. The Calls of Norfolk and Suffolk : their Paston connections and descendants. ino, as near as possible to the works, andhad Mrs. Johnston and her sister, Mrs. Muirhead, to look after mycomforts. My health broke down from rapid overgrowth at theage of twenty in 1851, when I was sent away to Cupar, Fifeshire, myfathers native town, to live some months in the house my fatherhad provided for his three sisters. Charles Bell remained wth his aunts about six weeks, passingthrough Edinburgh on the day that Sir Walter Scotts monument wasunveiled. He then went to London to the great Exhibition of thaty


. The Calls of Norfolk and Suffolk : their Paston connections and descendants. ino, as near as possible to the works, andhad Mrs. Johnston and her sister, Mrs. Muirhead, to look after mycomforts. My health broke down from rapid overgrowth at theage of twenty in 1851, when I was sent away to Cupar, Fifeshire, myfathers native town, to live some months in the house my fatherhad provided for his three sisters. Charles Bell remained wth his aunts about six weeks, passingthrough Edinburgh on the day that Sir Walter Scotts monument wasunveiled. He then went to London to the great Exhibition of thatyear, and returned to St. Petersburg by the SS. Victoria, CaptainKruger. He was offered a situation in the office of Mr. ArcliibaldMerrilees through Mr. Merrilees having observed his fine 1856 General Wilsons successor let his mother the Governmentfarm on favourable terms, and a Yorkshire farmer, Mr. Stickney Hoe,was engaged as steward and to train David Bell, junior, who hadintended becoming a farmer. David Bell occupied that farm fifty years. He married Emma.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidcallsofnorfo, bookyear1920