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Gertrude Bell

Page 52

by Georgina Howell


  1836

  Lowthian joins his father’s ironworks at Walker, later becoming a partner

  1837

  Queen Victoria succeeds William IV

  1842

  Lowthian marries Margaret Pattinson, daughter of Hugh Lee Pattinson FRS

  1844

  Gertrude’s father (Thomas) Hugh Bell born at Walker, elder brother of Charles, Mary (Maisie), Florence, Ada, and Sophie; Gertrude’s mother, Maria (Mary) Shield, born

  1845

  Lowthian Bell takes control of Walker ironworks on death of his father

  1850

  Lowthian opens Washington chemical company with Hugh Pattinson; with Newall, pioneers steel rope and undersea cable manufacture (company becomes Brunner Mond, 1872)

  1851

  Great Exhibition at Crystal Palace, London; future stepmother Florence born to Dr. Sir Joseph and Lady Olliffe (née Cubitt)

  1852

  Lowthian Bell opens Bell Brothers iron foundry with brothers John and Thomas

  1854

  Lowthian elected Lord Mayor of Newcastle (and again in 1863); opens Clarence ironworks in Middlesbrough

  1857

  First Atlantic cable laid, using 1,280 miles of Washington cable

  1860

  Lowthian pioneers manufacture of aluminium at Washington

  1865

  Lowthian incorporates his Cleveland Railway into the North Eastern Railway Company (later London and North Eastern Railway)

  1867

  23 Apr.—Hugh Bell marries Maria (Mary) Shield

  1868

  14 July—Gertrude Margaret Lowthian Bell (GLB) born at grandfather’s home, Washington New Hall, County Durham

  1869

  Lowthian Bell is founding organizer of the British Iron and Steel Institute

  1870

  Hugh Bell and family move to newly built Red Barns, Redcar, near Middlesbrough

  Franco-Prussian War; Olliffe family evacuate from British Embassy in Paris as Prussians approach

  1871

  29 Mar.—Brother Maurice Hugh Lowthian Bell born

  19 Apr.—Mother Mary Bell dies, aged twenty-seven; Hugh’s sister Ada manages household

  1872

  Lowthian Bell starts building Rounton Grange on newly acquired estate near Northallerton

  1874

  Hugh Bell elected Mayor of Middlesbrough

  1875

  Lowthian Bell elected Fellow of the Royal Society and elected Liberal MP for Hartlepool

  1876

  Sir Edward Poynter paints Gertrude and Hugh; Rounton Grange complete

  10 Aug.—Hugh Bell marries Florence Eveleen Eleanore Olliffe

  1877

  Lowthian Bell is founding organizer of the British Institute of Chemistry (later, Royal Institute)

  Queen Victoria declared Empress of India

  1878

  Lowthian Bell awarded Légion d’honneur

  GLB’s half-brother Hugh (Hugo) born

  1879

  GLB’s half-sister Elsa born

  1880

  Lowthian Bell resigns from parliament

  1881

  GLB’s half-sister Mary (Molly) born

  1882

  Forth Bridge Company formed to build world’s largest bridge; Hugh Bell becomes a director

  1884

  Lowthian Bell appointed High Sheriff of County Durham; rebuilds East Rounton church; Hugh again elected Mayor of Middlesbrough; Tees ferry Hugh Bell launched

  Apr.—GLB attends Queen’s College, London, living with stepgrandmother, Lady Olliffe, at 95 Sloane Street

  1885

  Lowthian Bell accepts baronetcy; Maurice Bell goes to Eton—there until 1889

  1886

  Apr.—GLB attends Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University

  July–Aug.—Lodges with a family in Weilheim, Germany

  Grandmother Dame Margaret Bell dies

  1887

  Great-uncle John Bell, Sir Lowthian’s business partner, dies

  1888

  June—GLB graduates from Oxford with 1st Class Honours

  Dec.—Stays in Bucharest with Sir Frank and Mary Lascelles (aunt); meets Valentine Chirol and Charles Hardinge; befriended by Queen Elizabeth of Romania (aka Carmen Sylva)

  1889

  Cousin Billy Lascelles accompanies GLB to Constantinople; they return to England via Paris

  June—Family holiday in Alsace

  GLB acts as housekeeper for her stepmother at Red Barns; does social work in Middlesbrough

  GLB “comes out” in the London season, presented to Queen Victoria

  War in South Africa resumes after Boer attack on Cape Colony

  GLB aids Florence’s group studying lives of local working families; becomes treasurer of its committee

  1891

  Washington New Hall given away as an orphanage, named Dame Margaret’s Hall

  1892

  Hugh Bell stands for parliament as a Unionist Party candidate, unsuccessful

  Apr.—GLB travels to Persia with cousin Florence Lascelles to stay with her parents in Teheran; studies Persian; begins reading the poetry of Hafiz

  GLB begins romance in Persia with legation secretary Henry Cadogan; betrothal intended

  Dec.—GLB returns to London with cousin Gerald Lascelles; her parents refuse permission to marry Cadogan

  1893

  Cadogan dies

  Jan.—GLB goes to Switzerland and northern Italy with Mary Talbot

  Apr.—Travels to Algiers with father to visit Great-uncle John Bell’s widow, Lizzie

  May—Returns to London with Mary Talbot via Switzerland and Weimar, where Maurice is staying

  June–Dec.—GLB in England, learning Persian and Latin; starts Arabic studies

  1894

  Jan.–Feb.—GLB and Hugh tour Italy

  Mar.–July—GLB in England; Safar Nameh: Persian Pictures published

  Aug.–Sept.—Family holiday in Paris, Switzerland, and Austria

  1895

  Aug.—Family holiday in Switzerland

  Sept.—GLB in England working on The Divan of Hafiz

  1896

  Mar.–Apr.—visits Italy with Hugh; takes Italian lessons

  Sir Lowthian awarded Albert Medal of the Royal Society of Arts

  July–Aug.—Family holiday in Switzerland

  Sept.—GLB visits the Lascelleses, Ambassador Sir Frank and Lady Mary, at embassy country house in Potsdam

  Oct.–Dec.—Returns to England; continues Persian and Arabic studies

  1897

  Jan.–Mar.—With cousin Florence visits the Lascelleses in Berlin; takes tea with the German Emperor and Empress

  Apr.—Lady Mary Lascelles dies

  June—The Divan of Hafiz published

  July–Aug.—GLB begins climbing during family visit to La Grave, Switzerland

  Dec.—GLB and Maurice go on world tour, visiting the West Indies, Mexico, San Francisco, Honolulu, Japan, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Burma; then return via Egypt, Greece, and Constantinople

  1898

  Sir Lowthian acquires the estate of Mount Grace Priory and restores the house

  June—GLB and Maurice return to England

  Aug.–Sept.—Family holiday near Fort William, Scotland

  Oct.—GLB in England studying Arabic with Sir Denison Ross

  1899

  Mar.—Travels to Italy, then meets up with Hugh in Athens; studies Greek antiquities, meets archaeologist David Hogarth; returns alone via Constantinople, Prague, and Berlin

  Aug.—Visits Bayreuth to attend opera

  Aug.–Sept.—Climbs the Meije and Les Écrins

  Sept.–Nov.—GLB in England; Bell Brothers becomes a public company

  Nov.—Goes to Jerusalem to stay with the Rosens at German Consulate; travels via Damascus, visiting Baalbek and Beirut, Athens and Smyrna; studies Arabic and Hebrew

  1900

  Jan.—Maurice Bell leaves for Boer War, commanding Volunteer Service Company
of the Yorkshire Regiment; Aunt Ada dies

  Feb.–June—GLB’s first desert travels, to Jerusalem, Palmyra, Damascus, Baalbek, Beirut

  June–July—GLB in England

  Aug.–Sept.—In the Alps, climbs Mont Blanc, the Grépon, and the Dru

  Sept.–Dec.—GLB in England

  1901

  Jan.–Feb.—In London, watches funeral procession of Queen Victoria; Edward VII succeeds to the throne

  Mar.–Aug.—GLB in Redcar and London

  Sir Lowthian sells majority holdings in the Bell companies and merges steel interests with Dorman Long (in 1902), releasing substantial funds. Hugh takes directorships in all Bell associated companies

  Aug.—GLB in Bernese Oberland, climbs Schreckhorn and Engelhorn range; Gertrudspitze named after her

  Sept.–Dec.—In England, takes up photographic developing

  1902

  Jan.–May—Travels with father and Hugo to Malta, then to Sicily, to be guided by Winston Churchill; travels on alone to Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, and Palestine

  Maurice Bell returns from South Africa wounded

  Ibn Saud regains Riyadh from Rashid dynasty in night attack

  May—Boer War ends

  July—GLB in Switzerland; via new route almost reaches summit of Finsteraarhorn; frostbitten

  Sept.–Nov.—In England, engages lady’s maid Marie Delaire

  Nov.—GLB leaves for second world tour, with Hugo

  Dec.—Attends Delhi durbar as guest of the Viceroy

  1903

  Dec.–July—Goes to Afghanistan, Himalayas, Burma, Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Korea, Japan, Vancouver, climbing in the Rocky Mountains, Canada, Boston, Chicago

  July—Returns to England with Hugo

  1904

  Jan.—Half-sister Molly marries Charles Trevelyan

  Feb.—Sir Lowthian gives £5,000 to each of his grandchildren

  Apr.—Entente Cordiale established between Britain and France

  Aug.—GLB at Zermatt, climbs the Matterhorn

  Sept.–Nov.—GLB in England

  Nov.—Studies antiquities in Paris with Salomon Reinach

  20 Dec.—Sir Lowthian dies, aged eighty-eight, at London home, Belgravia; Hugh succeeds to baronetcy and inherits £750,000

  Dec.—GLB goes on archaeological trip via Paris, Marseilles, Naples, Beirut, Haifa, Jerusalem; then takes desert route to Druze mountains, Damascus, Homs, Baalbek, Orontes valley, Aleppo; continues on horseback to Antioch, Osmaniyeh, Adana, Tarsus, Karaman; then by train to Konya, explores Binbirkilisse

  1905

  Apr.—Takes on Fattuh, her principal servant on future desert journeys

  May—Stays in Constantinople before returning to England

  June–Sept.—GLB in England, begins The Desert and the Sown; Sir Hugh and family move to Rounton Grange

  Oct.—Studies ancient manuscripts in Paris with Reinach; writes essay on the geometry of the cruciform structure

  Nov.–Dec.—In England; begins to transform the Rounton Grange gardens

  Dec.–Feb.—Travels to Gibraltar, Tangier, Spain, and Paris with Sir Hugh

  1906

  Feb.–Dec.—GLB in England; Sir Hugh appointed Lord Lieutenant of the North Riding (twenty-five-year tenure)

  Dec.—GLB and Sir Hugh arrive in Cairo, joined by Hugo from Australia

  1907

  Feb.—Return to England, delayed by Sir Hugh’s illness

  Feb.–Mar.—GLB in England

  Mar.–July—In Turkey, travels on horseback across Anatolia visiting ancient sites; works with Professor Sir William Ramsay in Binbirkilisse; meets Dick Doughty-Wylie

  July—Half-sister Elsa marries Herbert, later Admiral Sir Herbert Richmond

  Aug.—GLB takes Fattuh to hospital in Constantinople; guest of Grand Vizier

  Aug.–Dec.—GLB in England; publication of The Desert and the Sown

  Oct.—GLB trains in surveying and map-making with the Royal Geographical Society

  1908

  Young Turks’ Committee of Union and Progress rebel against Sultan, taking six more years to achieve full power over Ottoman Empire

  GLB in England all year; founding secretary of the Women’s National Anti-Suffrage League; drafts The Thousand and One Churches; holidays in North Wales with Valentine Chirol and Frank Balfour

  Doughty-Wylie unofficially rallies Turkish troops to stop massacre of Armenians; wounded, organizes relief for twenty-two thousand refugees

  Sept.—Hugo Bell ordained priest; curate of Guiseley, Leeds

  1909

  Jan.–July—Travels to Syria and Mesopotamia; on horseback, follows Euphrates to Baghdad, measures Ukhaidir, then follows Tigris to Turkey

  July—In England; publication of The Thousand and One Churches; draws palace of Ukhaidir; writes on Armenian monasteries for Josef Strzygowski; meets Sir Percy Cox, discusses with him proposed desert journeys; begins Amurath to Amurath; continues with Rounton gardens, now becoming a showpiece

  Stepmother Florence first president of the North Riding branch of the British Red Cross (until 1930)

  1910

  Feb.—GLB visits archaeological sites in Italy; pays flying visit to Munich

  Hugh Bell stands as Liberal candidate for the City of London—unsuccessful. George V succeeds Edward VII

  1911

  Jan.–May—GLB goes via Beirut and Damascus across desert to Baghdad to check measurements of Ukhaidir; travels along Tigris

  April—Meets T. E. Lawrence at Carchemish in Syria working for David Hogarth

  June—Returns to England; publication of Amurath to Amurath

  1912

  GLB in England all year; involved in worldwide fund-raising for relief of Constantinople after the great fire; creates new water garden at Rounton; meets Dick Doughty-Wylie in London

  1913

  Jan.–Nov.—GLB in England; elected to Fellowship of the Royal Geographical Society; awarded its Gill memorial theodolite, first woman to receive an RGS award; completes The Palace and Mosque at Ukhaidir

  Woodrow Wilson becomes twenty-eighth President of the United States

  Nov.—GLB travels to Damascus to organize journey to Hayyil, with intention of meeting Ibn Saud in Riyadh

  Dec.—GLB and caravan leave for Hayyil

  1914

  Feb.—GLB arrives in Hayyil, put under house arrest

  Feb.–May—Released; continues to Baghdad, through Mesopotamian and Syrian deserts; returns to England

  June—Churchill persuades British parliament to approve Admiralty purchase of 51 per cent of Anglo-Persian oil company to secure fuel for navy

  14 June—Archduke Ferdinand of Austria shot at Sarajevo

  July—GLB awarded Gold Medal by the Royal Geographical Society

  Aug.—First World War begins; GLB gives speeches to raise troops; publication of The Palace and Mosque at Ukhaidir; Maurice mobilized as Lieutenant-Colonel commanding 4th (territorial) Battalion, Green Howards

  Oct.—Turkey joins war as ally of Germany

  Nov.—GLB works at Lord Onslow’s Hospital, Clandon Park, Surrey

 

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