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Friday, 3rd September 2010

Carroll's work goes under the hammer

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Published Date: 20 January 2006
A RARE book dedicated by Lewis Carroll to the daughter of the Dean of Durham is to go under the hammer.
The sought-after, first-edition copy of Carroll’s 1886 publication, Alice’s Adventures Under Ground, was given by the writer in January, 1887 to Alexandra Kitchin, affectionately known as Xie.
Her dad, George Kitchin, was the last dean of Durham Ca
thedral to govern Durham University, where he worked from 1908 until his death in 1912.
Xie was Carroll’s favourite photographic model and he took at least 50 pictures of her.
When a friend asked the famous author how to take a wonderful photograph, Carroll replied: “Take a lens and put Xie before it.”
Xie’s book is one of about 800 antiques and family treasures which the Duke of Gloucester has put up for sale and which are expected to fetch between £1.3million and £2 million at the auction.
It has been put up for sale by the Queen’s cousin, the Duke of Gloucester, to help pay his father’s death duties.
The book, which was later developed into Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, is expected to fetch up to £3,000 at Christie’s in London on Thursday, January 26.
Carroll, whose real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, had many connections with Sunderland and Whitburn in particular.
He made a number of visits to his cousin Margaret Wilcox, wife of the Collector of Customs in Sunderland, and lived in Highcroft, Whitburn, although his house no longer exists.
During his time in Whitburn, Carroll visited Whitburn Hall, home of Lady Hedworth Williamson, second cousin to Alice Liddell, to whom Carroll’s most famous books are dedicated.
Here he met Frederika Liddell, another of Alice’s cousins whom he described as “one of the nicest children I have ever seen”.
But the work most associated Carroll with Whitburn is the poem The Walrus and the Carpenter, which was claimed to be inspired by a stuffed walrus which was on display for many years at Sunderland‘s museum – although the famous exhibit only went on display after the publication of the poem.
Only the head of the museum’s walrus now remains, but a magnificent bronze statue in Mowbray Park still maintains the link.
In April 1869, Carroll’s sister, Mary, married the Rev Charles Collingwood. Their home, the rectory at Southwick, now Holy Trinity, on Church Bank, has been recognised with a historic blue plaque and there is evidence that it too once housed a stuffed walrus.
Today, a statue of Lewis Carroll can be seen in Whitburn library. It was moved from its original home in Cornthwaite Park after it was damaged.



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  • Last Updated: 20 January 2006 12:00 PM
  • Source: Sunderland Echo
  • Location: Sunderland
 
 
 

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