These memoirs contain a plethora of gems for a historical writer and everyone else interested in the first half of the 19th century. The detailed descriptions, not made for an audience but a journal to leave for her family, gives it a unique and interesting perspective.
The family travelled a lot; London, Hertfordshire, Scarborough, Ramsgate and Edinburgh to name a few, my point is that this is a versatile book for research of the era far beyond the Highlands which was my motivation for reading this book.
I was amazed to read that six-year-old Elizabeth was taken to see plays on Drury Lane and Covent Garden. The games they played and the books they read.
Small details like a swinging cot for the baby in the post-chariot the children travelled in is just one of the many things I discovered that I had never heard of before. How it was to be a child in this era was another. Elizabeth Grant was a privileged child but it was an interesting perspective.
It portrays details that it is difficult to find like how it was to travel the northern road and cross the Spey on a ferry.
Interaction between children and their parents, governess and other relatives. It is a unique peek into the existence of early 19th-century living, ladled with interesting details.
Recommend