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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
As a young man, Charles Wentworth Dilke (1843 1911), the
Cambridge-educated Radical politician who went on to campaign for
votes for women and labourers, legalisation of trade unions, and
universal schooling, spent two years touring the English-speaking
world. This two-volume illustrated account of his journey was
published in 1868, the year in which he first entered Parliament.
Volume 1 describes his travels across the United States, where he
arrived aboard The Saratoga, landing at Chesapeake Bay in Virginia
on 20 June 1866. Dilke explored the reconstructing American South,
the bustling eastern seaboard, the vast plains of the Midwest, the
magnificent Rocky Mountain range, and the diverse landscape and
peoples of California before venturing south into Mexico and
departing for Polynesia and the Pacific islands. He thoughtfully
discusses the legacy of British colonial culture in America, and
its continuing diffusion via America to other parts of the world.
As a young man, Charles Wentworth Dilke (1843 1911), the
Cambridge-educated Radical politician, spent two years touring the
English-speaking world. This two-volume illustrated account of his
travels was published in 1868, the year in which he first became a
member of Parliament. Volume 2 opens as he leaves America in late
1866 for Australia and South Asia in search of British influences.
This second leg of his journey confirmed for Dilke that England not
only existed elsewhere beyond Great Britain, but that it spoke to
the whole world through its cultural and societal offshoots across
the entire globe. His discoveries of traditional English customs
and lifestyles in the farther reaches of Australia, India and even
Russia are recounted with pleasure and surprise. The book sheds
light on British colonial culture at the height of the empire,
through the eyes of a youthful, left-wing observer.
The liberal Radical MP Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke (1843 1911)
campaigned for (among many other causes) votes for women and
labourers, legalisation of trade unions, and universal education.
His republican sentiments damaged his political reputation, and
earned him the hostility of Queen Victoria. However, despite his
views on the monarchy he was an imperialist, and his early work,
Greater Britain (1868; also available in this series), was widely
read. In the 1890s he became known as a parliamentary expert on
military, colonial and foreign affairs. This 1892 work, co-written
with Spenser Wilkinson (1853 1937), a journalist and military
historian, together with Dilke's earlier work, Problems of Greater
Britain, led to the founding of a parliamentary committee on
imperial defence. The book argues that, while hoping to avert war
by diplomacy, the Government has a duty to maintain a naval and
military force to protect the interests of its citizens.
C. Wentworth Dilke (1810 69), an influential figure at the Society
of Arts, was one of the key organisers of the Great Exhibition of
1851. He played a leading part in planning the event and the
catalogue, overseeing the installation of exhibits and managing the
PR. The exhibition generated an enormous number of publications,
official and unofficial, both in Britain and abroad, ranging from
vistors' guides to London and descriptions of individual exhibits
to discussions about the long-term future of the Crystal Palace,
together with essays, sermons and poems. Dilke acquired several
hundred such books and pamphlets, in various languages, and in 1855
privately published this catalogue of his collection, noting that
it omits 'mere trade pamphlets' and that his 'departments' of
relevant music and engravings are not comprehensive. Alphabetically
organised and thoroughly cross-referenced, Dilke's catalogue
remains an invaluable research resource for those studying the
Great Exhibition and its global impact.
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