radstock4u home / Drawings by Chris Marshall
   
Pencil drawings by my brother Christopher Marshall.
Chris lived in Somerset and was a cartographic surveyor for the South West Electricity Board.
He died in 1994 age 42 after illness.

 

Note: The images here are highly compressed Jpeg files. Even the medium resolution versions do not do justice to the detail in these drawings.
Click on each picture to view in medium resolution.
Clandown Colliery - North East Somerset  

Pen & Ink drawing.
From a photograph of unknown date.

Work first began on this site in 1793. By 1810 £2000 had been spent on development, and by 1821 coal worth £12,252 had been produced from the 1,437 feet deep shaft. By 1824 some 60-100 tons were raised each day. Decline started around the turn of the century when water started to enter the mine. A loss of £766 was recorded in 1907, but the colliery kept going until November 11,1929. The pit-head was quickly demolished. Behind the chimneys can be seen the Methodist Chapel.

 
Clandown Colliery, North Somerset
Original drawing size 13 x 9 inches
Indoor Market and Bell Hotel - Radstock  
   

This Victorian market building has been fully restored and is now a museum of local history.

Visit
www.radstockmuseum.co.uk


for more info

 
Indoor Market and Bell Hotel, Radstock, Somerset
Original drawing size 6" x 4"
The Village School - Shoscombe - Somerset  
   

St. Julians Church of England school was once occupied by 120 pupils up to the age of 14. It is still in use today with about 80 pupils to age 11, but has been considerably extended.

For a fascinating insight into life in this area read The Life and Times of Ella Drew. Ella went to this school in 1903 at the age of three.

 
The Village School, Shoscombe, Somerset
Original drawing size 5" x 3.5"
   
Wellow Station - Somerset & Dorset Railway  
   

The Somerset & Dorset railway ran from Bath to Bournemouth as part of a popular holiday route from the Midlands to the south coast. Coal from the Somerset coalfields and stone from the Mendip quarrys were important freight traffic. Wellow station opened on 20 July 1874. After the line closed in March 1966 the station was converted into a private dwelling by the artist Peter Blake. (In 1967 he designed the cover of the Beatles LP Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band).

 
Wellow Station, Somerset & Dorset Railway
Original drawing size 6" x 4".
   
Bath Abbey - Somerset  
   

 

Bath Abbey was founded in 1499.
Bishop King, the founder, was a royal servant and employed the king's masons to build 'the finest vault in England'.
Building took a long time - mainly completed around 1616, the nave vault was not added until the 19th century.

 
Bath Abbey, Somerset
Original size 7" x 9".
   
Roman Baths - Bath - Somerset  
   

 

The Romans first arrived in AD44 and soon learnt the medicinal qualities of the hot spring water. Aquae Sulis was established as the leading spa town of Roman Britain, just as it was to become the same again in the 18th century. The city of Bath was extensively bombed during the second world war.

 
Roman Baths, Bath, Somerset
Original size 6" x 4"
   
Pulteney Bridge and Weir - Bath - Somerset  
   


Pulteney Bridge across the River Avon at Bath was built around 1770 and is unusual for the row of tiny shops that line both sides.

 

Pulteney Bridge and Weir, Bath, Somerset
Original size 6" x 4"

   
all material © Paul Marshall - (Reproduced with permission)