Tuesday Talk Guest Post by Roy and Lesley Adkins
Many thanks to Helen for inviting us as guests on her blog to talk about our latest book, Eavesdropping on Jane Austen’s England (or Jane Austen’s England if you are reading this in the US).
First, we should introduce
ourselves:
We have had a varied career working together as field archaeologists before sliding sideways into history, but we have always written books about archaeology and history, and we now write non-fiction history books full-time.
For
several years, we have been researching and writing about naval history, with
three books published – Trafalgar (called
Nelson’s Trafalgar in the US), The War for All the Oceans and Jack Tar: Life in Nelson’s Navy (though
you may see a different subtitle on the paperback version!). These naval books are
all set within the lifetime of Jane Austen (1775–1817), who herself had two
brothers in the Royal Navy – Frank and Charles. When we started work on our
latest book, Eavesdropping on Jane
Austen’s England, about the real way of life on land, we were therefore building
on the research we had already accumulated.
It
would be easy to get carried away with descriptions of our latest book, but having
discovered Helen’s interest in horses, we thought we would offer a few words on
that topic. People are often surprised to learn that warships smelled and
sounded like farmyards, owing to the number of animals kept on board, such as
pigs, cows and bullocks. Because horses were not eaten, they were rarely encountered
on board, unless being transported for the army. On land, the situation was
very different – horses were everywhere. They are known to have been used in
Britain as a means of transport since the Bronze Age, but the manufacture of
iron tools and fittings from the subsequent Iron Age and then the Roman period
enabled horses to be be adopted widely for riding, pulling carts and chariots
and ploughing.
Epona |
From
at least the Norman conquest in England, horses were the preserve of the
wealthy as a means of transport, while the ox was more often used for pulling
ploughs and waggons, and this was certainly still the case in the 18th century.
Nowadays, communications are so fast that it still comes as a shock to realise
that in the time of Jane Austen, only two centuries ago, nothing moved faster
than a galloping horse – the same speed of transport as the Romans! Jane Austen
was always concerned about accuracy in her own novels, and she pointed out the
problems of transport in a story that her niece Anna had written: “They must be
two days going from Dawlish to Bath. They are nearly 100 miles apart.” A
journey from Dawlish in south Devon to Bath then involved an overnight stop at
an inn. Today, it is a drive lasting two or three hours by car.
The
well-off in Jane Austen’s era would own horses to ride or to pull their
carriages, while the not-so-well-off could hire horses from stables, which were
usually attached to inns. Poor servants (mostly male servants) might get a
chance to ride errands for their master, although they were not always reliable
riders, as William Holland found. He was vicar of Over Stowey in Somerset and
was annoyed to discover how his servant had treated his horse: “Mr Robert among
his other excellencies has been in the habit of wearing my spurs. I have once
or twice had a hint of his riding hard and now I have found out the method he
takes to get his horse on.” Across the other side of England, at Weston
Longville in Norfolk, the Reverend James Woodforde also had problems with his
servant: “Ben went yesterday afternoon with a Mr. Watson, steward to Sr. John
Woodhouse to Kimberley Hall, where having made too free with the Baronets
strong beer, fell off his horse coming home and lost her, so that he walked
about all night after her and did not find her till about noon.”
Transport
was dominated by the horse and rider, just as it is by the car today. Stagecoaches
ran on regular routes, like trains and buses today, but private carriages with
horses and a driver could also be hired – at a price! The roads were so bad
that the veteran tourist John Byng firmly believed that riding on horseback was
the only viable method of travelling: “Whoever speaks of touring in chaises or
phaetons, (as many ignorants will,) let him attempt to travel thro’ these grass
farms and rough roads; and then he will recant and say with me, – there is no
touring, but on horseback.” In the West Country the roads were so bad, and
sometimes so narrow, that carriages and carts were not used as much as
elsewhere. Instead, goods were carried in panniers on the backs of ponies or
mules, or even dragged on sledges. This has left its mark on the region, with
narrow packhorse bridges surviving in many places and town markets often being
called ‘Pannier Markets’.
Pack Horse Bridge, Bruton, Somerset |
The
main roads themselves have left their distinctive mark on the landscape, with
the various tollhouses and milestones that are dotted along many minor roads.
Such survivals show that these were the motorways of their era – privatised
toll roads that were relatively well maintained and provided the best routes
between major towns. Jane Austen herself is often portrayed as writing in a
peaceful country cottage, but the room where she wrote in her house at Chawton
in Hampshire directly faced the London to Winchester turnpike, a few yards from
where it joined the turnpike to the teeming naval base of Gosport and Portsmouth.
The house had been an inn for a few years, taking advantage of the passing
trade, and when Jane Austen lived there, all kinds of civilian and military
traffic went by on its way to and from the capital. Passengers riding on the
top of stagecoaches could look down into the front windows, and the thunder of
traffic shook the beds at night. Jane only had to look up from her writing to
see all life passing outside her window.
Chawton |
Jane Austen |
Horses
were an integral part of everyday life in England 200 years ago, but they are
only one of many aspects of the period that which we researched for our book.
We could go on to talk about how quill pens were made from feathers plucked
from live geese or how toothache might be treated by the local blacksmith, but
that would take up too much of Helen’s blog. You can find out more about us and
all our books, or sign up for our free email newsletter, on our website but if you
really want to know about the England in which Jane Austen wrote her classic
novels two centuries ago, you will just have to read the book!
Roy
and Lesley Adkins’s website is www.adkinshistory.com.
Their
latest book is Eavesdropping on Jane Austen’s England: How Our Ancestors Lived Two
Centuries Ago published May 1st 2014 in Paperback
hardcover, ISBN 978-1-4087-0396-0, and in all e-book formats).
available from
Amazon.co.uk (paperback)
Amazon.co.uk (hardback)
Amazon.co.uk (Kindle)
Amazon.com (paperback)
Amazon.com (hardcover)
Amazon.com (Kindle)
hardcover, ISBN 978-1-4087-0396-0, and in all e-book formats).
available from
Amazon.co.uk (paperback)
Amazon.co.uk (hardback)
Amazon.co.uk (Kindle)
Amazon.com (paperback)
Amazon.com (hardcover)
Amazon.com (Kindle)
In
the US, the same book is called Jane Austen’s England
See
the Huffington Post slideshow
called ‘13 Reasons You Wouldn’t Want to Live in Jane Austen’s England’
Helen says: Thank you Roy and Lesley - I have a copy and it is wonderful! Expect lots of gleaned information to appear in my Sea Witch Voyages!
Helen says: Thank you Roy and Lesley - I have a copy and it is wonderful! Expect lots of gleaned information to appear in my Sea Witch Voyages!
I'm a big fan of Team Adkins - Roy and Lesley. They present history in such a lively way. Thanks for the interview!
ReplyDeleteLinda - thanks for your comment for Roy & Lesley Adkins, Sorry about the delay in replying, Blogger decided to hide all the comments from me! :-(
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