From London to Hill Top
Beatrix Potter came to love the Lake District from holidays there as a child. When she accumulated sufficient assets from her writing to make herself independent she bought Hill Top Farm, Sawrey, in the hills between Coniston Water and Windermere, two of the largest of the English Lakes. She was deeply in love with the area, and was a great supporter of the conservation movement and the development of the National Trust. She bought up considerable areas of farmland to save it from being taken over by speculative developers, and eventually willed it to the National Trust.
The book illustrated here is the original 1962 Penguin edition of Margaret Lane's biography of Beatrix Potter. (Yes, I bought it new then, and apart from a little yellowing it has survived in almost as new condition). It was originally published in hardback in 1946, just three years after its subject's death, and was written with the cooperation of her family.
I can't help wondering, given the class-consciousness (indeed down-right snobbishness) of her nouveau riche family in her early years, whether the fact that her biographer was the wife of the Earl of Huntingdon had anything to do with the access provided for the writing. Maybe not; I don't know, but whatever the case the quality of this first Beatrix Potter biography is so outstanding that it is still in print and popular today. A revised edition was published in 1985 to take account of information that had come to light in the intervening years.
Click on the book image above to buy from Amazon.com, or
here to buy in the UK from Foyles of London.
I'm also putting information about Beatrix Potter on my "England's Lakes" web site.
Table of Contents
Beatrix Potter's Lake District

As mentioned above, Beatrix Potter loved the Lake District. Here stories reflect her explorations around the lakes including Windermere and Coniston. Her house there has become a place of pilgrimage for lovers of her books to such an extent that the National Trust have been forced to put in place visitor scheduling systems. The sheer weight (or should that be volume) of footsteps at peak holiday times has become quite a challenge.
However, there's no need to follow the crowds at the height of the season. Visit the area at other times of year, and remember that you can combine the trip with visits to other National Trust properties while you're there.
You can prepare for your visit by reading this excellent book, Beatrix Potter's Lake District
Beatrix Potter and the National Trust
National Trust properties closely associated with Beatrix Potter include:
- Hill Top (her Lakeland farmhouse home for many years)
- The Beatrix Potter Gallery, Hawkshead (in her husband's legal office)
- Tarn Hows, near Coniston. [More on Tarn Hows].
- Melford Hall, Suffolk (includes a Beatrix Potter room where she was a guest)
Enjoy all these places, and why not consider joining the National Trust? Not only is the membership great value, giving access to locations all over England and Wales, but you'll be helping to conserve the national built and landscape heritage for future generations.
The Beatrix Potter Gallery, Hawkshead
in the building which previously housed her husband's law practice
Years later she married a country lawyer in the Lake District and so became Mrs. William Heelis. Now the 17th century house where he had his office in the village of Hawkshead (between Coniston Water and Windermere) has been converted by the National Trust into the Beatrix Potter Gallery.
If you're visiting the Lake District, don't miss this. It's something special. Hill Top, Beatrix Potter's home nearby, is also open to the public but can be very busy at peak times. The gallery is a very welcome addition to the Potter attractions in the area.
More Books about Beatrix Potter
Titles from Amazon
The Beatrix Potter Society
Patron: Patricia Routledge C.B.E.
The Society
> organises lectures in the UK,
> publishes source material and original research,
> issues a quarterly newsletter,
> supports story readings in public libraries,
> encourages discussion of Potter by book clubs and reading groups, and
> helps to resource the conservation of the originals of her works.
The Beatrix Potter Society can be contacted through its web site.
by 2 people |





