Continued from http://raleigh400.blogspot.co.uk/2017/12/cheers-sir-walter-1.html
So, across the Irish Sea we go, to land at Youghal, a seaside resort at the mouth of the River Blackwater in Ireland’s County Cork.
So, across the Irish Sea we go, to land at Youghal, a seaside resort at the mouth of the River Blackwater in Ireland’s County Cork.
It’s where Raleigh made his home for short periods
during the 17 years in which he held land in Ireland.
The habour in modern day Youghal
Image credit: Will McGoldrick - McGoldrick Art
& Photography
He was elected Mayor of Youghal in 1588 and 1589
and features prominently on the town’s website http://youghal.ie
Indeed they go so far as to say that his name is
synonymous with Youghal, and they actually have what they call a Raleigh
Quarter.
This year’s Youghal Festival, from 19-20 August,
has a medieval theme. And next year, to mark the 400th anniversary of Raleigh’s
death? Naturally I’ve written to enquire.
A smoking Sir Walter and that bucket of water
could well feature, since it seems that the story told at The Virginia Ash pub
in Henstridge - mentioned in my previous post - is also told in Ireland.
Myrtle Grove, Raleigh's home in Ireland. Always interested in plants and herbs, he is reputed to have introduced myrtle into England from Spain Image credit: Will McGoldrick - McGoldrick Art & Photography
As the Youghal website puts it in a ‘Little Gems’
section: ‘Legend recalls how, having introduced tobacco to Ireland, Raleigh was
smoking in the garden of his home at Myrtle Grove, Youghal, when his servant,
never having seen tobacco before, threw water over him believing that her
master had been set alight.’
The monument commemorating the Smerwick Harbour massacre Monument at the Field of the Heads (Gort na gCrann) near Dun an Oir commemorating the massacre of around 600 Irish, Spanish and Italian men and women by English troops commanded by Lord Grey of Wilton in 1580. It is said that the victims were decapitated and their heads buried here. The monument dates from 1980; the seaward side bears a cross and a Gaelic inscription 'igcuimhne dhun an oir samhain 1580'
‘The history of Ireland in the reign of Elizabeth
is a maze of hatreds, betrayals, rivalries and atrocities,’ writes Raleigh
Trevelyan in the 2002 biography of his ancestor. In view of Raleigh’s
involvement in Irish affairs as ‘a perpetrator of some of the worst horrors’ of
that period I am surprised that he is remembered in Youghal with such apparent
affection.
The Walter Raleigh Hotel https://walterraleighhotel.com/ in Youghal, pictured above, seems nonetheless equally proud of its link with our great Devonian. The website includes his biography and one of its three restaurants is called ‘The Walter’. But they might well raise an eyebrow at being included in my humble pub crawl.
Spectacularly located on the town’s sea front this
18th century Georgian pile seems a superior kind of place, although it’s worth
noting that, as Irish Times journalist Mark Paul points out, Raleigh’s British
title as a knight of the realm doesn’t appear in the name of the Youghal hotel.
‘Cork is the Rebel county, after all,’ is his explanation.
And maybe the Walter Raleigh Hotel is
acknowledging in its name the supposed republican sentiments which Raleigh had
expressed in his 1614 edition of the History of the World. They would impress
important later 17th century people like the poet John Milton and the
revolutionary Oliver Cromwell.
Both Cromwell and Milton were 'deeply influenced by the accounts of the
consequences of tyranny in Ralegh's History of the World' as Exeter University's Dr Robert
Lawson-Peebles wrote in a 1998 History Today article. According to historian
Christopher Hill The History of the World is the only book known to have been
recommended by Cromwell.
Cromwell, however, is definitely not a name to be
remembered with affection in Ireland.
I think we’ll move on quickly, crossing yet more
water to the land where Raleigh’s republican views are definitely recognized, and where, surely, in 2018, they ought to be remembering the great Devonian who inspired their forefathers, and the 400th anniversary of his shameful death.
A model of the USS Raleigh in the U.S. Navy Museum
Image credit: Sturmvogel66
In 1776, a year after the start of the
Revolutionary War when 13 colonies declared independence as the United States
of America, the Americans even named one of their warships after him. I imagine
the Royal Navy felt a bit miffed about this. The USS Raleigh had a full-length
figure of Sir Walter as figurehead.
In the American state of Maryland, north of
Virginia, I found the Sir Walter Raleigh Inn, seen above, and described as an
old fashioned restaurant known for its prime rib and salad bar. Serving the Washington County area since
1970, it’s located in Berwyn Heights, across Greenbelt Road from Greenbelt
Middle School. It has a website at
http://sirwalterraleigh.com,
There were once several Sir Walter Raleigh Inns in
the Washington area, such as Bethesda, Gaithersburg, and Alexandria. ‘The Sir
Walter Raleigh Inns strive to take you back over 200 years in history when
hospitality, good service and quality were of the utmost importance,’ was their
proud boast.
Image credit: https://greenbelt2012.wordpress.com
Now only the Greenbelt location remains, but it
offers a range of food and beverages to suit any taste. No mention of any
favourite dish or drink of Sir Walter however.
I emailed owner Jerry Cosker, shown above, to offer some suggestions!
The Inn has a Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/SirWalterRaleighInn/
In West Virginia I was excited to find Sir Wa
Both share a website at http://theraleighwv.com/the-raleigh-playhouse-and-theatre-in-beckley-wv/ and serve the town of Beckley, with an estimated population of almost 17,000 in 2016.
It’s apparently the only spot in Beckley where you’ll find ‘a genuine
speakeasy atmosphere and where you can sip on a tasty cocktail while viewing
the ever-rotating showings of talented, local artists.’
I wondered whether they serve the Sir Walter
Raleigh cocktail as described at
http://stayathomecocktails.com/2011/02/the-sir-walter-raleigh/
(More about Raleigh-associated drinks in a future blog post).
I’ve emailed Sir Walter’s Tavern to ask whether they know about the 400th anniversary: no reply as yet, I'm afraid.
(More about Raleigh-associated drinks in a future blog post).
I’ve emailed Sir Walter’s Tavern to ask whether they know about the 400th anniversary: no reply as yet, I'm afraid.
Beckley's Raleigh Playhouse itself is described as ‘an arthouse cinema’ which hosts play productions and musical performances as well as films.
‘Our desire is to showcase the films you always wanted to see on the big screen, along with indie films we think you’ll love, including those of West Virginia filmmakers,’ reads the website. ‘We are always on the lookout for up-and-coming local playwrights, and our intimate stage setting allows you to immerse yourself in the stories we work so hard to tell you.’
But why Raleigh Playhouse? In Beckley, West
Virginia? Is there a connection with Sir Walter? Naturally I’ve emailed to ask.
The statue of Sir Walter Raleigh at the Raleigh Convention Center in North Carolina Image credit: Alexisrael
Moving south to the city of Raleigh, state capital
of North Carolina, it’s obvious that there are links to Sir Walter. It was
named, as Wikipedia tells me, ‘after Sir Walter Raleigh, who established the
lost Roanoke Colony in present-day Dare County’.
The date of its charter, in December 1792, is
perhaps as significant as was the naming of the USS Raleigh in 1776. By the
summer of 1792, the monarchy in France had been overthrown: republicanism was
at its most strident. And Sir Walter would continue to be seen by many as its
defender, standing against the tyranny of those who believed in the outdated
and thoroughly ridiculous Divine Right of Kings.
Sadly though, my pub crawl is slowing down. No
thatched Sir Walter Raleigh pubs in the USA. Perhaps there should be, as he
stood in the eyes of many Americans for all that they hold dear.
Exterior of The Velvet Cloak Hotel in Raleigh NC
Image credit: David O’Docherty
There is of course in the city of Raleigh the
former hotel known as the Velvet Cloak Inn, its name a subtle link to Queen
Elizabeth’s favourite courtier and that legend of the ‘Greenwich’ puddle. It
opened in 1962 at 1505 Hillsborough Street.
Interior of The Velvet Cloak Hotel. You can just make out what looks like a portrait of Sir Walter with a Molyneux globe, similar to the one at Petworth, in Sussex, UK
Image credit: David O’Docherty
And a new legend was created. I learnt that the
Velvet Cloak will live forever as ‘a stars' hotel’: Bob Hope, Marilyn Monroe,
Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, The Rolling Stones, Ethel Merman, Tom Jones, Sonny and
Cher, and Rod Stewart being just some of the names from showbiz royalty who
enjoyed its champagne lifestyle during its 40-year existence as a hotel.
Rod Stewart, one of The Velvet Cloak Hotel's many celebrated guests, performing at a concert in 1976
Image credit: Helge Øverås
Sadly the legend is over. The Velvet Cloak has
been demolished, to be replaced by student accommodation, much to the disgust
of many who have fond memories of the place in its heyday. ‘The city of Raleigh
is going through a growth spurt unlike anything we've seen before,’ so I’m told
by the very helpful North Carolina Real Estate Agent David O’Docherty
http://searchclaytonncrealestate.com/
What else? For people back in Raleigh’s homeland
the obvious links are two districts in the American city named with him in
mind: one called Budleigh and the other called Hayes Barton! They’re both
located in NW Raleigh and in the property market both are classed as charming
and desirable historic neighbourhoods. Not quite as historic as Sir Walter’s
home village of course.
Both were planned in the early 20th century. The Hayes Barton district was designed by the landscape architect Earle Sumner Draper (1893-1994) – echoes here of Budleigh Salterton’s own William Hatchard-Smith (1887-1987), recently honoured with a blue plaque in his home town. – Clearly Earle had the ‘old country’ in mind.
Named after Sir Walter Raleigh's English
homeplace, the developers appealed to the Anglophile fashion of the times,
reads the informative document published by the Raleigh Historic Development
Commission. ‘Politicians and professionals - plentiful group in the state’s
capital city - chose Hayes Barton as home in the 1920s, buying into the
developers’ promise of exclusivity and separation from the urban ills of the
center city.’
Hayes Barton was ‘the first real nice suburb that
Raleigh had developed,’ as Draper himself stated according to a 2002 record in
the National Register of Historic Places, published by the United States
Department of the Interior National Park Service. ‘Therefore the neighborhood
was complete with covenants protecting the racial and social values of its
residents.’ Hmm.....
Fascinating stuff.
I learn also from the Raleigh Historic Development Commission that the
Tudor Revival Myrtle Underwood School, built in 1923, served the rapidly
growing neighbourhood. Another echo of Sir Walter’s Myrtle Grove, his home at
Youghal in Ireland?
But still no pubs, thatched or otherwise.
At the Hayes Barton Café and Dessertery in Raleigh NC
The Hayes Barton Dessertery at 2000 Fairview Road
in an area of Raleigh NC called Five Points has a great choice of food and
drink including wines and cocktails, and is renowned for its cakes. But there
are no Elizabethan dishes on the menu and no mention of a Sir Walter bar.
Owner Frank Ballard and his wife Marget launched
their business in 1998, having discovered that they both had a love for the
1940s. ‘We opened the restaurant with the hope to recapture some of the romance
and innocence of that time,’ they explain at
http://imaginarystudioonline.com/hayes/
I’m hoping that the people at Raleigh NC’s
‘Walter’ magazine http://www.waltermagazine.com/ – ‘the life of the party and
the soul of the city’ as they call themselves –
will help me discover further Raleigh-related gems in the community
named after him.
And finally to Roanoke Island, three hours’ drive
east of Raleigh NC. It’s a name forever associated with Sir Walter and made
famous because of the mysterious disappearance of the 117 English settlers whom
he sent in 1587 to establish a base in the New World.
An image of Virginia Dare on a commemorative stamp of 1937, published by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing: U.S. Post Office; Smithsonian National Postal Museum
The settlers included Ananias Dare and his wife
Eleanor White, the daughter of John White, the artist and expedition’s mapmaker
who was appointed by Raleigh as the colony’s governor. Eleanor would give birth
on 18 August 1587 to Virginia Dare, the first English child born in a New World
English overseas possession.
Three years earlier, on 25 March 1584, Queen
Elizabeth had granted Raleigh a charter allowing him to ‘discover, search, find
out, and view such remote heathen and barbarous Lands, Countries, and
territories (...) to have, hold, occupy, and enjoy.’ When English ships
returned to bring supplies, they found the island deserted with no sign of the
colonists. After nearly 450 years, the
mystery of what happened to the colonists, including little Virginia Dare,
remains unsolved.
There’s a lot going on in Roanoke Island to inform
visitors about its history, like the Roanoke Island Festival Park
http://www.roanokeisland.com/ along with names like Budleigh, Devon, Queen
Elizabeth and of course Sir Walter Raleigh on the street map.
The most celebrated of the area’s attractions is the outdoor drama The Lost Colony http://thelostcolony.org/ produced by the Roanoke Island Historical Association (RIHA).
The drama has been performed since 1937 in an
outdoor amphitheatre located on the site of the original Roanoke Colony in the
Outer Banks, near the present-day town of Manteo, North Carolina. More than
four million people have seen it since that year. It runs nightly except
Sundays, from May to August, and seems to be run by enthusiastic and energetic
volunteers. The same kind of thing as
the Puy du Fou spectacle which started off as a small-scale enterprise in
deepest France and has developed massively since I first saw it.
http://www.puydufou.com/
Do we have anything like this in South West
England?
The story of the outdoor or ‘symphonic’ drama of
The Lost Colony is fascinating in itself, as I found via Wikipedia
Well before 1937, annual celebrations of Virginia
Dare's birthday had been celebrated by the Roanoke Colony Memorial Association
since its founding in 1894. The early events were primarily picnic meetings,
featuring hymn singing and commemorative speeches. Mabel Evans Jones, a Roanoke
Island native and Dare County School Superintendent, wrote and produced a 1921
silent film of the historic events and starred in it. The finished film toured
across North Carolina. It was the first silent film produced in the state.
The Waterside Theatre on Roanoke Island, where The Lost Colony production takes place
In 1923, the festivities were expanded to include
dramatic sketches. By 1925 local residents performed a full-scale pageant of
the story, using pantomime, music, and narration.
The 1926 pageant attracted the largest crowd to that point, and organizers sought to build on their achievement in their preparations for the 350th anniversary of Virginia Dare’s birth. They approached North Carolina playwright Paul Green about developing a new pageant script.
The 1926 pageant attracted the largest crowd to that point, and organizers sought to build on their achievement in their preparations for the 350th anniversary of Virginia Dare’s birth. They approached North Carolina playwright Paul Green about developing a new pageant script.
Having visited the island on several occasions,
Green had already considered writing a piece about ‘those tragic first
settlers’ as he called them. He joined with Saunders and Bradford Fearing,
president of the Roanoke Historical Society, to develop a vehicle to celebrate
the 350th anniversary of Virginia Dare’s birth.
'The Baptism of Virginia Dare', a 19th century lithograph by Henry Howe, in William A. Crafts (1876) Pioneers in the settlement of America: from Florida in 1510 to California in 1849. Published by Samuel Walker and Company, Boston
Initially, the team thought that the plot would be
based on the story of Virginia Dare.
According to legend, she had fallen in love with the son of Chief
Manteo, head of the local tribe of Native American Croatan Indians who had
befriended the English, and had given birth to a new race that has since
vanished.
However Paul Green’s masterpiece developed into a
combination of music, dialogue, and dance, which he called ‘symphonic drama,
expressing common ideals of freedom, struggle and perseverance — guiding themes
for a nation in the grips of the Great Depression.
When President Franklin D. Roosevelt saw the
production on 18 August, 1937, he said, ‘We do not know the fate of Virginia
Dare or the First Colony. We do know, however, that the story of America is
largely a record of that spirit of adventure.’
The Lost Colony website has a link to its Wine and
Culinary Festival http://tlcwinefest.com/
a fund-raising event for the drama production
which takes place in September. North Carolina breweries taking part in the
2017 Festival include the Outer Banks Brewing Station
https://www.obbrewing.com/ the Lost
Colony Brewery http://lostcolonybrewery.com/brewery and the wonderfully named Weeping Radish Farm
Brewery http://www.weepingradish.com/
I emailed all three to ask if they were planning
to launch a beer in honour of Sir Walter, but there's been no reply as yet.
My ‘pub crawl’ continues in a future post with a survey of the drinks associated with Sir Walter, including the Raleigh 2015 Quality Sparkling Wine recently released by Lily Farm Vineyards at Knowle near Budleigh Salterton to mark the 400th anniversary.
You can read all about this highly successful East
Devon vineyard, located in its beautiful setting just over the hill from
Raleigh’s birthplace at https://www.lilyfarmvineyard.com/
FOR THE RALEIGH 400 CALENDAR OF
EVENTS WORLDWIDE
IN 2018 CLICK ON
http://raleigh400.blogspot.co.uk/2018/01/raleigh-400-calendar-of-events-in-2018.html
EVENTS WORLDWIDE
IN 2018 CLICK ON
http://raleigh400.blogspot.co.uk/2018/01/raleigh-400-calendar-of-events-in-2018.html
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