Scripto | Revision Difference | Transcription

Arthur Douglas Crease Letters, Diaries and Scrapbooks

ms0055b15f04e025.jpg

Revision as of Nov 20, 2015, 11:09:34 AM
edited by Rbcm.admin
Revision as of Nov 20, 2015, 11:09:53 AM
protected by Rbcm.admin
Line 3: Line 3:
 
The old lodge cottage has lost its roof but is still  picturesque.  My shins still ache a little from trampling up and down the Cornish Hills for I also went some distance up the Lynher to a pretty old bridge and a nice looking old inn called the Sportsmans Arms.  I hoped while in Plymouth to have got on board a new man of war but she had just been ordered to sea.  After returning to London I came.  Yesterday Milly & I went to a little village down the Orwell called Pin Mill - a free port
 
The old lodge cottage has lost its roof but is still  picturesque.  My shins still ache a little from trampling up and down the Cornish Hills for I also went some distance up the Lynher to a pretty old bridge and a nice looking old inn called the Sportsmans Arms.  I hoped while in Plymouth to have got on board a new man of war but she had just been ordered to sea.  After returning to London I came.  Yesterday Milly & I went to a little village down the Orwell called Pin Mill - a free port
  
BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 4 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1918..
+
BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 4 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1918.

Revision as of Nov 20, 2015, 11:09:53 AM

22

The old lodge cottage has lost its roof but is still picturesque. My shins still ache a little from trampling up and down the Cornish Hills for I also went some distance up the Lynher to a pretty old bridge and a nice looking old inn called the Sportsmans Arms. I hoped while in Plymouth to have got on board a new man of war but she had just been ordered to sea. After returning to London I came. Yesterday Milly & I went to a little village down the Orwell called Pin Mill - a free port

BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 4 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1918.