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An out-take from
The Dread Wrecker Featherstone: Lady Rosalind Northcote's 1908
Devon: its Moorlands, Streams & Coasts, an illustrated account of the landscape and history of Devon.
It has extremely pleasant colour plates, from watercolours by
Frederick John Widgery, who specialised in coastal art of Devon and Cornwall. The scenes range over the whole of Devon, but here I've selected a local sample from East Devon round to Torbay.
The text is worth a skim, though I can't say it's wildly enlightening; it's definitely a "me too" book, largely built around scraps of learned but well-recycled material. For instance, the section on Topsham consists of little more than a retelling of Robert Lyde's 1693
A True and Exact Account of the Retaking a Ship Called the Friend's Adventure of Topsham from the French (see also
). Anyhow, enjoy the pictures:
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Exeter Guildhall |
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Exeter from Exwick |
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Exeter Cathedral |
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Topsham |
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Exmouth from Cockwood |
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Sidmouth |
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Branscombe |
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Beer Beach |
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Seaton Headland |
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Teignmouth and Shaldon |
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Torquay from the Bay |
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Berry Head |
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Brixham Trawlers |
Devon: its Moorlands, Streams & Coasts (Lady Rosalind Northcote, with illustrations in colour after Frederick J Widgery: London, Chatto & Windus; James G Commin, 1908, Internet Archive
devonitsmoorland00nort).
Lady Northcote (1873-1950) published only one other work, the 1903
The Book of Herbs (Internet Archive
cu31924073899373) although
Devon had a 1919 reprint. She was a member of one of the aristocratic families of the Exeter area, as described in her obituary:
Northcote (Lady Rosalind Lucy Stafford Northcote), eldest daughter of the second Earl of Iddesleigh, died on 31st December, 1950, at her home at Upton Pyne. Greatly sympathetic towards the cause of kindness to animals, Lady Rosalind was a former vice-president of the Exeter and West Devon Branch of the R.S.P.C.A., chairman of Exeter Auxiliary branch and a group representative on the National Council of the Society. A film made on her estate was shown to the annual meeting of the Society in 1936. Part of the Society's propaganda, it was designed to help teach children a proper attitude towards animals. Her book on Devonshire was her best known literary work.
- page 12, Report and Transactions - The Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art, Volumes 82-83, 1950
- Ray