The Remaining Diary of Mary Hardy 1773-1809: Entries 1781-1809 Not Included in the Four-Volume Edition of the Diary
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★★★★★
English
This book contains the rest of the diary text (162,000 words) not contained in the four volumes The Diary of Mary Hardy, also published 30 April 2013. Covering the years 1781-1809, which are abridged in that edition, it supplies the missing 44 per cent of Mary Hardy's Letheringsett entries. The Coltishall years 1773-81 are published in full in Diary 1. This raw text will appeal to enthusiasts, family and local historians and specialist researchers. If you are compiling work of systematic analysis such as a database you may need access to the complete text of this little-known diarist. The same editorial method is followed as in the four Diary volumes, but this book differs in having few illustrations. It has no editorial annotations or index.
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Product Details
Weight: 670g
Dimensions: 210 x 297mm
Publication Date: 30 Apr 2013
Publisher: Burnham Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780957336056
About
The editor Margaret Bird was an honorary research fellow in the History department of Royal Holloway University of London 2006-21. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 2016. For both her first degree at St Anne's College Oxford and her master's at Royal Holloway she specialised in aspects of English 18th-century history. She has been continuously engaged since 1988 in researching and editing this work published in five volumes. She has now brought out not only the full text of this diary but of Mary Hardy's nephew Henry Raven who as the brewery apprentice lived in the same household. Their unusual diaries together total more than 570000 words. Four volumes of commentary and analysis followed in April 2020 entitled Mary Hardy and her World 1773-1809. In June 2015 Margaret Bird won the award of the British Association for Local History (BALH) for Research and Publication as the overall winner in the long-articles category for her article 'Supplying the beer' first published in The Glaven Historian in 2014. She drew on her Mary Hardy research as the principal source for this study of life on the road in late-18th-century Norfolk.
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