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Joseph Hardy, Distant Mountains, as seen from Villeneuve de Marsan, Aquatint Engraving, 1825

Early 19th-Century travel journals and guides document the development of tourism in Pau, France, the capital of Navarre, resulting in one of the most important international winter resorts in the 19th-century until World War I. The winter colony rebounded during prohibition and gaming restrictions, ultimately disappearing after they were overturned during the Great Depression. Most of the early 19-century tourist marketing themes are still valid and used today.

Joseph Hardy , Map with Pau drawn as the arrival gateway from Bordeaux into the High Pyrenees,1825
Joseph Hardy, Chateau of Henri Quatre at Pau, Aquatint Engraving, 1825
Chateau and Town of Pau, Colored Lithography. William Oliver, 1842

Napoleon, 1808

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Napoleon Bonaparte

John Milford, 1814

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A recent graduate of St. John's College, Cambridge, John Milford, began his grand tour during the Peninsular War, disembarking in Lisbon and following the reopened path up to Saint-Jean-de-Luz, where a friend had a post with at Wellington's headquarters. He does not state whether he met Wellington.[1] Milford remained with headquarters, joining it along with the baggage from Saint-Jean-de-Luz at Saint-Sever, then to Aire through to Toulouse, returning to Bordeaux with the troops in May 1814. It is from Bordeaux that Milford begins his published journal descending to Pau via Aire before continuing east through the Pyrenees.

Pau is a neat town, of considerable size and delightfully situated. It stands on an eminence, above a charming valley, through which the river Gave flows in a most picturesque manner, dividing itself into meandering rivulets, which leave many a little island in their course. The lower Pyrenees rise with majesty from the luxurious vale and form a romantic boundary to the enchanting picture.

For tourists, in addition to the view from Pau, Milton recommends the tortoise-shell cradle of Henry IV born in 1557 at the Château de Pau, which was then a decaying prison and barrack. He also describes an invalid who performs with a singing dog.

Lord Selkirk, 1819

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Thomas Douglas, 5th Earl of Selkirk,

George Payne Rainsford James, c. 1820

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George Payne Rainsford James

Marianne Colston, 1821

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Marianne Colston,

Antoine Ignace Melling and Joseph-Antoine Cervini, 1821

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Antoine Ignace Melling

Joseph Hardy, Esq., 1825

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In his 1825 book, "A Picturesque and Descriptive Tour in the Mountains of the High Pyrenees comprising Twenty-Four Views of the Most Interesting Scenes", Joseph Hardy fancied himself transported into a fairyland during his visit to the high Pyrenees. He states some English families made Pau their winter home and moved into the Pyrenees during the summer months. He describes work on the chateau as destructive rather than restorative. There is no mention of soldiers. His extraordinary book of aquatint engravings could have tempted tourists to follow his visit to the Haute-Pyrenees.[2]

Introduction of Reading Room and Club, 1828

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Place Royale thermal spa construction

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Doctor James Clark, 1829

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Sir Doctor James Clark, 1st Baronet, who later became the physician for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, was well-known for his early study of thermal stations published in 1820, "Medical Notes on Climate, Diseases, Hospitals, and Medical Schools in France, Italy, and Switzerland, comprising an Inquiry into the Effects of a Residence in the South of Europe in Cases of Pulmonary Consumption". Clark's second publication in 1829, "The Influence of Climate in the Prevention and Cure of Chronic Diseases, more particularly of the Chest and Digestive Organs", included a chapter "Climate of Pau" written by Dr. James George Playfair, who declared Pau as the best thermal station in France due to its proximity to Pyrenean mineral waters; however, he did not recommend Pau for rheumatism or tuberculosis.[3][4][5]

Derwent Conway

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Henry David Inglis

Pierre Saget, 1831

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James Harding, Costumes of the French Pyrenees

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James Erskine Murray, 1835

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James Erskine Murray's, "A Summer in the Pyrenees" explores what he describes a scarcely visited mountain range beginning at Pau in the summer of 1835, that he considers of historical importance and situated over a high terrace overlooking the Gave and commanding a fine prospect of the surrounding country. He describes Pau as a favorite place of exile to those English seeking an economical place with nice climate. He describes the town as sometimes abommably dirty, sadly deteriorating the purity of the mountain air, recommending the south side of the Rue Royale. Below is the extensive and wooded plain of the Gave, broad and open to the east and west, where the windings of the river are traced and lost in the distance, but narrowed and contracted to a mile in breath opposite to the town by the numerous low hills which, running out laterally from the mountains, and divided into numberless small valleys, ravines and dells, resemble a succession of mighty buttresses, intended as a support for the great mountains behind them. These hills, chequered with copses, and the vineyards from which the red and white wines of Jurançon are produced, and adorned with country houses,-border the noble plains beneath. Higher and more distant hills succeed them; and, above the whole is seen one long-continued range of summits, of most fantastic forms, from the Pic du Midi de Bigorre,-forming a promontory on the east,-to the inferior mountains which, beyond the valley d'Aspe, gradually decrease in height as the approach the ocean. Among the most distant summits to the east may be distinguished the glaciers of the Neouville [sic] and the Vignemale; sparkling in the sun; and at the head of the valley d'Ossau, which opens immediately to the south of Pau, the pic de Gers, the masses of the Eaux Bonnes, and the gigantic fork of the Pic du Midi d'Ossau, the most picturesque-looking of all the Pyreneans mountains, are conspicuous in the outline of the magnificent and unequalled amphitheater. Murray describes the society as one of chance visitors, limited and seldom pleasant or agreeable. However, he enjoyed time spent with Hanoverian Karl Willhelm Baron von Maydell a colonel at Waterloo, who died at Pau in 1840.

Mary Theresa Boddington, July 1835 - March 1836

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The Irish wife of a London wine merchant to the West Indies, well-travelled Mrs. Boddington describes in her 1837 publication, "Sketches in the Pyrenees", her first day at Pau: A long balcony commands all the advantages of the splendid position which the castle rejoices in, - a position that may boldly enter the lists with any thing in any country, at least that I know of. I mean any thing of similar or approaching character[...] It recalls Berne (Switzerland), or rather the view from it; but the tone of coulouring is more cheerful, and the long withdrawing vale that hides itself in the mountains, has still more depth and warmth than even the fine view from the cathedral platform of the latter place.[...]there is a prodigious flush and fulness of beauty here, the form and wooding of the côteaux leave nothing to be wished for, and the fine mixture of southern skies and southern vegetation with the young verdure of moister latitudes is perfectly delicious. and then sunset from the chateau: The stream of orange light - not merely coulour, but live light - which the sun has left behind it, spreads over the whole western heavens, but divided by the broad beams that still ray out from its golden bed. The mountains to the south-east gather shadows; while the river, that winds slowly through its dark and gracefully tufted banks, catches a pal silvery shine, which, as it flows onwards to the west, changes to the amber of the sky.[...]Sweet and gracious magic! Beautiful and innocent witchcraft of the twilight hour! I feel while I watch your changeful necromancy as if a fresh spring had burst out in my heart and the gift of belief had come again with it; the charming belief in all that bright phantasma which experience calls visions, but which are truths - welcome and precious to the fancy. Mrs. Boddington identifies Pau as a portal to the healing waters of the Pyrenees and an English colony: The rambling English seem to love Pau, and some have chosen it for their residence. It has many good houses in airy and agreeable - sometimes splendid positions, a few handsome hotels, reasonable markets abundantly supplied, delicious walks and rides, a charming climate, romance in the mountains, and real life in the mountain baths; with a reputation for winter gaiety, and social intercourse on pleasant terms. Mrs. Boddington wintered from a house on the hill overlooking Gelos, describing the local people as faithful, poor, carefree and generous. She does not mentioning former soldiers at Pau and her two-volume guide has no mention of Wellington or his Pyrenean campaign.<[6]

Elizabeth Brodie, Duchess of Gordon, 1837

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Elizabeth Brodie

Pierre Saget, 1838

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Antoine Dugenne, 1839

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Christ Church

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Déseré Nisard, 1841

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Allom, Thomas, Château and Bridge of Pau, 1840

Victor Hugo, 1842

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Doctor Alexander Taylor, 1842-1843, republished in 1856 and 1861

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William Oliver (1804-1853), 1843

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William Oliver published a series of 24 colored lithographs in 1843.

Eugene Déveria, 1843

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Eugène Devéria, statue Henri IV and costumes

English Club, 1856

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Pau Golf Club, 1856

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Ward McAllister, 1856-1858

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Charles Richard Weld, 1859

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Notes

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References

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  1. ^ Milford, John (1818). Observations, Moral, Literary, and Antiquarian, made during a Tour through the Pyrennees [sic], South of France, Switzerland, the Whole of Italy and The Netherlands, in the Years 1814 and 1815 in Two Volumes. Piccadilly: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, Patersoster-Row; and J. Harchard.
  2. ^ Hardy, Joseph (1825). A Picturesque and Descriptive Tour in the Mountains of the High Pyrenees: Comprising Twenty-four Views of the Most Interesting Scenes, from Original Drawings Taken on the Spot; with Some Account of the Bathing Establishments in that Department of France. London: R. Ackermann.
  3. ^ Clark, James, Sir Doctor (1820). Medical Notes on Climate, Diseases, Hospitals, and Medical Schools, in France, Italy, and Switzerland; Comprising an Inquiry into the Effects of a Residence in the South of Europe, in Cases of Pulmonary Consumption, and Illustrating the Present State of Medicine in Those Countries. London: T. and C. Underwood.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Clark, James, Sir Doctor (1829). The Influence of Climate in the Prevention and Cure of Chronic Diseases, more particularly of the Chest and Digestive Organs. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Webb, Diana and Tony (2020). The Anglo-Florentines. The British in Tuscany (1814-1860). London: Bloomsbury Academic. p. 383-384.
  6. ^ Boddington, Mary (1837). Sketches in the Pyrenees; with some remarks on Languedoc, Provence, and the Cornice in Two Volumes. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman.
  7. ^ Ellis, Sarah Stickney (1841). Summer and Winter in the Pyrenees. London: Fisher, Son, & Co.
  8. ^ Costello, Louisa Stuart (1844). Béarn and the Pyrenees. London: Richard Bentley.