Henderson, Jennifer Morag. Josephine Tey, a life. Sandstone Press.
322-6
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Wealth and Poverty | Christopher St John | After Craig's death, Sackville-West provided financial assistance to the very poor CSJ
and Tony Atwood (who was then over eighty). The money was enough to cover their living expenses until negotiations with the National Trust |
Wealth and Poverty | Edna Lyall | One of her latest charitable donations was for the purchase of Brandelhow near Crosthwaite (a wood which was otherwise to be cleared for housing development) for what became the National Trust
. Brandelhow, acquired in... |
Wealth and Poverty | Josephine Tey | JT
left an astonishing estate of close to £25,000. She willed the bulk of this to the National Trust
, with particular bequests to her sister Moire and to the Henderson, Jennifer Morag. Josephine Tey, a life. Sandstone Press. 322-6 |
Travel | Agatha Christie | A year or so before war broke out, AC
and her husband bought a country house in Devon as a holiday escape from their other homes in Oxfordshire and London. This was Greenway at... |
Travel | John Dryden | The family estate of the Drydens (held by the poet's grandfather but not inherited by his father) was at Canons Ashby in Northamptonshire (now owned by the National Trust
and open to the public). The... |
Textual Production | Beatrix Potter | Leslie Linder
bequeathed his extensive collection of BP
's papers, paintings, and first editions to the National Trust
. The trust holds its Potter manuscripts at Near Sawrey in the Lake District; others are... |
Textual Production | E. Arnot Robertson | This too she dedicated to, and in reproof of, her husband
, calling him her sailing partner and recalling some words he had used about her, which in the novel she puts in the mouth... |
Textual Production | Agatha Christie | The Bookseller magazine announced in June 2009 the expected appearance (which duly followed the same year) of AC
's Secret Notebooks: Fifty Years of Mysteries in the Making, based by the self-confessed Christie arch-fan... |
Textual Production | Constance Smedley | Maxwell Armfield
's frontispiece to Commoners' Rights, 1912, shows Chippingdun, the book's fictional version of Minchinhampton. His later illustrations also show the town or its beautiful surroundings. The work is dedicated to... |
Textual Production | Carol Ann Duffy | As public poet rather than laureate, she has contributed, for instance, to publicizing the National Trust
's competition for countryside poems. Her poem Moniack Mhor (inspired by time spent at the Scottish Writers' Centre
,... |
Textual Features | Dorothy Wellesley | Poems are included here from several groups. Verses for the Middle-aged (collected later for separate publication as Rhymes for Middle Years) is a collection of absurdities: England (about the image of the country as... |
Residence | Henry James | After his humiliating experience on stage at the opening of his play Guy Domville on 5 January 1895, he withdrew from London to Rye in Sussex, where he rented and eventually bought Lamb House... |
Residence | Rudyard Kipling | In England in 1902 RK
bought a seventeenth-century house called Bateman's at Burwash in Sussex, which is now maintained by the National Trust
and is the place most closely connected with his name. He... |
Residence | Lady Mary Wortley Montagu | |
Residence | William Morris | Morris sold the house in 1865 and moved closer to his work in London. Red House was privately owned until it was acquired by the National Trust
in January 2003 and later opened to the... |