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Subject:
From:
Francis Herbet <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Maps-L: Map Librarians, etc.
Date:
Thu, 24 Mar 2016 10:31:47 -0000
Content-Type:
multipart/alternative
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This geologist William Smith posting on another exh[i]bition may (still) be
of interest to 'MAPS-L' subscribers - or for re-forwarding to others.

 

Francis Herbert

[log in to unmask]

 

"From: HOGG - History of Geology Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of Nina Morgan
Sent: 24 March 2016 10:18
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: New William Smith exhbition opens in Churchill

 

A new exhibition about William Smith is opening on Saturday 26 March at the
Churchill and Sarsden Heritage Centre. Titled William Smith: The Family Man,
the exhibition focuses on the personal life of Smith, who was born in
Churchill in 1769. Highlights include a scan of a sketch of his mother,
drawn by Smith from memory, and  facsimile extracts and transcriptions of
unpublished personal  correspondence between  Smith and his niece, Anne
Phillips  [1803 - 1862] and nephew, the geologist John Phillips [1800 -
1874], between 1819 and 1839. The letters, drawn from the archives at the
Oxford University Museum of Natural History, highlight the personal side of
Smith's life, demonstrate his lifelong loyalty to his birthplace and reveal
the close and loving relationship he maintained with his niece and nephew
until  his death in 1839.

 

The letters  will remain on display from 26 March to 25 September 2016. The
Churchill and Sarsden Heritage Centre, located on Hastings Hill in Churchill
near Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire is open from 2 - 4:30 on Saturdays,
Sundays and Bank Holidays. Admission is free.  

 

A visit to Churchill also provides an opportunity to examine other Smith
memorabilia, including a plaque that marks the site of the house on
Churchill Road where Smith was born; the monolith made of local stone
erected in at the top of Hastings Hill  in 1831 by the 3rd Earl of Ducie
that honours William Smith as the 'Father of British [sic] Geology', and the
exterior of the All Saints Church, the parish church where, in 1831, Smith
describes how he and his brothers 'had the grace of presenting their bald
heads in one Pew ...  in supplications to their maker'. 

 

For the full Smith experience you can round off your day with a visit to The
Chequers in Churchill, where Smith's stepfather, Robert Gardner, was once
landlord.

 

For further information see: www.churchillheritage.org.uk

 

Nina Morgan, Science writer and editor, tel: 01608-676530

Mailing address: Rose Cottage East End, Chadlington, Chipping Norton Oxon
OX7 3LX

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For information about my latest book visit www.gravestonegeology.uk"  

 



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