Gainsborough Lane Explained

Gainsborough Lane is a rural road in the South East Area, Ipswich which has been noted for its charm since the nineteenth century. In 1888 John Ellor Taylor, curator of Ipswich Museum, described it as the "dearest walk" available locally for Ipswich people.[1]

In 1901 William Dutt wrote:

"When Gainsborough resided in Ipswich much of his time was spent on the banks of the Orwell, and a lane not far from the town, now known as Gainsborough's Lane, is depicted in his picture The Market Cart, which is in the National Gallery. This lane owes its beauty to its magnificent oaks, which interlace their branches above the turf-bordered footpath leading to the Priory Farmhouse in which Margaret Catchpole was employed as a domestic servant. This house was formerly an Augustinian monastery".[2]

It proved a popular topic for local artists in the late nineteenth century such as John Postle Heseltine[3] and Henry George Todd.[4]

Gainsborough Lane leads from Pipers Vale to Priory Farm, once the workplace of Margaret Catchpole.[5] Nowadays the Orwell Bridge crosses over it.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Taylor . James Ellor . In and About Ancient Ipswich . 1888 . . Norwich.
  2. Book: Dutt . William A. . Highways and Byways in East Anglia . 1901 . McMillan and Son . London . 12 November 2022.
  3. Web site: Heseltine . John Postle . John Postle Heseltine – Gainsborough Lane Ipswich – Rare Antique British Etching . eBay . 28 July 2021 . en-gb.
  4. Web site: Gainsborough Lane Ipswich by Henry GeorgeTodd . www.artnet.com . Artnet . 28 July 2021.
  5. Web site: Wright . Pip . Gainsborough Lane . pipwright.com . Pip Wright . 28 July 2021.
  6. Book: Twinch . Carol A. . Ipswich . 2006 . Breedon . Derby . 1859835015.