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 | | Irving in 1820 - painting by Gilbert Stewart Newton |
This page may be referred to as:
http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/irving
The American writer
Washington Irving (1783-1859) spent many years in Birmingham, first
visiting at the end of the Napoleonic War, in 1815. He stayed with his
sister Sarah, her husband, Henry van Wart, and their two sons and two
daughters, one of whom was his god-child. They later told of how he
would invent stories to entertain them and their friends.
van
Wart, an American who became British by special act of parliament, was a
businessman and politician, founder of the Birmingham Exchange, one of
Birmingham's first Aldermen and a director of the Birmingham Banking
Company.
Irving lived with the van Warts first in Icknield Street
West (formerly Ladywood Lane), then Camden Hill (now called Newhall
Hill). Although neither house still stands, the former was half way
between the Monument Lane Canal and Spring Hill Library, the latter on
the corner of Legge Lane and Frederick Street. Irving christened each of
these buildings "Castle van Tromp". Irving later stayed with the van
Warts at their subsequent homes, at 13 Calthorpe Street, Edgbaston, and
"The Shrubbery" on Hagley Road. He is also known to have worshipped at
St Paul's Church in St Paul's Square.
It is worth remembering
that, when Irving was here, most of what we now know as Birmingham was
countryside, with no railways and only the beginnings of the
industrialisation that was to follow - Camden Hill would have been on
the country edge of what we now know as the Jewellery Quarter, with many
small workshops, but Icknield Street West was in countryside - Irving
would probably have been aware of nearby Perrot's Folly, although
Edgbaston Reservoir, beside which it stands, was not made until 1825.
Perhaps Irving also visited Boulton and Watt's works a mile or so away,
at Soho, or Boulton's home, Soho House?
Irving toured England,
Scotland and Wales during his stay here, meeting Coleridge and Walter
Scott, and working on his collection of essays, "The Sketch Book
of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent." (1819-20), including the famous story of
Rip van Winkle, a story which he wrote through the night at the house in
Camden Hill, reading it to his hosts over breakfast the next day, and
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, which has recently been filmed.
His next book, "Bracebridge Hall, or, The Humorists, A Medley
" (1822), was inspired by his visits to Aston Hall. The hall was then
occupied by James Watt Junior, whom Irving visited, but was previously
owned by members of the Holte Family (the last Holte to own, but not
live at, Aston, Charles Holte, had only one child, Mary, who married
Abraham Bracebridge, who in turn became Charles' tenant at Aston). There
is also a Bracebridge Pool in Sutton Park. Irving's notebook of 1818
includes such jottings as:
"Aston Hall. Gateway to the park. Lion
Head Knocker. Studded nails, squirrel on top of gateway - gateway and
porters lodge sheltered under trees... church spire rising above... Old
oak gallery of great extent... figures of knights in armour with
banners".
An epitaph used in the book was "borrowed" from a
gravestone in Handsworth parish churchyard.
Other works,
including "Alhambra" (1832) and "Mahomet and
his Successors" (published 1850, although finished much earlier)
were drafted on his travels, and completed in Birmingham, which he
continued to visit for many years.
To this day, Birmingham has an
Irving Street, west of Bristol Street and parallel with Holloway Head,
in the City Centre.
Much of the material on this page was found
in The Life of Washington Irving, by Stanley T. Williams, 1935,
which is available, along with many other reference works about, and
writing by, Irving, in the Central Library.
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