Shining a light on one of Lakeland’s most neglected historic figures – the remarkable Eliza Lynn Linton, the first female salaried journalist in England.
In the company of author Philippa Harrison, Keswick Museum curator Nicola Lawson and academic Sue Wilkinson, we learn about Eliza’s traumatic childhood and the self-education that allowed her to escape the family home and embark on a writing career among the literary elite of her day.

Reflecting on the passionate attachments Eliza formed with both men and women, we turn to Eliza’s beautiful The Lake Country, a ‘love book’ to Cumbria that inspired Alfred Wainwright, and which Rawnsley thought would never be bettered.
As we make our way to the overgrown Lynn family grave, we consider the contradictions of a contrary life; of Eliza’s complex views on sexuality; of the great U-turn that saw her abandon her one-time progressive feminist ideals; and of the curious fact that this once infamous writer – and her superlative guidebook – are now barely acknowledged, even in the margins of Cumbrian history.
Learning
- Learning Opportunities
- Loan Boxes
- Online Activities
- Podcasts
- Secret Cumbria: The secrets of the Keswick museum wars
- Countrystride: Eliza Lynn Linton & the Lake Country
- The Sensational Museum: What does ‘Multisensory’ really mean?
- Secret Cumbria: Keswick and the secret of the Three Bears
- Countrystride: Robert Southey, The Neglected Lake Poet
- Mr Fox and Old Badger’s Adventures of Discovery