Cleveland and North Yorkshire rarely feature in the literature maps but there’s a surprising history in these parts that led George Markham Tweddell to write The Bards and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham in 1872, explaining that –
“ I have long cherished the idea of a work similar to Chambers’s excellent Cyclopedia of English Literature, to be confined to the poets and prose writers of the North of England…to Parody Leigh Hunter, I could name a local writer for every tick of my watch“
The idea was for a much wider North of England work but, as he explains, the idea for a more localised volume came from his friend ‘Chips’ who proposed the idea in 1860 while Tweddell Master of the Ragged and Industrial school in Bury. On returning to Stokesley, Tweddell, on finding that his friend did not have the time to complete the task, took it on and made it his own as he explains in more detail in the Dedication to the book. It was a surprise to find the book only availbable in the reference library or antiquarian books shops at quite a price when most of this knowledge was largly unknown. In 2005 I bought an original 1872 copy and you can now rdownload the PDF file which is housed on Google Drive.
Click below to read as a flipbook or download Free the original version of George Markham Tweddell‘s Bards and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham 1872
The book is 392 pages long with woodcuts of the various authors / poets, a dedication, introduction and index and the chapters contain a mix of biography, historical commentary, poems and extracts of prose by the authors. Writers from Whitby to Hartlepool, from 500 AD to the 1800’s of varying styles and backgrounds – a treasure trove of literature that includes the following writers –
- Caedmon (Poet of Whitby / Lealholm)
- Walter De Hemingford (Chronicler of Austin Priory Guisborough)
- John Gower (Gower the Moral) (Poet and Chaucer’s mentor) Sexhow (Near Stokesley and Stittenham – Sheriff Hutton)
- Rev Bernard Gilpin (Norton on Tees – Writers – ‘Apostle of the North of England’ ‘Father of the Poor’)
- Roger Ascham (Kirby Wisk 1515) Writer
- Dean Wittingham (South Durham) (Psalms etc)
- Francis Mewburn (Ormesby, Darlington, Antiquarian and Solicitor to the Stockton and Darlington Railway).
- Lionel Charlton (Whitby – Historian)
- John Jackson (Schoolmaster of Rudby School, Hutton Rudby and poet) (The Cleveland Fox Chase)
- Thomas John Cleaver (Stockton on Tees, Poet, President of Stockton Literary Club)
- The Chaloners – Sir Thomas Chaloner, The Elder, (Guisborough Priory)
- The Chaloners – Sir Thomas Chaloner, The Younger (Guisborough)
- The Chaloners – Rev. Edward Chaloner
- The Chaloners – Thomas Chaloner MP Commonwealthsman
- The Chaloners – James Chaloner MP Commonwealthsman
- Rev. Henry Foulis – (Inglby Manor, Near Stokesley. One of the best read and skillful writers of the 17thC.including The Gunpowder Treason)
- William Martin (Associated with Great Ayton, Guisborough and Middlesbrough – Poet (Be kind to the Poor)
- Joseph Reed (Stockton on Tees. Playwright, The Register Office – a dialect play relating to a character from Great Ayton, performed at Dury Lane, London).
- William Emerson (Hurworth on Tees. Mathematical and Scientific author).
- John Reed Appleton (Stockton on Tees. Antiquarian writer / Journalist and Tweddell’s walking companion).
- Jabez Cole (Poet, Ingleby Greenhow)
- William Mudd (Botanical writer, Great Ayton and Curator of Cambridge Botanical Gardens).
- John Castillo (Lealholm. Poet (Bard of the Dales), Stonewaller and Methodist Preacher. Well published (including by Tweddell) and highly popular poet in the area.
- Bishop Brian Walton ( Seamer (Near Stokesley) Plays, Polyglot Bible etc).
- Thomas Webber (Stockton Poet Laureate)
- Byron Webber (Grandson of Thomas Webber, Stockton Poet)
- John Walker Ord (Poet, Historian, author of History and Antiquities of Cleveland, Guisborough)
- John Ryley Robinson (Poet not from the area but had had sung of the area)
- James Clephan (More North Durham but verses about the Cleveland area)
- Henry Heavisides (Stockton printer, poet, author, historian, musician and radical)
- Samuel Gordon (Not from the area but wrote for local newspapers and produced three books on the area)
- Frank Wilkenson (Hurworth on Tees, Poet)
- The Hon Commodore Constantine John Phipps MP (Afterwards Baron Mulgrave) (Mulgrave – another Cleveland Navigator around the time of Captain Cook – Journal of Voyages)
- Rev James Holme – (Yorkshire poet associated with Kirkleatham)
- Rev Thomas Holme & Mary Jane Holme (Related to above. Hymns and Sacrad poetry)
- Rev John Graves – (History of Cleveland).