• Home
  • AV/E-Texts
  • History
  • Icons/Fansites
  • Links
  • Novels
  • Original Sources and 19th C. Texts
  • Podcasts
  • Social Customs During The Regency Era
  • Teacher/Student
  • Writer and Literature Resources

Jane Austen's World

This Jane Austen blog brings Jane Austen, her novels, and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details related to this topic.

Feeds:
Posts
Comments
« The Making of Lust in Pride and Prejudice, a Review of Sorts: Mitzi Szereto and Vic Talk Lust and Dust Up
The Fashionable in Hyde Park: 19th C. Satiric Poem »

Richmond Park: Historic and Still Lovely

August 24, 2011 by Vic

Gentle Readers, It may please you to know that frequent contributer, Tony Grant (London Calling), lives near Richmond Park, a wilderness that has kept its pristine nature for centuries. Enjoy these beautiful photographs.

Geese flying towards Pen Ponds

Richmond Park is situated 12 miles south west of St Pauls Cathedral in the city of London. It just happens to be two miles from where I live on the edge of Wimbledon and abuts Wimbledon Common that stretches for a few miles on the other side of the Kingston Road.

Deer at Richmond Park

The Kingston Road is a very old road running between Kingston upon Thames and the City of London. It bisects Wimbledon Common and Richmond Park on it’s way. Jane Austen would have travelled often along it on her way from Hampshire by way of Kingston upon Thames to her brother Henry’s house in Henrietta Street or to one of the other houses Henry owned at different times.

Deer under the trees

The park has always been an untouched piece of wilderness. It has never been adapted or changed by agriculture. It has always been as it is to this day. It covers 2,500 acres. King Edward I who lived from 1272 to 1307 and who was also called Longshanks and The Hammer of the Scots, formed the park in the Manor of Sheen beside the Thames outside of London, as a hunting park stocked with red and fallow deer.

There are six hundred deer in the park to this day. Under Henry VII, who built a palace at Sheen beside the river, the park and the local town was renamed, Richmond. There is a mound or small hill in the park called, Henry VIII’s Mound, where the Tudor king reputedly would spy out likely deer to be hunted. In 1625 Charles I removed the whole of his court to Richmond Palace because of the Black Plague raging through London.

He used the park for hunting too. In 1637 Charles had a wall built around the park, which is still there. The local people were obviously chagrined. Charles passed strict laws about the King’s deer being poached and the wall was an extra deterrent.

Stag by Pen Ponds

Richmond Park has a strong emotional connection for Marilyn and me. Not only does one of the campuses of Kingston University, where me met as undergraduates, back onto the park and on numerous occasions we scaled the brick wall between Kingston Hill Place, my halls of residence , to get into the park at night but it has great significance to the birth of all our children. Now I know what you are thinking, but you would be wrong. By the way, Kingston Hill Place used to be the home of Lilly Langtry or Jersey Lill, as she was known, the mistress of Queen Victoria’s eldest son Edward VII.

Pen Ponds, Richmond Park

Getting back to the great significance to the birth of our four children. Well, it first happened with Sam, our eldest. The day he was due to be born, 1st July 1986, Marilyn showed no signs of going into labour. We sat around and sat around waiting for something to happen and obviously it wasn’t going to.

Pen Ponds

We decided to drive to Richmond Park and go for a walk beside Penn Ponds, two beautiful small lakes right in the middle of the park with reed beds and groves of massive ancient oak trees nearby. The ponds have a large variety of water birds, swans, mallards, Canada Geese, coots and many other varieties of ducks inhabiting them. They nest in the reed beds along the edge of the ponds. Richmond Park has been classified as SSSI status. That means it is a site of special scientific interest. Sam was born a week later on the 8th July.

Pen Ponds in the Rain

When Marilyn [Tony's wife] was pregnant with Alice we followed the same routine, a day beside Penn Ponds and then after that, we did the same with Emily and Abigail in later years.

Pen Ponds

All of our children were born late. You might think, weren’t you taking a chance? What if Marilyn had gone into labour on the predicted date? Ah well you see, Kingston Hospital is right next to Richmond Park. All we needed to do was climb over the wall. No sorry, let me get that right; drive a short distance to the maternity department.

My daughters outside the Royal Ballet School

There are a number of beautiful houses inside Richmond Park. White Lodge,in the centre, is the home of The Royal Ballet School. All our great ballet dancers train there from an early age. In the film Billly Elliott, that is where he went to train as a dancer. White Lodge is an elegant 18th century pile that used to be a country house belonging to Edward VII.

Outside the Royal Ballet school

Pembroke Lodge, situated on a high hill overlooking the River Thames and Kingston upon Thames is situated on the edge of the park. It used to be the home of Lord John Russell, a prime minister during the reign of Queen Victoria. He was the grandfather of Bertrand Russell, the philosopher. Bertrand Russell spent much of his childhood at Pembroke Lodge.

Pembroke Lodge

Pembroke Lodge is now a café and restaurant. It is a great experience to sit on the terrace of Pembroke Lodge on a summers afternoon looking out over the Thames sipping Earl Grey or Lapsang Souchong, and eating a scone with clotted cream or homemade strawberry jam.

Pembroke Lodge entrance

Richmond Park is wonderful to take long walks. There are many massive ancient oak trees. Some must be four or five hundred years old. A few have been scarred by lightning strikes.

Pembroke Lodge view

You will see deer grazing in amongst the vast areas of bracken. An unexpected sound and sight are the flocks of green parakeets that have inhabited parts of Richmond Park.

Pembroke Lodge

The story goes, whether myth or reality , is that in the 1940’s Treasure Island was being filmed at Pinewood Studios. They had parakeets on the film set and some escaped and began breeding in Richmond Park. A similar story centres around the making of The African Queen with Humphrey Bogard. It too was being filmed partly at Pinewood. Again the story goes that parakeets escaped from that film set too. I don’t know how much truth there is any of these stories but there is, without doubt, a colony of green parakeets living and breeding in Richmond Park. I have had a few land and rest in the branches of the apple trees in my own garden.

The Royal Ballet School

There are a number of plantations that are fenced off from the rest of the park so deer cannot eat the shrubs and trees growing in them.

Walk in the park

The Isabella Plantation is the most wonderful example of them all. It is a woodland garden at it’s best. In the spring when the bluebell woods are carpeted in blue it lifts the spirits and is a joy to behold. Many of the bushes and shrubs situated in glades and beside the sparkling stream that runs through the plantation create an emotional and spiritual experience.

Foot bridge

The Isabella Plantation is one of those places on earth that sooths the spirit and fills your eyes with beauty. To sit on the grass and listen to the birds and look at the camellias, magnolias, azaleas and rhododendrons is wonderful. The plantation is run on organic principles and because of this it is home to a great variety of insects and mini beasts.

Wild corner

Here is a quote from the web site dedicated to the Isabella plantation.

“In spring, visitors can see camellias, magnolias, as well as daffodils and bluebells. From late April, the azaleas and rhododendrons are in flower. In summer, there are displays of Japanese irises and day lilies. By autumn, guelder rose, rowan and spindle trees are loaded with berries and leaves on the acer trees are turning red. Even in winter, the gardens have scent and colour. There are early camellias and rhododendron, as well as mahonia, winter-flowering heathers and stinking hellebore.”

The present plantation was developed by George Thomson , the park superintendent from 1951-1971.

Woodland paths

Some recent news for you Hollywood A list watchers. My local paper had a small news item. Brad Pitt has been spotted taking pictures of the deer in Richmond Park recently. He is over here filming at the moment. He and Angelina are living in a house, a grand house I am sure, by the Thames at Richmond.

Woodland stream and flowers

Outside the Richmond gate is a large elegant brick building called The Star and Garter Hospital. It is a special hospital for aged military servicemen and women from all wars. They also have the poppy factory next to it. We celebrate the dead of our wars on November 11th every year which was the First World War Armistice Day. The fields of Picardy, in Northern France, where much of the terrible deadly trench warfare took place, were covered in wild poppies in the Spring. Somebody thought the poppies represented the drops of blood from the dead who lay in those fields so the poppy was taken as the British symbol to remember the dead.

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below. – John McRae

Poppies in Connaught Cemetery. Image @The Great War

Just down the hill from the park, in Richmond town, there is a house called Hogarth House. It was in this house that Virginia Woolf lived with her husband Leonard for many years and began The Hogarth Press, named after the house. Virginia Woolf, in her diaries, often mentions going for walks with Leonard and friends in Richmond Park.

Hogarth House, Richmond

More on the topic:

  • The Great War: 1914-1918
  • Explore Richmond Park - Map of photos of Richmond Park

Share with others:

Like this:

Like Loading...

Posted in History, jane austen, Jane Austen's World, Regency World | Tagged British history, Historic London, London Calling, Pen Ponds, Richmond Park, Royal Parks, The Royal Ballet School, Tony Grant, Virginia Woolf | 22 Comments

22 Responses

  1. on August 24, 2011 at 01:45 Tara Fly

    Wow, simply breathtaking! It’s just amazing that a piece of history (as grand as 2,500 acres of park land) has been so well preserved! Just one more thing to add to my ever-growing list of English places to visit…

    And thanks for the laugh about scaling walls while in labor!! ;D


  2. on August 24, 2011 at 02:45 Kate Moore

    Thanks for the wonderful tour in words and pictures.


  3. on August 24, 2011 at 03:07 Dentelline

    Hi Vic,
    Quel endroit magnifique! J’adore toutes ces photos du parc! Tout est reposant! Nous sommes embarqués vers la rêverie et la poésie!
    Stunning!
    Bises,
    Dentelline


  4. on August 24, 2011 at 03:10 Diana Birchall (@Dianabirchall)

    This is one of the most beautiful photo essay/blog posts I have ever read. It brought back memories: I once visited White Lodge when researching Queen Mary, who gave birth to the Duke of Windsor there. I could hardly concentrate on the old photograph books they kindly brought out, because I was so charmed by getting to visit the ballet school at the same time!


  5. on August 24, 2011 at 09:59 lgilbert52

    I have not yet had the opportunity to visit Richmond Park, but I shall certainly do so! Your pictures are beautiful, and your writing is so eloquet. Thank you very much!


  6. on August 24, 2011 at 10:02 Patty

    Great photo essay, Tony. It reminded me of another nearby attraction – Kew Gardens and Newen’s Bakery. So, I looked on line and found the Foodnetwork recipe for Maids of Honor. I can’t believe the original had frozen puff paste – from the time of Anne Boleyn? Does Newen’s serve these curd pastries with puff paste? It seems so. Pate brise would be a better guess.


  7. on August 24, 2011 at 10:43 Jean | Delightful Repast

    That was a wonderful post, Tony and Vic! I’ve always wanted to visit Richmond Park and the surrounding towns. This makes me want to even more. Until then, I’ll be revisiting this post!


  8. on August 24, 2011 at 13:35 Gayle

    Thanks for the lovely tour.


  9. on August 24, 2011 at 14:13 Tony Grant

    Thank you for all your lovely comments.
    Any time any of you would like a walk in Richmond Park, give me a call. Tea in Pembroke Lodge, spying out red and roe deer and just walking in a wonderful place.

    All the best,
    Tony


  10. on August 24, 2011 at 15:03 Chris Squire

    Give your thanks to ‘ . . John Lewis, a Richmond brewer, who took court action to establish once and for all that the public enjoyed the right to enter the Park on foot, after the then Ranger, George II’s youngest daughter, Princess Amelia, had closed all the gates and admitted only those to whom she had issued a ticket. Charles I had preserved certain rights of way when he completed the enclosure of the Park in 1637.

    In the 18th century, steps were taken to limit those rights, but it was Amelia who tried in the 1750s to abolish them. A 1754 law suit failed to convince the court that pedestrians and carriages had rights of entry. In the following year, finding himself physically denied entry on foot at Sheen Gate, Lewis tried to force his way in.

    It was not until 1758 that Lewis’s case came to court, and he shrewdly pleaded his case on narrower grounds — i.e. not on the right of unlimited public access but more precisely on the rights of way that had been recognised since Charles I’s time. Lewis’s victory at the Surrey Assizes in 1758 resulted in ladder stiles being provided once more. These stiles consisted of steps on each side of the wall, with a small platform at the top; they were erected close to the gates, but had the advantage of being constantly available for use . . the 250th anniversary of the re-opening of the Park to the public on 16 May 1758 [was celebrated in 2008] . . ‘ (Friends of Richmond Park)

    It is not the case that ‘The park has always been an untouched piece of wilderness.’ It is in fact a highly managed landscape and always has been. It is true that it has never been under the plough since it was enclosed 400 years ago, a mere fraction of the 12,000 years that have elapsed since ice retreated and the first forests grew.

    During WW2 the Park housed an army convalescent camp; in 1948 the army left and it was used by Olympic competitors for the 1948 Austerity Games: the video at http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/olympics_1948/12100.shtml is a charming reminder of how we were then.


    • on August 24, 2011 at 22:04 Vic

      Chris, the “pristine wilderness” was my remark – an American from abroad – not Tony’s. The rest of this beautiful essay was his. Vic


  11. on August 24, 2011 at 21:25 marilyn

    such a lovely, educational essay. your anecdotes made it personal and charming.


  12. on August 25, 2011 at 00:26 Suzan

    That was tremendously enjoyable – beautiful, educational and fulfilling. Thanks so much for sharing.


  13. on August 25, 2011 at 03:13 teahouse1

    I love your photographs-have been to England twice-can’t wait to go back! Lovely writing! glad I found your blog! Blessings


  14. on August 25, 2011 at 04:39 Tony Grant

    Chris, thanks for all the extra history about public access.

    Are you a member of the, Friends of Richmond Park?

    Yes, you are right, it is a managed environment in the sense it has been managed to keep much of the natural environment that has never been under the plough. I realise that is a rather tortuous thought. White Lodge , Pembroke Lodge and the other cottages and buildings have obviously been constructed in the park . Pen Ponds have been created by damming and managing the watercourses, paths and roads have been built, walls put up and dare I say sign posts are everywhere and of course as I mention, The Isabella Plantation has been created, but it still can be described as” an untouched piece of wilderness,” in many ways. You just have to go there to understand what I mean.


  15. on August 25, 2011 at 10:44 mefoley

    Great piece and really great photos. All that *and* a Virginia Woolf tie-in — who could ask for more?


    • on August 25, 2011 at 10:59 Chris Squire

      I walk past Hogarth House – now smart offices – most days & see the plaque to VW; her stay was not long, 8 years I think and she didn’t like Richmond which even more then than now is regarded as ‘too far out’ by true Londoners: it was to far away from her fashionable and intellectual Bloomsbury friends.


  16. on August 25, 2011 at 14:08 Tony Grant

    Hi Chris, aren’t you lucky to pass Virgina Woolfs doorstep everyday. The likes of Lytton Strachey, the biographer, Roger Fry, the art critic, Maynard Keynes, one of the worlds greatest economists, Duncan Grant the great Bloomsbury artist and T.S.Eliot the greatest poet of the 20th century have all stepped across that threshold. You walk in the footsteps of greatness, Chris.
    Virgina Woolf lived in Richmond, as you say a quiet country retreat, compared to Bloomsbury because of her nerves. Hectic London was too much for her and made her ill, even though she was drawn inexorably to the literati and great minds that London provided. She herself was one of the greats too. She loved shopping in Richmond and often walked through the town to the station. She did go up to London a few times a week. She loved walks by the river and would go on her own to visit Marble Hill House. She and Leonard stood with some of the old soldiers in their Bath chairs on Richmond Hill to watch the fireworks to celebrate the end of the first world war. She often went walking in Richmond Park,

    Tuesday 19th January 1915
    “We walked in Richmond Park this afternoon, the trees all black and the sky heavy over London but their is enough colour to make it even lovelier today than even on bright days I think.The deer exactly matched the bracken.”

    The next time you catch a bus to Kingston to go shopping think of Virginia. She often did the same thing too. I think she actually liked Richmond but was drawn to the rarefied literary life of London of which she was the head.She loved the countryside anyway. She and Leonard owned Monks House at Rodmell in Sussex which they often went to.


  17. on August 25, 2011 at 19:16 Beth

    Beyond lovely! I have revisted this blog several times over the past couple of days just to look at the photographs. Thank you for sharing with us, Tony.


  18. on August 26, 2011 at 16:27 Birdsong

    Thank you so much for such a lovely tour. I am impressed by how very long this land has been in conservation.


  19. on November 30, 2011 at 10:41 Incident in Richmond Park « Jane Austen's World

    [...] Readers, A few months ago frequent contributor Tony Grant wrote a lovely post about Richmond Park in August. Recently, a man walking his dog lost control of his animal, who was not on his lead. [...]


  20. on September 6, 2012 at 08:30 Richmond Park during the Regency | Katherine Dotterer's Corner

    [...] forests, lakes, and abundant red & fallow deer. The topography in the park is fairly gentle. Jane Austen’s World has some nice photographs from Richmond [...]



Comments are closed.

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 3,086 other followers

  • Notice: Comments

    Due to SPAMMERS, I will no longer accept comments on posts that I published over 30 days ago. In some instances, I will remove links from comments as well.

    I regret having to take this action.

  • Blog Stats

    • 6,242,501 hits
  • Pin It!

    Follow Me on Pinterest
  • Downton Abbey Season 3 Articles

    untitled

    Click on banner image to see this season's schedule

    SEASON THREE ARTICLES

    ~ Review of Episode 6: Oh, how the mighty have fallen

    ~ Review of Episode 5: The Earl's Gone Off His Rocker and Book Giveaway

    ~ Beauty Lessons Learned from Downton Abbey

    ~ Review of Episode 4: Let the grieving begin '

    ~ Review of Episode 3: Not Enough Noses Out of Joint

    ~ Review of Episode 2: Being Tested Only Makes You Stronger

    ~ Say Yes to the Dress, Episode 2 Poll

    ~ Review of Episode One: The Mouse that Roared

    ~ 1920s Fashions

  • Downton Abbey Season 2 Articles

    Click on the banner to go to PBS Masterpiece Classic

    SEASON TWO ARTICLES

    ~ Watch Downton Abbey Season 2 Online

    ~ Viewers of Downton Abbey Season 2: How Did You Like the Christmas Ending?

    ~ Downton Abbey Season 2 Finale:Tonight you're mine completely

    ~ Highclere Castle Floor Plan: The Real Downton Abbey

    ~ The Flu Pandemic in Downton Abbey

    ~ Downton Abbey Season 2:Teagowns and Relaxation

    ~ Downton Abbey Season 2 Review:Coupling

    ~ Downton Abbey: Preview of Season 2

    ~ The Symbolism of the White Feathers

    ~ World War One Guide to Rats, Shell Shock, and Barbed Wire

    ~ Country houses in medical service

  • Downton Abbey Season One Posts on this blog

    Click on image to enter PBS's site.

    READ THIS BLOG'S ARTICLES ABOUT DOWNTON ABBEY:

    • ~ Watch Downton Abbey Online
    • ~ Downton Abbey: Preview of Season 2
    • ~ Entertaining visitors in an English country house, such as Downton Abbey
    • ~ Downstairs in Downton Abbey: The Servants
    • ~ Upstairs in Downton Abbey: The Three Crawley Sisters
    • ~ The Jane Austen Connection to Downton Abbey and Egypt
    • ~ Downton Abbey's Recycled Costumes
    • ~ Everything You Wanted to Know About the Entail in Downton Abbey, and More
    • ~ The Foxhunt: From Downton Abbey Back to Its Origins
    • ~ The Servants Quarters in 19th Century Country Houses Like Downton Abbey
    • ~ Would You Care for Weak Tea or Strong Tea? How the Dowager Countess of Grantham Served Tea to Her Guests
    • ~ The Duties of a Valet
  • The Obituary of Charlotte Collins by Andrew Capes

    Click on image to read the story.

  • Bookmark

    Add to DeliciousAdd to DiggAdd to FaceBookAdd to Google BookmarkAdd to MySpaceAdd to NewsvineAdd to RedditAdd to StumbleUponAdd to TechnoratiAdd to Twitter
  • Links to Jane Austen Blogs

    My links page was updated May 2013 and I have removed all the dead links. Topics include Regency fashion, historic foods, Jane Austen societies, British sites, related topics. Click on image.

  • Find Jane Austen on Google

  • Tweet
  • Jane Austen Today, My Other Blog

  • Randolph Macon Talk

    The Marriage Mart
  • This blog has no commercial purpose

    Any ads you see are placed here by Wordpress. I make no profit off my blog. I do receive books and DVDs for review.
  • Jane Austen’s Advice for Writers

    Click on image to read the article.
  • Doctors and Medical Care in the Regency Era

    Click on image.
  • Join Me on Twitter

  • Twitter Updates

    • @delightfulrepas I was appalled at the woman's decision to change her baby's diaper on a dirty floor. What's wrong with her car? #Starbucks 1 day ago
  • Join me on Facebook

    Vic Sanborn

    Create Your Badge
  • Hello, my name is Vic and I live in Richmond, VA. I work in program and professional development at Virginia Commonwealth University, and I have adored Jane Austen almost all of my life. I am a proud lifetime member of the Jane Austen Society of America. This blog is a personal blog written and edited by me. I do not accept any form of cash advertising, sponsorship, or paid topic insertions. However, I do accept and keep books, DVDs and CDs to review.

    Contributors to this blog include: Tony Grant and Shelley DeWees.

    If you would like to share a new site, or point out an error, please email me. (Yes, I am fallible. I'll own up to my mistakes and will make the corrections with a polite smile on my face.) Write me at

    Spam protecting image courtesy: Nexodyne.com

    Thank you for visiting my blog. Your comments and suggestions are most welcome.

  • Copyright Statement

    © Vic Sanborn and Jane Austen's World, 2010. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Vic Sanborn and Jane Austen's World with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.
  • Regency Fashion: Ladies Outerwear and Shawls

    Click on the image.
  • Colors of 19th Century Wedding Dresses

    Click on image

  • Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape
  • The Distinctions of Regency Dress: Undress, Half Dress, Full Dress and Their Meaning

    Click on the image to read the article.
  • Recent Posts

    • Streaming Jane Austen
    • Pride and Prejudice: Having a Ball at Chawton House
    • Nothing As it Seems – Jane Austen in Bath
    • The College of William and Mary, A Sir Christopher Wren Building in Williamsburg, Virginia?
    • The Bathing Dress: Fashion in the Georgian Era
  • Tags

    Bath Beau Brummell Cassandra Austen Charles Dickens Chawton House Cookery Downton Abbey Downton Abbey Season 3 Elizabeth Bennet embarking on a Course of Study Emma Emma 2009 Georgette Heyer Georgette Heyer Book Reviews Holidays jane austen Jane Austen's family Jane Austen's World jane austen blogs Jane Austen Book review Jane Austen Movies Kate Beckinsale Laurie Viera Rigler London Lori Smith Masterpiece Classic Mr. Darcy PBS Masterpiece Classic PBS Masterpiece Mystery! PBS Movie Adaptation PBS Movie Review Pride and Prejudice Prince Regent Regency Bath Regency Dandy regency dress Regency Fashion Regency food Regency London Regency Servants Regency Transportation Romola Garai SourceBooks Tony Grant Working class
  • Ad Disclaimer

    Any ads that appear on this site were placed there by WordPress. I do not make money off this blog. WordPress keeps the revenue. - Vic
  • Pages

    • AV/E-Texts
      • A Proposal To Cicely, by Georgette Heyer
    • History
    • Icons/Fansites
    • Links
    • Novels
    • Original Sources and 19th C. Texts
    • Podcasts
    • Social Customs During The Regency Era
      • English Culture, 1660-1830
    • Teacher/Student
    • Writer and Literature Resources
  • Petticoats in the Regency Era

    Click on image.
  • Jane Austen’s Writing Desk and Writing Table

    The little round writing table at Chawton.

    Click on image to read this fascinating article.

  • Top Posts

    • Social Customs During The Regency Era
    • Highclere Castle Floor Plan: The Real Downton Abbey
    • Streaming Jane Austen
    • Pride and Prejudice Economics: Or Why a Single Man with a Fortune of £4,000 Per Year is a Desirable Husband
    • Pride and Prejudice: Having a Ball at Chawton House
    • The Servant's Quarters in 19th Century Country Houses Like Downton Abbey
    • Review: Downton Abbey Season 3, Final Episode, or Bloody Hell! Why did Fellowes do it again?
    • Downton Abbey, Season 3: 1920s Fashions
    • Downstairs in Downton Abbey: The Servants
    • Everything You Wanted to Know About the Entail in Downton Abbey, and More
  • Geo Visitors Map
    Add to Technorati Favorites
    Cultural Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
    Blog Flux Local - Virginia
  • cool hit counter
  • The Animal Rescue Site
  • Archives

    • May 2013
    • April 2013
    • March 2013
    • February 2013
    • January 2013
    • December 2012
    • November 2012
    • October 2012
    • September 2012
    • August 2012
    • July 2012
    • June 2012
    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
    • November 2011
    • October 2011
    • September 2011
    • August 2011
    • July 2011
    • June 2011
    • May 2011
    • April 2011
    • March 2011
    • February 2011
    • January 2011
    • December 2010
    • November 2010
    • October 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
    • March 2009
    • February 2009
    • January 2009
    • December 2008
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • August 2008
    • July 2008
    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
    • September 2007
    • August 2007
    • July 2007
    • June 2007
    • May 2007
    • April 2007
    • March 2007
    • February 2007
    • January 2007
    • December 2006
    • November 2006
    • October 2006
    • September 2006
    • August 2006
  • Irresistible Attraction

    An online Regency novel in serialized form. Click here to read a new chapter of Irresistible Attraction each week, and follow the story of Amanda Sinclair and James Cavendish, the Earl of Downsley.
  • My Regency Tea Cup Review Ratings

    • Five Regency tea cups: The book is not perfect (few books are), but it was well worth its purchase and possesses many outstanding qualities that makes it stand head and shoulders above its counterparts.
    • Four Regency tea cups: This book offered many hours of pleasant reading, and I found I could not put it down.
    • Three Regency tea cups: Damned with faint praise. I put the book down often, but was intrigued enough to finish it. In this instance, the movie might be better.
    • Two Regency tea cups: This book required major changes that the author and editor should have fixed before publishing deadline.
    • One Regency tea cup: Oh dear. I do so feel for the trees that sacrificed their lives for this verbal garbage.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Theme: MistyLook by WPThemes.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 3,086 other followers

Powered by WordPress.com
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
%d bloggers like this: