William Wordsworth and Cockermouth
Posted in Architecture, Bridges, Trips at 21:00 on 17 April 2013
Cockermouth’s most famous son is the poet William Wordsworth.
There is a huge statue of a Lord Mayo on Main Street, though. From the inscription it sounds like Mayo was a bit of an imperial adventurer. He became Viceroy of India and was assassinated in the Andaman Islands!
Anyway, below is Wordsworth’s boyhood home on the junction of Main Street (right) and Crown Street (left.)
Quite imposing. And difficult to photograph without a car in the shot!
We viewed the house and garden – both overseen by the National Trust. We got there just as it was opening at eleven a.m. and there was a queue. Apparently at the height of the tourist season it’s mobbed.
Here’s a view of the garden from the house. It’s a bit sparse looking after the coldest early spring in Britain for 50 years. The River Derwent is a footpath or so beyond the wall at the back. It was from the terrace there I photographed the bridge over the Derwent I featured a couple of posts ago.
There is a small bust of Wordsworth on a pedestal on Gallowbarro – the bar of the “T” to Main Street and Crown Street.
Just to the right of where I took the above photo is a memorial fountain to both William and his sister Dorothy. This was taken at more or less a right angle to where I photographed their childhood home.
Tags: Andaman Islands, Bridges, Cockermouth, Dorothy Wordsworth, Lord Mayo, River Derwent, Viceroy of India, William Wordsworth