The Red Barns Hotel
Family Home of the World Famous
Gertrude Bell
Set in almost rural surrounds the red Barns offer good facilities for children in the
Playpark and the collection of intersting animals in the grounds.
Rooms available single and double
Rates are very reasonable at £20.00 per person
inclusive of full English breakfast
Gertrude Bell
Gertrude Bell (1868-1926) was born in Washington, in what was then Co. Durham,
but, when she was very young, she moved with her family to Redcar Living in
the The Red Barns(now converted into a hotel). She was educated first of all
at home, and then at school in London; finally, in a time when it was not
at all usual for a woman to have a university education, she went to Oxford
to read history, and, at the age of twenty and after only two years study,
she left with a first-class degree. In the years immediately following, she
spent time on the social round in London and Yorkshire, she travelled extensively
in Europe, and visited Persia. Her travels continued with two round the world
trips, in 1897-1898 and in 1902-1903. At about this time too, in the seasons1899-1904,
her climbing exploits in the Alps earned her renown as a mountaineer.
But from the turn of the century onwards, her life was governed by a love
of the Arab peoples, inspired, it seems, by a visit to friends in Jerusalem
in 1899-1900. She learned their language, investigated their archaeological
sites, and travelled deep into the desert, accompanied only by male guides.
Her knowledge of the country and its tribes thereby gained made her a prime
target for recruitment by British Intelligence during the First World War,
later, as a Political Officer, and then as Oriental Secretary to the High
Commissioner in Baghdad, she became a king-maker in the new state of Iraq,
which she had helped to create. Her first love, however, was always for archaeology,
and, as Honorary Director of Antiquities in Iraq, she established in Baghdad
the Iraq Museum.
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