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Scenes in Our Village

Investigating TR Williams' series of idyllic stereoviews of his childhood village.
Scenes In Our Village
© 2016 National Museums Scotland

Some time in the 1850s TR Williams produced a series of fifty-nine stereoviews entitled ‘Scenes in Our Village’ which presented a romanticised vision of 19th century English rural life. As we heard from Dr Brian May in the video, after a period of anonymity the village featured throughout this series has now been identified as Hinton Waldrist.

It was part of Berkshire until 1974 boundary changes transferred it to Oxfordshire. The village lies between Oxford and Faringdon. It was in this location that TR Williams spent part of his childhood and where, in 1847, he returned to solemnise his marriage to Elizabeth Gorfin.

Image: Stereocard entitled Scenes In Our Village. / No. / The Straw Yard, by TR Williams 1850-1855. The description on the back of this image reads: ‘Now that at length his harvest work is done, / His straw-yard yielding shelter from the sun / Of summer, and of winter’s frost and snows ; / His shed, his pump, his barrow, and his ground, / The worth of each, how well the farmer knows / And well they harmonize with all around’. IL.2003.44.6.7.80 © Howarth-Loomes Collection at National Museums Scotland

‘Scenes in Our Village’ became commercially available by Christmas 1856 and were taken using the wet collodion method on glass. There are some glass positive transparencies in existence as well as the more typical card-mounted examples.

The pictures in this series were given familial titles, including My Summer Haunt, The Road Through Our Village, The Dame and her Spinning Wheel, Maria Carson’s Washing-Day, A Gossip By The Way, Dame Edmunds’ Talkative Daughter and The First Warm Day In Spring, reflecting Williams’s emotional connection with the village.

They also unusually featured descriptive verse printed on the reverse of the cards, most likely written by Williams himself. We have reproduced this in the caption for each stereocard.

Image: Stereocard entitled Scenes In Our Village. / No. / John Sims at His Pigstie, by TR Williams, 1850-1855. The description on the back of this image reads: ‘John with content now views his fattening hog, / Dreams of plump bacon and the Christmas log, / For this with him in truth is dainty fare, / But to complete the feast we add the pomme-de-terr’. IL.2003.44.6.7.75. © Howarth-Loomes Collection at National Museums Scotland

The stereocard above depicts John Sims at his pigsty – Dr Brian May was thrilled to find Sims’ gravestone in the church at Hinton Waldrist.

Image: Stereocard entitled Scenes In Our Village. / No. / The Cart Shed- Quite Tired, by TR Williams 1850-1855. The description on the back of this image reads: ‘What matters it where, when we’re wearied and worn / With working or walking, awhile we sojourn? / Rest can be found by the peaceful at heart / On a barrow, a truck or the shaft of a cart’. IL.2003.44.6.7.87 © Howarth-Loomes Collection at National Museums Scotland

Further reading:

A Village Lost and Found: “Scenes in Our Village” by TR Williams. An Annotated Tour of the 1850s Series of Stereo Photographs by Brian May and Elena Vidal.

© 2016 National Museums Scotland
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