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Victoria Barbour

USA TODAY Bestselling Author
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Historical Wednesday: January 21, 2015

January 21, 2015

My apologies today to both Sarah Hegger and you for being a week off schedule. Like half of the universe, it seems, I was hit by that holiday flu. But I'm on the mend, and Sarah's guest post has had a week to percolate happily in my inbox. I'm very excited to have the wonderful and funny Sarah Hegger on the blog today. Sarah is both a contemporary and historical romance author (YAY!) and this week she's sharing her tale of researching the city of London, which is, in many historicals, a character unto itself. Thanks for coming by Sarah!


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Hi Victoria, we look forward to welcoming you to the historical fold. Like you, I write in both historical and contemporary, and I love being able to time jump between the two. My latest historical, Sweet Bea, a medieval romance, is actually on sale now for 99cents in all formats.

 

I’m not really sure how I ended up in medieval, as I had visions of being the modern day Georgette Heyer, but there has always been something about the rough, tough and grittiness of medieval times that fascinated me. The church played a leading role in everyone’s lives, but this was before etiquette and social affectations governed behavior and it pretty much was survival of the fittest.

I set myself an interesting challenge with Sweet Bea. Beatrice and Garret race to London—along with Bea’s friend Tom and assorted stragglers they pick up along the way—to warn Bea’s father that the family is in danger.

This was the time just before the Magna Carta was drawn up and the barons had taken London with their Army of God in opposition to King John. Bea’s father, Sir Arthur, was one of these rebel barons for the purposes of my story.

So, I have the group racing for London, and I stop. Medieval London was so not modern London. Stating the obvious, I know, but questions started to circulate.

It began my fascination with medieval London, and it was an amazing place. Parts of it are still standing in modern day London, if you can believe that. 

The city has been called “The Great Wen” by William Cobbett, a passionate ruralist who disparaged the city, and later, “The Big Smoke” for her suspect air quality. But London has always been an amazing city.

I stumbled across a wonderful book by Peter Ackroyd called “London: The Biography” and it traces the history of the city from ancient times right through to London today. If you have a tendency to get lost in the past and keep following one little trail after another, like I do, this is a great book.

This is a little of what I discovered:

Medieval London, did have walls, and was much smaller than the current city, which now incorporates the city of Westminster. At Sweet Bea’s time, the cities of Westminster and London were separated and the easiest way between them was the Thames.

London at the time I wrote her, was marked by the monasteries at her boundaries with the Tower of London on her eastern edge.

 

Sadly, the old London Bridge, the one Sweet Bea would have crossed was pulled down by the ever efficient Victorians in 1831, which was a great pity on some ways. It was a hive of activity, with buildings and whatnot stacked all along its span. The bridge was 26 feet wide, and 800-900 feet long and by 1358 (years after Sweet Bea) had about 138 shops along its span. There was a drawbridge in the center for tall ships and defensive gatehouses at both ends. And apparently at least one, multi-seated public latrine overhanging the parapets and discharging into the river below. There were also a number of private latrines (doesn’t really bear too much thinking about).

This bridge wasn’t the origin of the children’s rhyme London Bridge is Falling Down though. That bridge came before even this one. The one Sweet Bea crosses was actually completed in 1209 and had taken 33 years to complete. 

 

The rebel barons and their Army of God occupied London but many of them based themselves at Westminster Palace. The current Westminster Palace is the Houses of Parliament. The old one, the one Sir Arthur was staying in, is also and very sadly, long gone.

 

London was dirty, busy, extremely smelly and for those times packed with people. Interestingly enough even then it was a city filled with people from all over. Traders and merchants from far away worlds made their way up the Thames to trade in London.

London is probably my favorite city in the world. Spending time in medieval London only made her more interesting for me. I’m going to leave you with those immortal words by Samuel Johnson:

“When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in London, all that life can afford.”

Is anything sweeter than revenge?

 

Curious about Sweet Bea? Here's a morsel for you. 

In a family of remarkable people, ordinary Beatrice strives to prove herself worthy. When her family is threatened with losing everything, she rushes to London to save them. Unfortunately, she chooses as her savior the very man who will see her family brought low.

Garrett has sworn vengeance on Sir Arthur of Anglesea for destroying his life when he was a boy and forcing his mother into prostitution for them to survive. He has chosen as his instrument Sir Arthur's youngest daughter, Beatrice.

Can Beatrice’s goodness teach Garrett that love, not vengeance, is the greatest reward of all?

 

About Sarah Hegger

British and raised in South Africa, Sarah Hegger suffers from an incurable case of wanderlust. Her match? A hot Canadian engineer, whose marriage proposal she accepted six short weeks after they first met. Together they’ve made homes in seven different cities across three different continents (and back again once or twice). If only it made her multilingual, but the best she can manage is idiosyncratic English, fluent Afrikaans, conversant Russian, pigeon Portuguese, even worse Zulu and enough French to get herself into trouble.

Mimicking her globe trotting adventures, Sarah’s career path began as a gainfully employed actress, drifted into public relations, settled a moment in advertising, and eventually took root in the fertile soil of her first love, writing. She also moonlights as a wife and mother.

She currently lives in Draper, Utah, with her teenage daughters, two Golden Retrievers and aforementioned husband. Part footloose buccaneer, part quixotic observer of life, Sarah’s restless heart is most content when reading or writing books.

She loves to hear from readers and you can find her at any of the places below.

 

Website

Facebook

Twitter


In Historical Wednesday Tags London, Tower Bridge, Sweet Bea, Sarah Hegger, Historical Romance
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Historical Wednesday: January 7, 2015

January 7, 2015

I took a blogging break over Christmas, but how great it is that today's post is about a symbol of Christmas and hope? Today's guest blogger is the wonderful Jennie Marsland. Not only is she a talent author (seriously, look at her Amazon page, her books rock and her covers are breathtaking!) but she knows her history as well. Thanks so much for coming out to chat today about Halifax and Boston. 


Vicki, thank you for having me on your blog today!

Just before Christmas, I published the third book in my ‘Winds of War, Winds of Change’ series, set in my hometown of Halifax, Nova Scotia, during and after World War 1. The first two stories, Shattered and Deliverance, include a pivotal event in Halifax’s history, while the third, Flight, takes place as war gives way to the brave new world of the 1920s.

I find this time period fascinating because of the sweeping changes – social, moral, technological – that took place during those years.  Nowhere were those changes felt more deeply than here in Halifax. As the foremost point of departure for personnel and supplies bound for Europe, this small port city swarmed with soldiers and sailors from all over the world, and our harbour handled more shipping than New York’s.  That excess of traffic led to one of the greatest disasters of the 20th century, and to a tradition that Nova Scotians hold dear to this day. With the holiday season just past, I thought this would make a fitting story to share.

Boston’s Christmas Tree

Every Christmas tree is special, but the magnificent evergreen that glitters each year in Boston’s Prudential Plaza is unique. It’s a holiday symbol with a deeper meaning, a special gift in remembrance of help provided in a time of desperate need many years ago.

The year was 1917, and much of the world was at war.  North along the Atlantic coast from Boston, the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia bustled with activity as convoys bound for Europe with troops and supplies prepared for the dangerous crossing. Traffic on Halifax Harbour had never been so busy. All vessels had to come and go during daylight hours, as submarine nets were drawn across the Harbour’s mouth at night. Amid the bustle, the city looked forward to Christmas. The economy was booming and the shops were full of festive goods to cheer yet another wartime holiday.

On the morning of December 6th, as men set off for work and children made their way to school, two ships collided in the Harbour. One of them, the French vessel Mont Blanc, was fully loaded with explosives – TNT, picric acid, airplane fuel and gun cotton. The collision sparked a fire.  Knowing their deadly cargo, the crew of Mont Blanc took to the lifeboats and left the ship to drift into a pier in Halifax’s industrial North End. At 9:04 am Mont Blanc detonated in what is still the largest non-natural, non-atomic explosion in recorded history.

 

The North End was devastated. Homes and businesses were blown away, and ships touched bottom as the Harbour parted with the force of the blast. Over a thousand people were killed instantly and a thousand more died later of their injuries, but horrific as the loss of life was, it would have been much worse but for the bravery of Vince Coleman, a railway telegraph operator who sacrificed his life to send a warning message to an oncoming train. Thanks to Coleman, the whole world quickly got word of the disaster. Response was overwhelming, especially from the state of Massachusetts, where so many Nova Scotians had family ties.

Within a day, a train loaded with relief supplies, doctors and nurses set out for the stricken city. They relieved Halifax’s exhausted medical personnel, and remained to provide aid and distribute supplies until the casualties had been cared for and aid began to arrive from other sources. There is no doubt that without the help provided by Massachusetts, the explosion would have caused even more hardship and suffering.

Nova Scotia has not forgotten. And so, every year, we send a carefully chosen, towering tree to “the Boston States” to stand in Prudential Plaza, a reminder that kinship and generosity know no borders.


Jennie Marsland is a teacher, an amateur musician and for over thirty years, a writer. She fell in love with words at a very early age, and the affair has been life-long. 

Jennie grew up reading Louis L'Amour and Zane Grey. She still has a soft spot for Westerns, and she draws further inspiration from her roots in rural Nova Scotia and stories of earlier times, passed down from her parents and grandparents. Glimpses of the past spark her imagination.

Jennie lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia, with her husband and their two rambunctious Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retrievers, Ceilidh and Echo. When she isn't teaching or writing, Jennie plays guitar, dabbles in watercolours, gardens, and caters to the whims of the four-footed tyrants of the household. Jennie can be found on the Web here!

In Historical Wednesday Tags Jennie Marsland, Halifax Explosion, Boston Christmas Tree, World War One, History, Historical Romance
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