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Timeline

21st April 1770

Age 17, Upper Gate, Redcliffe Church

 St Mary Redcliffe Church - Slideshow

Click the picture to open full screen with clickable links.

It was on the steps of St Mary Redcliffe, on Saturday 21st April 1770, that Chatterton famously distributed gingerbread to his friends and to the local children.  

 

According to Meyerstein, Chatterton went over the way to Mr Freeling's shop to buy the gingerbread. I wonder did his friend John Kator, whose father was also a baker, donate some of the gingerbread too?

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Chatterton was also given the money that his friends had collected to help sustain him on his fateful trip to London.  

 

Surely all of the above highlights the camaraderie that existed in the neighbourhood?

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One of the engravings in the slideshow above is from John Britton's History of Redcliffe church, an important little book, published in 1813, which contains the first printings of two of Chatterton's letters.

 

The steps to the left of the church lead into the North Porch, and a winding set of steps within the porch lead up to the famous muniment room, now known as 'Chatterton's Room.' 

Chatterton's Coach Trip to London

Bristol - Speenhamland - Shoreditch.  Age 17.

mail coach to london.jpg

April 24th 1770, was the day Chatterton caught the coach from Bristol to London. He chose to ride in the basket of the coach to Brislington and only go as an inside passenger when the weather turned bad. He knew, even as a 17 year-old boy, that what stretched ahead of him was not going to be easy. He also knew that he must be careful and make his money last until he could start earning and support himself.

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The second part of the journey, from Speenhamland to London, took around 12 hours - it was an adventure that would end with his death 122 days later. 

Chatterton's First Letter to his Mother
Sent upon his arrival in Shoreditch

To Sarah 26 April 1770 resized.jpg

Part of Chatterton's letter to Sarah Chatterton (his mother)

Dated 26 April 1770  :  View the letter with Taylors Analysis

As apprehensive as Chatterton must have been, his letter home to his mother, dated 26th April 1770, telling her about his trip, is a real delight. The original letter is lost, but we do have the above transcript by Herbert Croft, taken from its first printing in his 1780 book, Love and Madness : View the letter

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Donald Taylor suggests that after Croft returned the 'borrowed' letters to Mrs Chatterton, the letters were ‘dismembered’ and sold by her or her heirs.

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It seems that samples of Chatterton's handwriting were eagerly sought after by collectors. I have in my own collection, the lower portion of Chatterton’s letter  to his mother, 14th May 1770, which came from the collection of autographs belonging to Martha ‘Patty’ More, Hanah More’s sister. The letter was cut at the folds, and Hanah More, who loomed large in the life of both Sarah and Mary Chatterton, got the part with Chatterton's signature; where the other two parts of the letter are is anybody's guess.

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Read Chatterton's correspondence in chronological order : View.


A sadly departed friend, Tom Routledge, built an impressive collection of Chattertonian books, which his wife, Sandra, has passed on to Simon Fraser University (Canada). Sandra still owns a section cut from Chatterton’s letter to his sister, 30th May 1770, which had made its way to Japan before it was bought by Tom.


According to Donald Taylor, the whereabouts of these letters was unknown. Fortunately, we now have parts from two of the letters, however, the letter of 26th April 1770 is still missing. 


These are important documents with perfect provenance. They help to  prove that what Croft prints as Chatterton’s can be accepted as such.

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Note: The image of the coaches is from the 1830s and not Bristol; If anyone has an image of a coach and horses leaving Bristol in 1770 it would be welcome.

Links to All Works & Correspondence

   Call it what you will, authentic, doubtful, lost, or plainly wrong - if it was linked with Chatterton it will be included in Chatterton's Works & Correspondence.  This will be the base point from which we can examine every piece of work, and add notes and links accordingly.  

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