Absolutely Charming
I
can’t imagine anyone not being enthralled with the Cotswolds with
its quaint villages, charming thatched-roof homes, lovely gardens and
the picturesque bridges over all the rivers running though towns. I
found several neat and different things to learn about and
photograph. Here are some of them.
Avon
is a Celtic word meaning river. Stratford is a Saxon word:
strat means soft road and forde means over a river, in this case the
River Avon,
not the Avon River. Over time the final e has been dropped from
Stratford. Richard
I (King Richard the Lion Hearted) granted Stratford-upon-Avon a
charter in 1196. A charter was necessary to become a market town.
Upon
boarding a canal boat we learned all
of the locks are manual, no mechanized ones, and are operated by the
same winch—(or whatever the tool is)—which is given to you when
you rent the boat. We found out
soon enough that it is rather
strenuous work to open and close the locks,
but one soon gets the hang of it.
Mr.
Wedgwood helped finance the
canal system built in the
1700s---too much of his
merchandise was being broken via horse and wagon.
In
town we boarded a manual winch
ferry to cross the river, as we needed
to be on the other side of the
river. On
this small ferry the fellow
stood up and turned a wheel
which moved a chain that
propelled us the short distance across the river.
This mechanism was new to me.
Windows
in the 1700s were only open wooden
framed spaces in the walls and
tended to be few in number. Being open left the home exposed in bad
weather. When it rained a cloth,
smeared with fat from cooking,
covered the
wooden frame placing
it over the window opening.
Perhaps this
was the original storm window?
A
yeoman farmer is one who owns his farm vs. a tenant farmer who rents
his plot of land.
All
bus and truck drivers in England, by law, are required to stop for a
45-minute rest every 4-½ hours. They are
limited to driving only 9 hours
a day.
China
clay is quarried, but only a small amount of it is sent to the
china/porcelain
industry. It is the paper industry that has a big demand for it, as
it is the substance that makes paper shiny for all those slick
colored ads.
Built in 1246 Hailes
Abbey ruins, ,
once housed 20 monks and 10 lay brothers. Richard, Earl of Cornwall,
and brother to Henry III, was caught in a storm at sea in 1242. He
vowed that if he survived the storm, he would build a religious
house. Hailes Abbey was the fulfillment of that promise. The first
cloister was built of wood, but replaced with stone at the end of the
15th
century. The abbey was destroyed, like nearly all others, during
Henry VIII reign. All churches were catholic until that time. Henry
just ravished England with his destruction of the churches.
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