Izaak Walton's Cottage of Walton's Shallowford house, 1888 In his will, Walton left
his property at
Shallowford in
Staffordshire for the benefit of the poor of his native town. He had purchased Halfhead Farm there in May 1655. In doing this he was part of a more general retreat of Royalist gentlemen into the English countryside, in the aftermath of the
English Civil War, a move summed up by his friend Charles Cotton's well-known poem "The Retirement" (first published in the 5th edition of Walton's
Compleat Angler). The cost of Shallowford was £350, and the property included a farmhouse, a cottage, courtyard, garden and nine fields along which a river ran. Part of its attraction may have been that the River Meece, which he mentions in one of his poems, formed part of the boundary. The farm was let to tenants, and Walton kept the excellent fishing.
Commemorations Advertising mogul and land developer
Barron Collier founded the Izaak Walton Fly Fishing Club in 1908 at his
Useppa Island resort near
Fort Myers, Florida. The
Izaak Walton League is an American association formed in 1922 in
Chicago, Illinois, to preserve fishing streams. Walton has been inducted into the American
National Fresh Water Fishing Hall of Fame. There is a forest preserve in Homewood, Illinois, called the Izaak Walton Forest Preserve. The Izaak Walton Hotel in the Staffordshire village of
Ilam overlooks the River Dove, at the entrance to
Dovedale. There are also two pubs in England named The Izaak Walton: one in the village of
East Meon, Hampshire, the other in
Cresswell, Staffordshire. In the county town of
Stafford, there is now a statue of him placed in the town park, by the bank of the river. This route through the park was originally known as 'Izaak Walton Walk', there is also a street in the north part of Stafford named after him. There is a creek named after him in
Owatonna, Minnesota. There is also a pub in
Norwich named 'The Compleat Angler'. The Compleat Angler Hotel in
Bimini,
Bahamas, was destroyed by fire in 2006; the hotel bar was frequented by
Ernest Hemingway. The Allen-Edmonds shoe company of
Port Washington, Wisconsin, produces a "Walton" style in tribute. In the Silver Divide region of the
Sierra Nevada mountain range of California,
Mount Izaak Walton is named after Izaak Walton. The Izaak Walton State Recreation Site in
Sterling, Alaska, is located at the confluence of the Moose River and the
Kenai River, and his name is lent to the
Izaak Walton Inn in Montana. There is an Izaak Walton Inn in
Embu, Kenya, overlooking a small stream that feeds into the Rupingazi River.
Non-fiction •
Charles Lamb, in his
letter to
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, recommends
The Compleat Angler: "It breathes the very spirit of innocence, purity, and simplicity of the heart. There are many choice old verses interspersed in it; it would sweeten a man's temper at any time to read it; it would Christianise every discordant angry passion; pray make yourself acquainted with it." •
Washington Irving's humorous essay
The Angler comments on Walton's popularity; the work is in
The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.. •
Gilbert Ryle uses him in his 1949 book
The Concept of Mind as an example of knowing how' before 'knowing that; in his collected essays he writes that "We certainly can, in respect of many practices, like fishing, cooking and reasoning, extract principles from their applications by people who know how to fish, cook and reason. Hence Isaak Walton, Mrs Beeton and Aristotle. But when we try to express these principles we find that they cannot easily be put in the
indicative mood. They fall automatically into the
imperative mood." •
Henry David Thoreau mentions him in his 1849 book
A week on the Concord and Merrimack rivers, in the chapter "Saturday". Not far into this chapter while floating down the Concord river, just north of the Old North bridge, he and his brother pass a fisherman on the shore, which begins a five-page treatise on fishing and species of fishes. In the treatise he mentions a man from his youth whom he saw frequently fishing on the shore of the Concord, and referred to him as "an old brown coated man who was the Walton of this stream".
Fiction •
Charles Dickens makes reference to him in chapter 14 of book 2 of
A Tale of Two Cities. "The honoured parent steering Northward, had not gone far, when he was joined by another disciple of Izaak Walton, and the two trudged on together." • Walton is mentioned by
Thomas Hardy in his 1891
A Group of Noble Dames, where his relation to fish is compared to the relation of the Petrick family towards the aristocracy. •
Zane Grey mentions him in a fishing passage in his 1903 book
Betty Zane on page 84. "Alfred Clark said 'I never knew one [girl] who cared for fishing. "Betty Zane answered 'Now you behold one. I love dear old Izaak Walton. Of course you [Clark] have read his book? •
Richard Brautigan describes Communists carrying "propaganda posters" in a "trout fishing in America peace parade" with slogans including "ISAAC WALTON [
sic] WOULD'VE HATED THE BOMB!" in his 1967 book
Trout Fishing in America. •
Donna Tartt references him in
The Secret History when the character Bunny writes an essay which over-emphasises his friendship with
John Donne. •
Jules Verne references him in
The Mysterious Island when the author refers to making fishing lines in the fashion of Izaak Walton. •
David James Duncan employs Walton's
The Compleat Angler to comedic effect throughout the early chapters of his novel of fishing and spiritual development,
The River Why (1983). • In the film
School Ties (1992) the history teacher refers to Izaak Walton as a personal favourite after mentioning the date of his birth to see if any students knew it. • A ghostly Walton appears in "Over the Edge" by Peter Wise in
Disturbing the Water, a collection of themed original ghost stories set around rivers and lakes. ==Notes==