Page 15 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)_Neat
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                        Early Days






       Fifty years after her death the Victorian mansion in which Gertrude
       Bell was born, the Hall at Washington in England’s northern
       county of Durham, is a training centre for the National Coal
       Board. Visitors arrive at the village from many parts of the world
       but they usually come to see another house, the Old Hall, which
       was built in the thirteenth century and became the home of the
       de Wessingtons, George Washington’s ancestors. Few make the
       journey of a hundred yards or so to the redbrick establishment          i
       which was the home of three generations of the Bell family and
       whose first owner, Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell (usually called
       Lowthian), may be said to have done as much as any man to create
       the industries that have sustained and tormented the north-east of
       England to this day, and to foster the technical advances of the
       late nineteenth century which made Britain rich beyond the
       dreams of the pioneers of the Industrial Revolution. Those who
       take the trouble to call at the other Hall may, by peering through
       its stained-glass and leaded windows, just make out a wall plaque
       and its legend which neatly sets out the essential facts of the life
       of the industrialist’s grand-daughter:
                             GERTRUDE BELL
                 Scholar, historian, archaeologist, explorer,
                       poet, mountaineer, gardener,
                     distinguished servant of the state.
                     She was born here on 14 July 1868
                     and died in Baghdad 12 July 1926
       It is necessary to go to the back of the house to find a tall, slender
       tower with windows from bottom to top, each surmounted by a
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