Northern France : from Belgium and the English Channel to the Loire, excluding Paris and its environs : handbook for travellers . noon 50 c., afternoon 1 fr., evening or wholeday 3fr.; subscription per week 12, fortnight 20, month 35, season 60 fr.; 2 pers. 22, 36, 6J, and 110 fr.; 3 pers. 33, 52, 80, and 160 fr. — Theatre,adm. 1-5 fr. Steamboats to Newhaven twice a day. British Vice-Consul, //. W. Lee-Jorlin, Esq., Rue du Faubourg de laBarre 2. — U. S. Consular Agent, M. Raoulle Bourgeois, uai de Lille 8. English Churches. Christ Church, Rue Dcmarest; services on 11 and 7 (in summer 7.


Northern France : from Belgium and the English Channel to the Loire, excluding Paris and its environs : handbook for travellers . noon 50 c., afternoon 1 fr., evening or wholeday 3fr.; subscription per week 12, fortnight 20, month 35, season 60 fr.; 2 pers. 22, 36, 6J, and 110 fr.; 3 pers. 33, 52, 80, and 160 fr. — Theatre,adm. 1-5 fr. Steamboats to Newhaven twice a day. British Vice-Consul, //. W. Lee-Jorlin, Esq., Rue du Faubourg de laBarre 2. — U. S. Consular Agent, M. Raoulle Bourgeois, uai de Lille 8. English Churches. Christ Church, Rue Dcmarest; services on 11 and 7 (in summer ); Chaplain. Rev. Dr. Merk, M. A. — All Saints,Rue de la Barre; services at 11 and ; Chaplain, Rev. F. J. JohnstonSmith, Golf Links, on the Pourville road, 1 M. from Dieppe (visitors fees, 3 fr. per day, 10 fr. per week, 25 fr. per month). Dieppe, with 22,440 inhab., is situated in a valley formed bytwo ranges of lofty white chalk-rliffs, at the mouth of the .?\rque$,which forms a harbour capable of containing vessels of considerable§ize. The estuary was formerly called the Deep, from which the. to Paris. DIEPPE. 4. Route. 39 town derives its name. In spite of the vicinity of Le Havre, Dieppestill carries on a considerable trade in coal with England and intimber with Norway and Sweden. Fish is, however, the staple com-modity of the place. Dieppe is also a fashionable watering-place,being annually visited by numerous English , as well as Frenchfamilies. Captured and destroyed several times during the warsbetween England and France and afterwards in the religious wars,Dieppe suffered severely from the plague in 1668 and 1670, and in1694 the citadel and town were reduced to luins by the Englishfleet returning from an unsuccessful attack on Brest (p. 219). The Gare Maritime (PI. E, 2} and the Steamboat Quays are onthe N. side of the old Avant Port or outer harbour. To the ,beyond the Bassins Duquesne and Berigny, lies the Central Station(PI. C, 3); and to the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherleipsickbaedeker