Bedfordshire Record Office, so they are now
housed a few miles from where they were written. The Turner Letters
cover the years 1830-45 and give a lively view of life in a rural
village in times of upheaval. The main writer of the letters, John
Turner, was a Methodist baker, whose father ran a farm. John's
religion and his hatred of the Church of England colours his
writing. John Turner's sharp insights cover a number of the major
issues of the day such as the Reform Bill, the New Poor Law and
rural unrest as well as local issues such as the establishment of
fox hound kennels in the village. His description of the villagers
in 1834 is particularly valuable, bringing them to life and giving
a real sense of what life in Milton Ernest was actually like.
John's brother, Thomas, was a merchant in a small Canadian port
close to the United States border. Part of the correspondence
relates to Thomas's suppliers and gives an idea of the
precariousness and danger of the passage from England to Canada and
the difficulties of setting up a new business overseas. Above all
the Turner letters tell human stories. The tragedy of the drowning
of Susannah, Thomas's wife, in 1834 is revealed in graphic
newspaper descriptions. John and Thomas Turner's sister was abused
by her alcoholic husband. John's own life was frustrating,
initially coping with his housekeepers and later, when he gave up
his bakery and returned to his father's farm, coping with an aged
and obstinate man, who did not appreciate him.
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