| Florence Nightingale's Balcony, Lea-Hurst, Nr. Matlock |
| Matlock, Twentieth Century Photographs, Postcards, Engravings & Etchings |
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Lea Hurst was one of the homes belonging to the father of Florence
Nightingale and the family moved into the property when Florence
was about five years old. William Edward Shore had married the niece
of Peter Nightingale and added Nightingale to his surname following
the death of his wife's uncle.
William Adam, writing when Florence Nightingale was a young woman,
mentioned Lea Hurst.
"Passing over the small bridge [at Lea], we take the road leading
up to a long and steep hill to the village of Holloway"[1].
"Lea Hurst, the seat of William Nightingale Esq., is embosomed
amongst the woods, to the right" (footnote[1]).
Pevsner described Leahurst as a "C17 gabled house with low
mullioned windows, much enlarged in 1825"[2].
Describing the house as a place of national interest because of
its association with Florence Nightingale, the 1920's Ward Lock
Guides add that "it is one of the most beautiful places in
the district. The park and grounds form a prominent feature in the
landscape from any of the surrounding hills. The Hall, Elizabethan
in style, is pleasantly situated on a sloping lawn, surrounded by
trees"[3].
"Her balcony was a great joy to her, commanding a view of
the garden with its stone terraces massed with flowers, and of a
meadow beyond, losing itself among the trees running down to the
river. Often the sound of the Derwent was in her ears, and she greatly
recalled it one night at Scutari. There was a great storm, and suddenly
Florence Nightingale said: " How I like to hear that ceaseless
roar; it puts me in mind of the Derwent. How often I have listened
to it from the nursery window!" If ever she lived to see England
again, she wrote from the Crimea, the western breezes of her hilltop
home would be her first longing"[4].
More on site information about the Nightingale family and Florence
Nightingale
Matlock
Biographies: see NIGHTINGALE
Coat
of Arms: Description of NIGHTINGALE arms
Pedigree
of Nightingale
Dethick,
Lea and Holloway (Kelly's 1891 Directory)
Photo of Lea
Hurst amongst scanned images from "Souvenir of Matlock Bath" can be seen onsite
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One of the Artistic Series, A.P. Co., 9 Bury Court, St. Mary Axe,
London, E.C. No.2539. Chromotyped in Saxony. Exact date difficult
as the card is not postmarked but first postal date known for their
cards is now 1905 (see both Via
Gellia, Tufa Cottage on this website and list
of postcard publishers elsewhere on the internet which supplies
the date of 1909)
Postcard in the collection of, provided by and © Ann
Andrews Intended for personal use only
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References:
[1] Adam, William (1840) "The Gem of
the Peak", London; Longman & Co., Paternoster Row, MDCCCXL,
p.170
[2] Pevsner, Nikolaus (1953), "The Buildings
of England, Derbyshire", Penguin Books, p.129
[3] Ward Lock & Co's "Matlock, Dovedale,
Bakewell and South Derbyshire", Illustrated Guide Books of
England and Wales (1932-3), p.59
[3] Mee, Arthur (ed.) (1937) "Derbyshire:
The Peak Country", The King's England Series, Hodder and
Stoughton Limited, London, p.156
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