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Mr Horniman's Walrus: Legacies of a Remarkable Victorian Family
Barnes and Noble
Mr Horniman's Walrus: Legacies of a Remarkable Victorian Family
Current price: $13.58
Barnes and Noble
Mr Horniman's Walrus: Legacies of a Remarkable Victorian Family
Current price: $13.58
Size: Audiobook
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Mr Horniman’s Walrus
tells the story of the rise and fall of three generations of a remarkable and dysfunctional Victorian family – the Hornimans – exploring the lives and loves behind their extraordinary and varied legacies.
Family patriarch
John Horniman established the tea company that bore his name
in 1826, which went on to become one of the best-known brands of nineteenth-century Britain. His son
Frederick created the eclectic and wonderful Horniman Museum
in London, and his granddaughter
Annie was a theatrical impresario
responsible for founding Ireland’s national theatre, the Abbey. Across more than a century, the family embodied changing middle-class attitudes
from patriarchy to the new spirit of modernity
; and their progress mirrored the high point of Victorian entrepreneurialism and the changes ushered in by the Edwardian age.
Drawing on her years of research and unfettered access to the family archive, Clare Paterson has written
a riveting tale
of trade, collecting, the stage, sex and politics in Victorian Britain. For the first time,
unpicks the lives of this fascinating family,
including their slips from grace as well as their astounding achievements
. It’s a story of capital and culture, philanthropy and empire, but also bankruptcy, betrayal, intrigue, lunacy and deep involvement in the esoterica of the occult.
tells the story of the rise and fall of three generations of a remarkable and dysfunctional Victorian family – the Hornimans – exploring the lives and loves behind their extraordinary and varied legacies.
Family patriarch
John Horniman established the tea company that bore his name
in 1826, which went on to become one of the best-known brands of nineteenth-century Britain. His son
Frederick created the eclectic and wonderful Horniman Museum
in London, and his granddaughter
Annie was a theatrical impresario
responsible for founding Ireland’s national theatre, the Abbey. Across more than a century, the family embodied changing middle-class attitudes
from patriarchy to the new spirit of modernity
; and their progress mirrored the high point of Victorian entrepreneurialism and the changes ushered in by the Edwardian age.
Drawing on her years of research and unfettered access to the family archive, Clare Paterson has written
a riveting tale
of trade, collecting, the stage, sex and politics in Victorian Britain. For the first time,
unpicks the lives of this fascinating family,
including their slips from grace as well as their astounding achievements
. It’s a story of capital and culture, philanthropy and empire, but also bankruptcy, betrayal, intrigue, lunacy and deep involvement in the esoterica of the occult.