For readers who might be interested in the places and people I’ve used in my stories in the Time Travel Diaries of James Urquhart and Elizabeth Bicester, I’ve compiled a small list below.
Choosing locations and characters
With the exception of Mars, I’ve based my stories in areas where I have lived and know reasonably well in the North East of England and West Sussex.
This, I think makes it easier to write description of a place naturally.
I have heard of authors who have constructed detailed maps of places they have never visited, possibly assisted by Google StreetView,
in the hope of giving the impression that they know the place intimately.
This doesn’t work for me because I end up giving descriptions from the point of view of a tourist rather than a local.
Though I admit I had to use maps of Mars for the story line there.
But that was only for the reason outlined above.
With regard to real people in my novel, most of whom are long dead, I put my hand up to almost completely fabricating the characteristics I attached to them.
List of People and Places
People
Emily Davies
Served as mistress of Girton College from 1873 to 1875.
Before founding Girton she was the editor of the English Woman’s Journal and helped organize the first petition to parliament for women’s suffrage.
As a member of the London School Board and the Schools Inquiry Committee she worked to secure admission for women to official secondary school examinations.
In my stories, she was Elizabeth’s tutor at Girton.
William Rutter Dawes (1799-1868)
Born in West Sussex. Daws, had an 8 inch reflector telescope from which he made drawings of Mars.
These were used by R. A. Proctor, Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, to make a map of Mars.
In my 2nd book, A Drift Out of Time, he was a friend of Elizabeth’s father and bequeathed him a globe of Mars.
James Clerk Maxwell FRS FRSE (1831 –1879)
A Scottish scientist in the field of mathematical physics.
His most notable achievement was to formulate the classical theory of electromagnetic radiation, bringing together for the first time electricity, magnetism, and light as manifestations of the same phenomenon.
Maxwell’s equations for electromagnetism have been called the “second great unification in physics”.
In my book, Out of Time, he is instrumental in starting time travel
Maxwell was pivotal in providing the basis for Einstein’s theories of Relativity.
Without Maxwell’s equations the world would be a very different place and most importantly there would be no Star Trek!
T. W. Rolleston (1857–1920)
Founder member of the Irish Literary Society and wrote a book on Celtic Legends describing the coming of the Fairy Folk.
In my novels he is the person who discovers the diaries of James Urquhart and Elizabeth Bicester.
Nikola Tesla(1856 – 1943)
On March 13 1895 while conducting an experiment, he suffered an electrical shock which caused him to be able to see a little into the future and past.
He is used in my story, The Space Between Time, to cause the fracture and shift in time.
There is an excellent web site on his works and ideas at the Tesla Memorial Society of New York Website.
H. G. Wells (1866 – 1946)
He is instrumental in influencing the time travels of James and Elizabeth. His purpose is not really known save that he seems to work quite close with the Martians.
He shared digs with Horace Byatt at his house in South Street, Midhurst. This information is confirmed by the 1881 census.
He was apprenticed in January 1881, to Samuel Cowap, a chemist in Midhurst’s Church Hill.
His Science Fantasy, The Time Machine was published 1895.
I’ve written a page on Wells interest in time and the Time dimension
Places used in my stories
Chanctonbury Rings, West Sussex.
A mysterious place on the edge of the Sussex South Downs associated with many fairy legends.
Its ancient beech trees were destroyed in the great storm of 1987. Within the circle is the remains of what are thought to be a small Roman temple.
Church of St. Mary Magdalene and Denis, Midhurst
The parish Church between the Inn and the Castle. The tunnel between the Inn and the cavern could be accessed from its crypt.
Girton College
The first residential college for women established in England. Founded by Emily Davies, Barbara Bodichon, and Lady Henrietta Stanley in 1869.
When Girton opened, the university refused to let women formally sit for Tripos examinations (undergraduate course assessments), as it considered the tests too difficult for women.
Emily Davies fiercely opposed this idea and insisted that the college’s students be allowed into the exams. In 1873 three of Girton’s first students, Rachel Cook, Louisa Lumsden, and Sarah Woodhead, sat for the Tripos in Classics and Mathematics, and they are collectively known as ‘the Pioneers.’
I wanted to show that Elizabeth was up with James on mathematical knowledge, so I invented she had been at college there.
I possibly over did it though when I got her to make James explain Einstein’s Theory of Relativity in one evening.
Ham Green, West Sussex.
Elizabeth’s home is in Hamgreen. It’s not far away. The best way to find it is from Chichester. Turn right at Cocking and follow the old green path close to Downs.
After a while you will come to a small combe and if you are in luck you will see the old Lodge nestling in the woods. There is usually a Martian sitting on one of the gate posts but don’t look to closely for it will disappear.
Halley’s Comet
In A House Out of Time, a comet fractures time putting the distant past out of reach. James and Elizabeth have the task of going back to try and deflect the comet. They found a Martian spaceship quite useful for this task.
Helmsley Castle
A Norman castle situated in the market town of Helmsley, within the North York Moors National Park, North Yorkshire, England. It is mainly a ruin and walking distance from Helmsley.
One side of the keep has collapsed. In my Book, Out of Time this was done by the Martians trying to escape by a spaceship which had been incorporated in the keep.
Harrow Hill Camp, West Sussex.
According to Heather Robbins’ map of the fairy folk legends of England ,this was the last place in England where the fairies lived.
Actually it has a late Bronze Age fort on top and is surrounded by Neolithic flint mines. In A Drift Out of Time it used by the Martians as a base.
Midhurst Castle
The town is home to the Norman St. Ann’s Castle, which dates from the about 1120, and not to be confused with the imposing ruins of the old Cowdray House which stands near Midhurst.
The Castle foundations are all that can now be seen and are hidden in shrubbery and trees out of site of the average tourist.
They can be found just behind the parish church of St. Mary Magdalene and St. Denis.
For my stories I invented a cavern underneath accessible by a tunnel from the Inn and church where the servers and time controllers were housed.
Loch Ness Monster
Sighting by D. Mackenzie (c. 1871–72)
On October 1871 or 1872, by a Dr D. Mackenzie of Balnain. He described seeing an object that looked much like a log or upturned boat “wriggling and churning up the water”.
It was this story and the link between James and Urquhart Castle which gave me the idea to use the Loch Ness Monster as Marco’s time machine in my first book Out of Time.
Spread Eagle Hotel, South Street, Midhurst, West Sussex,
The Coaching Inn used by James and Elizabeth as a base in which they found the tunnel to the cavern under the Norman Castle.
One part of the inn is from about 1430 with half timbering and lattice windows.
It was originally a hunting lodge. In the main bedroom is a separate wig powdering room, used by travellers over the years and bears the date 1430 on the narrow black door.
It is near the door of this room that a ghost of an elderly man with a baldhead was seen.
Several witnesses have described this apparition as wearing a judicial uniform of scarlet robe, fur facings, black cravat and waistband, with a scarlet hood hanging back over his shoulders.
Steadham, West Sussex.
A small village on the River Rother in West Sussex where Elizabeth takes James at the beginning of The Space Between Time.
The village is only a mile from Iping where H.G. Wells based his book, The Invisible Man.
Urquhart Castle
Sits on a promontory on Loch Ness in Scotland.
it was chosen for no other reason originally because of James’ surname and of course the Loch Ness Monster.