An English interlude 2: West Yorkshire

Kiplin Hall
After our few days in Ullswater we set off for West Yorkshire to stay with our friends Valerie and Kenn in Bramham. On the way, we stopped in North Yorkshire to visit Kiplin Hall, a Jacobean house constructed between 1622 and 1625 for George Calvert, Lord Baltimore, after whom the American city is named. (He obtained a charter from Charles I for a colony centred on Chesapeake Bay which he named Maryland after Charles’s Queen Henrietta Maria.)
After the Calverts the house passed through the hands of three other families until 1971 when its last private owner, Bridget Talbot, died and it is now run by a Trust. I had never visited before but my interest was piqued on reading in a magazine that the house is celebrating its 400th anniversary this year.
We started by looking round the gardens before approaching the main door of the house. The crest above it is that of the Carpenters, one of the later families to own the house. The motto, Per acuta belli, translates as Through the asperities of war.
I enjoyed looking round the interior, the Library being an especial favourite. I liked what looks like an early version of Scrabble and the panel acknowledging the owners’ role in the slave trade. The last image below represents Kiplin during the Second World War when it was used as an ammunition dump and Officers’ Quarters.
Finally, we took a stroll round the lake before resuming our journey.
Harewood House
On our first day with V&K we went to Harewood House, somewhere which had been very familiar in our days living in Yorkshire but which we hadn’t visited for decades. Harewood was built in the 18th century by Edwin Lascelles whose family were Caribbean sugar merchants actively exploiting thousands of enslaved African people to make their business profitable. Once again I was happy to see this made explicit both on the website and in exhibits, including in a temporary exhibition celebrating the 250th anniversaries of the landscape painter JMW Turner (1775-1851) and novelist Jane Austen (1775-1817).
Another part of the exhibition was a display of costumes from film and TV productions of Austen novels, including two from the BBC’s Pride and Prejudice of 1995 – the best ever Austen adaptation in my opinion. Other opinions are available, but they are wrong.
We enjoyed the rest of the interior:
And the gardens and grounds:
The last image above is from the second-hand bookshop, something which we noticed on this trip that many stately homes and castles now have. I loved the classification of this shelf and feel it could easily be reused elsewhere, including for library volunteers of a certain age …
RHS Harlow Carr
On our second and final day we went with Valerie to the Royal Horticultural Society garden at Harlow Carr near Harrogate, another very enjoyable visit.
The next day it was time to pack up again and head for our next destination – Derby.

More very lovely old houses and i have always wanted to see the gardens at Harrogate. X
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The gardens were lovely.
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I love Yorkshire. Have never been to West Yorkshire, but to the Yorkshire Dales region and to York itself.
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We went to the Dales later, still to write that up.
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I can still see – if I close my eyes – the first “real” English cream tea at the Devonshire Arms Hotel in Skipton.
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I’m late to the party here, but so glad you made time to stop off at two of our local playgrounds (well, stately ‘omes I suppose), both of which always give a good account of themselves,
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They do scrub up well!
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The interior and the gardens all look wonderful. Thank you for the tour, Anabel.
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Thanks Natalie, we loved all these places and seeing the gardens in good weather was a real bonus!
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Now you’ve visited more places I’ve never been to that are reasonably close by.
You have certainly been the globetrotter (well, Britain trotter) of late.
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There are so many good places that either I’ve never been to or that I haven’t visited for years – someday I might get my globetrotting mojo back but at the moment I’m happy exploring the UK.
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I’ve wanted to visit Yorkshire ever since I read James Herriott’s books. And as an American, I tend to think of slavery only in terms of our own country’s shameful history in that department. But you’re right, it was prevalent in the caribbean and other countries as well. I still don’t understand how society can ever accept one person “owning” another, but history is full of examples of just that. Thank goodness some people were brave enough stand up to it!
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The British Empire was dependent on slavery. I look round Glasgow and so much of it was built on the wealth that came from sugar, cotton, tobacco – all through the labour of enslaved people. Horrific. On a lighter note, I’m sure you’d love Yorkshire – in a couple of posts I’ll be into “Herriot country”.
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I would love to visit Harlow Carr.
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I’m glad so many people agree with me! I did think of you at Harlow Carr but I assumed you would have been.
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I think it really took off in 2001. I never visited any gardens when I lived in Yorkshire. No time, no money, no car.
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Glad you are able to make up for it now.
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Now I need to get back to using the macro lens.
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‘Other opinions are available, but they are wrong.’
Exactly.
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Good! Another person in the sensible camp 😉
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Encouraging to see more and more acknowledgement of the foundations of many stately homes and museums being built on the proceeds of slavery. Harewood House looks like a very fine example.
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I agree it is encouraging to see these acknowledgements – though some criticise it as “woke” I’m glad no notice is taken of that!
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Hi Anabel – what an interesting trip – I’d love to visit them all, but Kiplin Hall entices … thanks for the photos – I’ll have to be back to look through … life is taking over at the moment – cheers Hilary
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Thanks Hilary. Hope life sorts itself out!
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A lot of opulence going on! Loved the gardens, especially.
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Yes, I love to look at the opulence but always have mixed feelings. That’s why I like to see the acknowledgements of where the wealth came from.
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These are the days out I enjoy most, some history and architecture and a beautiful garden. I agree with you, the 1995 P&P is definitely the gold star adaptation.
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Yes, me too – and there was more in similar vein when we went to Derby. And of course you agree with me about P&P! Everybody should 😉.
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🤣👍
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Sensible people anyway. Glad to know you are in that camp.
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I’ve only been to Kiplin once- a February visit to see snowdrops and aconites. It might have been sensible to go inside but we had a very small person with us. Harewood, on the other hand, is just down the road from the not so small now person, and his youngster, and we’ve done the full Monty. Harlow Carr- well, we were once members. Preaching to the converted. We might manage YSP this trip but it’s a packed itinerary xx
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I thought all these places were lovely. It’s nice to revisit old haunts (Harewood) and visit new ones (to us – Kiplin).
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Beautiful buildings and gardens. Don’t know Yorkshire at all, apart from the rock climbing areas. Didn’t know much about Jane Austen either, (apart from her book films) until I watched a recent life story about her. Amazing just how many writers from that time period were taken out early by TB or other illness. Luckily, they just lasted long enough to be remembered by history and make an impact. Bob. BSS.
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Yorkshire is really lovely – though I know nothing about its rock climbing! It sounds as though you watched the same Jane Austen programme that i did a few weeks ago. Though I’ve been a fan since my teens I still learned more about her. I’m sure she would have had many more books in her.
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Wonderful to see these interesting properties and garden through your eyes , photos and commentary. I especially enjoyed the tour of Harewood House with the links to Jane Austen and the display of costumes.
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Thank you! We went to another Jane Austen costume exhibition at our next stay. So much to enjoy!
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Thanks for the tours – always so interesting.
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Thanks Barbara!
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so much to see in UK and I’m enjoying being virtually guided around by you with lots of superb photos
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Thanks Pauline. I’m sometimes surprised myself at how much we still have to see.
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Oh, and “BBC’s Pride and Prejudice of 1995 – the best ever Austen adaptation in my opinion. Other opinions are available, but they are wrong.” cracked me up!
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I’m just right. No question.
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Hmmm…..
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Kiplin Hall and Harewood House look interesting and I enjoyed what little I saw of Harlow Carr on a wet, very wet, day
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We were lucky with the weather on this whole trip. No washouts!
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Marvellous!
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Here’s a sentence I like a lot:
“Other opinions are available, but they are wrong.”
That sentence made me laugh!
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Well, one has to have the courage of one’s convictions!
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I’ve been to Harewood House, many years ago, but not to Kiplin. Like you I am pleased to see that they both now acknowledge the part that slavery played in creating the riches that financed these houses. The Jane Austen exhibition particularly appeals to me and again I am glad that they picked up on her subtle anti-slavery stance in Mansfield Park.
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This exhibition and the documentary about Austen a couple of months ago have made me think I should reread Mansfield Park. It’s the novel of hers that I know least well.
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Funnily enough I’ve been thinking the same. It’s some years since I read it and I’ve always had a soft spot for it, partly because other readers don’t like it so much!
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I don’t think Fanny has the appeal of her other heroines. She’s a bit dull!
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That’s true I guess, but she’s a product of her upbringing and being made to feel so out of place at Mansfield
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Definitely time for a reread!
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Another interesting part of Britain I am not very familiar with. We have been to York on our way to Scotland in 2004 (I think it was) but only had time to visit the cathedral and the city centre…Always glad to do virtual tours of new areas. (Suzanne)
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Thanks Suzanne. Yorkshire likes to think of itself as God’s Own Country and it might have a point!
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My old stomping ground Anabel as I grew up in West Yorkshire and my dad still lives in Harrogate! I’ve been to Harlow Carr many times – it was just down the road from my dad’s old flat and it’s beautiful at any time of the year. Harewood House was somewhere we went as kids (they used to have an exotic bird garden there) but I always remember my mum going on about the slave trade and I only remember going inside the house once. I’m glad they make this unpleasant history explicit both on the website and the exhibits. I would love to see the costumes from Pride and Prejudice – yes I agree the BBC’s 1995 adaptation was the best! Looks a lovely interlude 🙂
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We saw more Jane Austen costumes on the next leg of our trip – stay tuned! My sister lived in Leeds for a while and we visited Harewood with them, then with Val and Kenn after they moved to West Yorkshire, but even that was a long time ago.
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Look forward to seeing the Jane Austen costumes!
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Such fabulous places to visit Anabel. The rooms in both Kiplin and Harewood look so opulent and I love the ornate bed at Kiplin. Interesting to read about the slavery connections too. The book classification and the reference to yourself made me laugh – interesting you may be but old and tatty, never😀 I don’t know how feasible it would be for me to get to either or both of these places but I must try to make an effort sometime, they look too good to miss.
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Yes, they were all great places. But who said I was referring to myself, Eunice?! 😂😉
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Harewood House is the only one of these that I know. Like you, I was impressed by the acknowledgment of the role slavery had in the fortunes of the family owning it. Kiplin Hall looks worth a visit? And I’m looking forward to seeing what you made of Derby, my local city!
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Yes, I would recommend Kiplin. There was also a woodland walk I think which we didn’t have time to do. As on our previous visit we didn’t go into the centre of Derby at all, though at least the places we went to were in Derbyshire rather than Nottinghamshire and Staffordshire as two years ago!
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Wise move! I spent the last 20 years of my working life based in Derby city centre, and can confirm you didn’t miss much! But DerbySHIRE has lots to recommend it, and I’ll be fascinated to learn where you went and what you made of it.
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