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It was love at first sight. We drove up the long track, pulled into
the yard, and wow! What a view. I did the drawings myself, the
maximum we were told (in those days) about what one could get away
with in terms of planning permission. A local architect did the
formal drawings and submitted them for planning permission. I did
not intend to do the work myself, it simply happened by
circumstance. I put the groundwork out to tender to six
contractors. Only one bothered to reply and the quotation was
astronomic. The steelwork looked very complicated, but I went to
the structural engineer's office in Gloucester to chat about it. I
asked: 'It looks complicated, but could I do this myself?' Peter
Rowntree was very reassuring. 'It looks complicated because you are
looking at it in its entirety. Let me show you this corner here.'
And he then explained how the steels fitted together and how one
wired them up. After a quarter of an hour, he summarised by saying
'Yes, you could do it.' And I did! Working only on Saturdays, and
even then, not every Saturday, it took me seven years to complete
it to a point where we could move into the extension. I was
extremely sad to leave Hydefield and putting this book together has
been cathartic. I was tremendously proud of what I managed to build
and have wanted to produce this photo book to bring back the
memories of every little achievement.
This beautifully illustrated book provides information on the air
arms of the nations which took part in aerial warfare during the
First World War featuring the Aces and their mounts. The war was a
global conflict with 57 nations involved, but with aviation being
in its infancy only eight nations had a major air arm to their
fighting Services. The Allies: Britain, America, Italy, Belgium,
France, and Russia and then the Central Powers comprising Germany
and Austria-Hungary. This book is not intended to be comprehensive,
for to provide such a work would require many volumes totalling
thousands of pages. Instead this should be viewed as a relatively
detailed overview; a general introduction to the topic of military
aviation in the First World War. The aim has been to produce a
well-illustrated book to maintain the interest of the reader with
some short biographies of the leading Aces and basic information on
the aircraft types used, and their development during the First
World War. Furthermore, this book focuses on the air arms initially
developed by the respective armies, and therefore the air arms of
the navies, although fleetingly touched upon, are not dealt with in
much detail. To provide reasonable coverage for the Royal Naval Air
Service alone would require a separate and substantial additional
volume. In a similar manner, although Zeppelins, other airships and
balloons are mentioned and illustrated, little detail is given. The
book contains details of the top Aces for each nation and in
extensive illustration sections provides an extensive summary of
the aircraft flown. While much of the focus is on the Aces, the
book provides information on the aircraft flown and also has a
separate illustrated section on Manfred von Richthofen and his
'flying circus'.
Mr Rens' murderer is carted off to Gloucester but Francis is still
beset by problems. A fellow magistrate, Richard Ford, even manages
to profit from them. Francis and Richard's long-term but mutually
antagonistic friendship suffers a blow when in 1834, at a meeting
of the Stow Savings Bank, Mr Baillie makes a personal attack on
Francis, and Charles Pole. Canon Ford has something to do with it
and the 'Baillie' affair is set to blow up out of all proportion.
Life for Francis Witts is more settled. Victoria has ascended the
throne and Francis is now Chairman of the Board of Governors of
Stow-on-the-Wold Union Workhouse, a position he takes seriously and
maintains until his death. The diaries throw much light onto the
setting up of the Unions and the harsh routine there. He does not
disapprove of charity being shown to the inmates but is most
unhappy at the suggestion that they be allowed to enjoy the
Coronation celebrations.
First published in 1992, 16-19: Changes in Education and Training
explores the context and background to the demand for reform in
16-19 education and sets out in broad and structured terms an
agenda for change. It also considers specific initiatives and
developments which in different ways can be seen as vehicles for
achieving change and assesses the possibility of significant
progress in relation to the agenda for action in the face of
competing financial claims and a shifting political agenda. This
book is an essential read for scholars and researchers of school
education, higher education and education in general.
Volume Eight begins with a family holiday, probably the only time
in which the whole family, including grandchildren, spent a long
time together (May-June 1846). The destination was the Isle of
Wight where they had an enjoyable sojourn of five weeks, although
Margaret's poor health precluded her doing much walking. Much of
the volume covers property matters and the Hunt Trust. The summer
of 1847 did not include a holiday, but as a substitute, Francis and
Margaret spent nine days with the Hunt family in Stoke Doyle,
Northamptonshire, and of course much Trust business was discussed.
The following year saw their holiday, with a four-week break in
North Wales. From 1848 onwards Margaret's health went into a severe
decline. Missing diaries result in us knowing little of what
happened between November 1848 and December 1849, but from that
point onwards Margaret became bed-bound and by the end of this
volume she was lying at death's door. Volume Eight is interesting
for depth of detail. The Irish Potato Famine is covered, although
not in as much detail as one may have imagined.There is also the
say news of the death of Frederick Howell, in South Africa, killed
in a conflict with Hottentots. Frederick was the eldest son of
Thomas Howell, Francis Witt's closest friend.
As before, events alter the manner in which entries are recorded
and here we see a change in style and emphasis as problems with his
son, Edward, and the murder of Mr Rens figure prominently in
Francis' life. Indeed, it seems that the gap in the diaries from
June 1830 to January 1832 may be due to the depression that Francis
suffers as he fears that his son will not be able to fulfil the
ambitions of a loving father.
Francis Witts gained a curacy in Wiltshire in 1806 but did not get
on with his Rector and was about to be ousted when an opportunity
at Upper Slaughter arose after his Uncle Fernando's death. By 1809
Francis is married to Margaret Backhouse and settled there. Frances
discontinued his writing from 1808 until 1820 but, fortunately,
details come from his mother, Agnes. The volume ends sadly with the
death of his brother, George, in 1823 and Agnes's own death in
1825.
The Complete Diary of a Cotswold Lady is an extraordinary sequence
of daily entries, covering the years 1788 to 1824. During these
thirty-seven years Agnes Witts - a remarkable woman with great zest
for life - recorded the weather, letters received and letters sent,
and most importantly of all, her social diary. Her spirits made her
rise above the family's financial disaster caused by her husband's
bankruptcy and she and Edward always moved in the best circles,
notwithstanding their straitened circumstances.
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The Patriarch (Hardcover)
Francis Edward Witts; Edited by Alan Sutton
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R1,539
R1,241
Discovery Miles 12 410
Save R298 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Volume Nine begins with the death of the diarist's wife, Margaret,
after a marriage of almost 42 years. Margaret's health had always
been delicate and she finally declined and died of dropsy-what
today might be referred to as an edema due to congestive heart
failure. Margaret had never been a lively or outgoing person, but
it had been a marriage of money and the Backhouse resources
restored the Witts family's fortune and provided the foundation to
the substantial estate that Francis Witts left to his son Edward
when he, the diarist, also died four years later. Francis Witts was
lonely and reflective in his final years. His own health was not
good and he predicted, correctly that it was the heart. On 4 May
1854 he put his thoughts to his diary: 'But, in truth, the
continued, if not increased, difficulty of breathing, makes me
satisfied that there is some serious mischief near or about the
heart: it may be organic; and the end may come at no distant
period: may I be then found not ill-prepared; resigned, patient,
and penitent as the clouds gather around me!' In between the
periods of indifferent health he roused himself to visit old
friends and relations and he made several visits to London,
especially at the time of the Great Exhibition in 1851. Francis
Witts longed for visits from Edward, Sophy and his grandsons, and
the sadness he felt at not getting enough of their time is
painfully clear in these last years. At last he found a curate to
aid him in his clerical duties, but it was all too late. In the
presence of his curate at lunch on 18 August 1854 the ultimate
mischief occurred. The previous day he had written the final words
in his diary: 'Received from C. J. Geldard a present of two brace
of Moor game.' He did not live to enjoy them, and his diaries
extending 56 years came to close.
No musical partnership has enjoyed greater success during its time
span, or bequeathed a more powerful and enduring legacy, than that
of Gilbert and Sullivan in the later nineteenth century. Even
before their first successful collaboration in 1875, both William
Schwenk Gilbert (1836-1911) and Arthur Seymour Sullivan (1842-1900)
had already forged considerable reputations for themselves.
Thereafter, between 1877 and 1896, Gilbert wrote the librettos, and
Sullivan the music, for no fewer than a dozen Savoy operas, among
them the still regularly performed 'H.M.S. Pinafore' (1878), 'The
Pirates of Penzance' (1879), 'Iolanthe' (1882), 'The Mikado'
(1885), 'The Yeomen of the Guard' (1888) and 'The Gondoliers'
(1889). Not only are the plots ingenious, the lyrics witty and the
music compelling, the operas also present modern audiences with
splendidly rich and satirical evocations of Victorian England and
its society: the prime subject matter of this book!
This comprehensive index volume (volume 10 in 'The Complete Diary
of a Cotswold Parson' series), is presented in two hardback parts.
Part 1 extends to 682 pages and contains a detailed places index, a
subjects index, and the first part of the Biographical Index
comprising surnames A to G. Part 2 extends to 800 pages and
contains the second part of the Biographical Index comprising
surnames H to Z. The subjects index which takes up 192 pages of the
index has been presented as a digest, assembled in six parts in a
contextual style in chronological sequence. These six parts broadly
cover all elements of the diarist's life: 1 The Domestic
Environment, Home and Family 2 Art, Music, Pastimes and Theatre 3
Society, the Law, Local Governance, Education and Public Health 4
Agriculture, Commerce, Industry, Transport and Infrastructure 5 The
Establishment, Politics, Religion, the Armed Forces and
International Affairs 6 Abstract and Miscellaneous By far the
largest element of this index is the Biographical Index listing
approximately 3,400 people and their families. For each person
mentioned a short biography is given with a summary of their career
and family. This is followed by the dates that the person is
mentioned in the diary in chronological sequence. 'The Complete
Diary of a Cotswold Parson' contains all of the surviving journals
and notebooks written by Revd Francis Edward Witts (1783-1854) from
1795 to 1854 and amount to almost 2.5 million words. To anyone
tempted to dip into random entries of the diaries, it quickly
becomes apparent that much of what Francis Witts wrote was mundane;
however, this monotony is interspersed with gems of information and
occasional moments of ire, sarcasm, wit, and levity. Taken as a
corpus, and especially when added to the 900,000 words of the
diaries of his mother, these diaries create a fascinating picture
of society and mobility during the times of the Napoleonic Wars
through to the early years of the reign of Queen Victoria. Francis
Witts records minutiae that cannot be found elsewhere. His method
appears to have been to maintain a 'rough' book, and some portions
of one survive in one of the diaries. From this he transcribed in
fair copy later. However, it does seem that in his settled time
late in his life he went straight to final copy. There are obvious
occasions, picture exhibitions being a clear example, where he
undoubtedly used the exhibition catalogue as his source to write in
his own hand in his journal. Witts also met an extraordinarily
large number of prominent people inhabiting the second layer of
society. The top layer was extremely small, the royal family and
the nobility, while this second layer was essentially made up of
the people who managed and ran the country: the landed gentry, the
baronetage, the politicians, the clergy, military officers,
officials, magistrates and the upper professional classes. In 1801
the first census indicated the population of Great Britain to be
around 10.5 million. If we consider this second layer to have
consisted of about 100,000 souls, we can deduce that it effectively
amounted to 1 per cent of the population. It was in this 1 per cent
that Francis Witts felt at home. Witts mentions approximately 3,400
people in his diaries, and out of these, about 78 per cent, roughly
2,500 people, are of this second layer of society; it is but a
small fraction of the population of the nation, but importantly, it
represents about 2.5 per cent of this influential second layer that
has been referred to. Through this representative sample, we obtain
a tableau of Great Britain during the period in which it was
approaching its pinnacle of influence on the globe.
'The Two Duchesses' is family correspondence of and relating to
Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, Elizabeth, Duchess of Devonshire,
Earl of Bristol (Bishop of Derry), the Countess of Bristol, Lord
Byron, the Earl of Aberdeen, Sir Augustus Foster and others
1777-1859, focusing on the period from America's independence to
the fall of Napoleon. Single letters are also included from Gibbon;
Sheridan; Fox; the Prince Regent; General Moreau and Alexander,
Emperor of Russia. The Devonshires were one of the first families
of the land they were highly connected with George, Prince of Wales
being a regular visitor to Devonshire house along with James Fox,
Richard Brinsley Sheridan, and other politicians and celebrities of
the day. They were at the centre of society and their interest to
history is heightened by the celebrated m'nage a trois and other
affairs which led both duchesses--at separate times--to seek a
quiet period abroad to bear illegitimate children; Georgiana's
daughter Eliza Courtney was sired by Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey,
who later became prime minister; Elizabeth's children, Caroline St
Jules and Augustus Clifford were sired by William, the 5th Duke of
Devonshire, who she later married. Vere Foster, Elizabeth's
grandson, had unique access to the papers and over a period of
years produced accurate transcriptions of these historically
important letters--often working from abominable scrawl--to provide
us with fascinating window into the pinnacle of society of the
period.
In his forties Francis Witts enjoyed a leisurely lifestyle and by
1825 he was reporting on Parliamentary affairs in detail and
reviewing the many books he read, but this declined as his
magisterial duties grew. This volume sees many deaths and, as a
consequence, Francis becomes the head of his family. However his
expectations of inheritance are dashed as his line is excluded in
favour of his Uncle Ferdinand's children and grandchildren. Even
worse, a debt of GBP800 is called in!
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