Wednesday, 31 March 2010
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
Thursday, 18 March 2010
The Dent Du Midi Sketched in 1895... lost... then found
This charcoal sketch was found in the wash house of my childhood home, wedged between sheets of wood and glass. It had clearly been discarded and forgotten decades ago, and we have no idea how it did not suffer from damp or mould out there.
The wash house did not survive. When my dad pulled the ivy from the walls, the walls came down with it. But the picture did. Framed and cherished, it now hangs in my parents' new home.
My childhood home was a Georgian farmhouse that had put on airs and graces as posher residences sprung-up around it. Located in Abbey Road, Grimsby, it was quite the time capsule, with owner after owner barely maintaining it. This picture was our greatest find.
The location of the sketch is given as The Dent Du Midi, from St Maurice. The artists is Mabel Chard and she has dated the picture 1895.
St Maurice is a little town in Switzerland, squeezed into a narrow pass in the Rhone valley, south of Lake Geneva. Somewhere I'd like to go.
I wonder what the street looks like now? No goats I suspect, and the Swiss version of Health & Safety will have knocked the romance out of it.
As for Mabel Chard, I suspect she lived in my old home through Victoria's reign and this sketch was completed in St Maurice on her Grand Tour. I hope she rests in peace knowing it has a safe home after all those years in the wash house, and is now enjoying a flutter of fame on the Internet.
If you know anything else about this sketch, St Maurice or Ms Chard, please let me know with a comment or through my Twitter page. Thank you.
UPDATE 1: My sister Louise has just emailed added her recollections
"Dad remembers a shirt box behind the boiler to Dr Chard so think her and a this doctor lived there I think I found them when I did research into who had lived in our house at Grimsbyy library (who have records of ownership / occupation) and map showing the house as a stand alone farm house on a "turnpike" road into town."
UDPATE 2: Christine Farmer has located a Mabel Chard born in Louth in 1880, the daughter of a solicitor's clerk who went on to marry John Gilbert Jones. Louth is about 12 miles from Grimsby so the date and location all fit. This Mabel would be 15 when this sketch was completed. As talent can be well developed by that age, I would say this could be the same woman. Christine has kindly contacted Mabel's descendents, now living in South Africa, to see if they can shed more light and confirm if this Mabel is my Mabel. I will update the blog again should any new information come in.
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
Monday, 15 March 2010
On Adding Google Analytics to a Blogger Blog
I have recently discovered how to add Google Analytics to a Blogger blog.
After one month of scrutinising how many visitors I get, where they come from, who sent them, what they typed into Google and how long they spent, I have become the Uber Geek.
It’s pretty easy to do, although does involved that four letter word CODE.
Interesting statistics so far (I know that sounds like an oxymoron)
One Tweet about my ‘Is this St Catherine’s Chantry?’ blog created a spike of 84 visitors. Only one of these left a comment. That’s a lot of lurkers. On average those people spent five minutes on that particular blog, which means THEY READ THE WHOLE DAMN THING. This makes me extremely happy.
I have readers from 21 countries. Bonjour. Willkommen. Aloha.
Most of my vistors arrive via Twitter. Blogger, Stumbleupon and my commercial copywriting pages at Push Creativity.
However, I’m also getting a lot of visitors via other people’s blogs, so a big thank you to The Life and Times of a Househusband, Mrs Trefusis Takes a Taxi, Woman at Work and The Middenshire Chronicles – busy blogs that have kindly signposted their readers to Incense and Peppermints.
People have also reached my blog through Google searches, with the most weird search being ‘sleep sixy afgan girl’. Did they mean sexy Afghan girl? Who knows. They only stayed with me for 2 seconds anyway. Good riddance.
So how did I do it? I followed the instructions here at eblog templates. And yes it's all free, so go on, release your inner nerd.
Finally, please share this blog using the handy Share widget below, and make my Google Analytics dance…
Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Found: the Chantry, the Church and the Artist!
Yesterday I posted a blog that asked the good people of Twitter to help me find the real location of this etching, with an inscription "St Catherine's Chantry, in St Michael on Wyre" the only evidence to go on.
They came back with armfuls of information!
First to respond was Ricky Bee, saying there was both a River Wyre and Wyre Forest in Worcestershire - might these be a clue?
The Lancashire Tourist Board also kindly RT's my blog to ask if any of their followers could help.
Then Christine Farmer, a fine artist researching her family history at the moment, gave me this amazing link to an online version of the
HISTORICAL AND LITERARY REMAINS CONNECTED WITH THE PALATINE COUNTIES OF Lancaster and Chester. COUNCIL FOR THE YEAR 1891. By The Worshipful RICHARD COPLEY CHRISTIE, M.A., Chancellor of the Diocese of Manchester.
In which the following description can be read:
Thomas Butler, at the altar of the Blessed Katherine within the pishe churche of St. Michaell-upon-Wyre " lately dissolved, together with all the lands, tenements, and appurtenances now or late in the tenure of Robert Styham, and situate in Great Eccleston, being part of the said chantry ; and the said Henry Butler agrees to sell the said so acquired lands and tenements in Eccleston to the said John Wilkinson. 1 The chantry itself continued in the Butlers holding, and subsequently went to the France family, one of whom repaired it and erected a tablet in it bearing the following inscription : "This oratory, known before the Dissolution to have been a chantry dedicated to St. Catherine, and competently endowed with lands in the neighbouring town- ships, was repaired by John France, Esq., of RawclifFe Hall, A.D. 1797, being an appendage to that ancient mansion house." This chantry is at the eastern end of the north aisle, and is raised two steps above the rest of the floor.
Raised by two steps above the rest of the floor – exactly like my picture. My heart skipped a beat!
Then my good friend Sarah Ballans sent me a link to Google Books.
There I could search through a scan of A history of the Chantries within the county palatine of Lancashire, by Francis Robert Raines.
On page 217-218 in delightfully antiquated language it told me of
The Chauntrie in the paroch church of Saynt Myghell Upon Wyre
Where
Willyam Harryson pst Incumbent ther of the ffoundacon of John Butler to celebrate ther in the saide church for his sowle and all chrysten sowles and the Incumbent therof to teach gram skole…
And
At the alter of saynt Katheryne within the poche churche saynt Myghell upon Wyre and the same priest doth celebrate ther and kepe gramer skole accordinglie
So there was a grammar school!
Sarah also pointed me to three Flickr accounts which included current photographs of the church – but frustratingly none showing the chantry reconisable in my etching.
These are here:
nige820
rasmusthepod
animall68
Then Chris Hale posted this wonderful comment on the original blog, summarising his research brilliantly. I reproduce his text here in full
I have ascertained from a report dated 1871 that St-Michael's-in-Wyre was (and is) 'A late Perpendicular church of rather coarse architecture, comprising nave, with aisles and chancel, with south aisle only carried to the east end, a west tower, and south porch. The north aisle, after the first two bays to the west, is expanded, but without arcade, into a chapel, but only extends four bays in all, and is not carried along the chancel. The north chapel is dedicated to S. Catherine, and belongs to the Butlers.'
I have also discovered that one John Boteler (Butler), who was born at Rawcliffe on 16 Aug. 1489, and baptized at St. Michael's, 'had begun a chantry and service in St. Michael's Church.' This was probably on his death in 1534. It is likely that he would have left money in his will for a chantry priest to say masses for his soul.
There now. I have too much time on my hands!
So the chantry is definitely at St Michael on Wyre church, in Lancashire, England.
Finally Sarah came back with an amazing breakthrough on the artist that created the etching.
My C G Coperman is in fact Constance Gertrude Copeman.
Born in 1864, she studied at the Liverpool School of Art where she was awarded a silver medal and was a Queen's prize winner. Elected an associate of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1897.
Here’s another of her etchings unearthed by Sarah, with her distinct signature matching the one on my picture.
According to artnet, six of her works have come up for auction recently, but they won’t tell me the price unless I sign up to the site. Buggeration.
So, within 24 hours of my original post I know the exact location and history of the Chantry depicted in my junk-shop find, and I know the name of the artist, a little of her background, and that her work regularly comes up for auction.
I cannot thank you enough. A picture I love anyway has gained a whole new level of enjoyment.
And let this tale waggle its bare bum at anyone who thinks Twitter is just about broadcasting what you had for breakfast.
So now to my next mystery picture… watch this space!
As ever, do please leave a comment if you've enjoyed my ramble.
They came back with armfuls of information!
First to respond was Ricky Bee, saying there was both a River Wyre and Wyre Forest in Worcestershire - might these be a clue?
The Lancashire Tourist Board also kindly RT's my blog to ask if any of their followers could help.
Then Christine Farmer, a fine artist researching her family history at the moment, gave me this amazing link to an online version of the
HISTORICAL AND LITERARY REMAINS CONNECTED WITH THE PALATINE COUNTIES OF Lancaster and Chester. COUNCIL FOR THE YEAR 1891. By The Worshipful RICHARD COPLEY CHRISTIE, M.A., Chancellor of the Diocese of Manchester.
In which the following description can be read:
Thomas Butler, at the altar of the Blessed Katherine within the pishe churche of St. Michaell-upon-Wyre " lately dissolved, together with all the lands, tenements, and appurtenances now or late in the tenure of Robert Styham, and situate in Great Eccleston, being part of the said chantry ; and the said Henry Butler agrees to sell the said so acquired lands and tenements in Eccleston to the said John Wilkinson. 1 The chantry itself continued in the Butlers holding, and subsequently went to the France family, one of whom repaired it and erected a tablet in it bearing the following inscription : "This oratory, known before the Dissolution to have been a chantry dedicated to St. Catherine, and competently endowed with lands in the neighbouring town- ships, was repaired by John France, Esq., of RawclifFe Hall, A.D. 1797, being an appendage to that ancient mansion house." This chantry is at the eastern end of the north aisle, and is raised two steps above the rest of the floor.
Raised by two steps above the rest of the floor – exactly like my picture. My heart skipped a beat!
Then my good friend Sarah Ballans sent me a link to Google Books.
There I could search through a scan of A history of the Chantries within the county palatine of Lancashire, by Francis Robert Raines.
On page 217-218 in delightfully antiquated language it told me of
The Chauntrie in the paroch church of Saynt Myghell Upon Wyre
Where
Willyam Harryson pst Incumbent ther of the ffoundacon of John Butler to celebrate ther in the saide church for his sowle and all chrysten sowles and the Incumbent therof to teach gram skole…
And
At the alter of saynt Katheryne within the poche churche saynt Myghell upon Wyre and the same priest doth celebrate ther and kepe gramer skole accordinglie
So there was a grammar school!
Sarah also pointed me to three Flickr accounts which included current photographs of the church – but frustratingly none showing the chantry reconisable in my etching.
These are here:
nige820
rasmusthepod
animall68
Then Chris Hale posted this wonderful comment on the original blog, summarising his research brilliantly. I reproduce his text here in full
I have ascertained from a report dated 1871 that St-Michael's-in-Wyre was (and is) 'A late Perpendicular church of rather coarse architecture, comprising nave, with aisles and chancel, with south aisle only carried to the east end, a west tower, and south porch. The north aisle, after the first two bays to the west, is expanded, but without arcade, into a chapel, but only extends four bays in all, and is not carried along the chancel. The north chapel is dedicated to S. Catherine, and belongs to the Butlers.'
I have also discovered that one John Boteler (Butler), who was born at Rawcliffe on 16 Aug. 1489, and baptized at St. Michael's, 'had begun a chantry and service in St. Michael's Church.' This was probably on his death in 1534. It is likely that he would have left money in his will for a chantry priest to say masses for his soul.
There now. I have too much time on my hands!
So the chantry is definitely at St Michael on Wyre church, in Lancashire, England.
Finally Sarah came back with an amazing breakthrough on the artist that created the etching.
My C G Coperman is in fact Constance Gertrude Copeman.
Born in 1864, she studied at the Liverpool School of Art where she was awarded a silver medal and was a Queen's prize winner. Elected an associate of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1897.
Here’s another of her etchings unearthed by Sarah, with her distinct signature matching the one on my picture.
According to artnet, six of her works have come up for auction recently, but they won’t tell me the price unless I sign up to the site. Buggeration.
So, within 24 hours of my original post I know the exact location and history of the Chantry depicted in my junk-shop find, and I know the name of the artist, a little of her background, and that her work regularly comes up for auction.
I cannot thank you enough. A picture I love anyway has gained a whole new level of enjoyment.
And let this tale waggle its bare bum at anyone who thinks Twitter is just about broadcasting what you had for breakfast.
So now to my next mystery picture… watch this space!
As ever, do please leave a comment if you've enjoyed my ramble.
Monday, 8 March 2010
Is this St Catherine's Chantry in St Michael on Wyre Church?
I bought this etching at a junk shop in North Wales a few years ago because I love the Edwardian and the Gothic. I wondered if the good people of Twitter or Blogland could help me in locating the real chantry that it depicts.
Bottom left on the frame, the signature seems to be C G Coperman, 1911. The place St Michaels on Wyre? Or am in not reading it correctly?
Google tells me there is a church with this name in Lancashire, England, but the description of its interior does not mention a chantry dedicated to St Catherine. I cannot find any pictures of this church's interior either that confirm this is indeed the chilly corner where Mr or Ms Coperman sat in 1911!
Bottom right of the frame it says St Catherine's Chantry. Google offered me very little on this when searched alongside St Michael on Wyre. There is nothing else in the picture or on the frame to give me a clue.
Can anyone help solve the mystery? Do you know anyone who lives in St Michaels on Wyre who might know?
I would love to see a photograph of the chantry now.
Thanks for reading, and if you can help, have a big kiss x.
Get in touch through the comments on this blog, or by Twitter where I am @angpang.
Wednesday, 3 March 2010
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