The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Wham, fang, thank you Bram: Hotel hopes link to Dracula writer will put village on the map

Tourism blueprint inspired by author of classic vampire novel

- By sally Mcdonald smcdonald@sundaypost.com

He has terrified generation­s of readers, curdled the blood of cinema-goers and will soon be bringing the world’s most sinister smile back to the small-screen.

Now a village in Aberdeensh­ire is hoping Dracula will lead an influx of tourists to the place that helped inspire the classic vampire novel’s creator Bram Stoker.

The writer stayed at the 276- year- old Garden Arms Hotel in Gardenstow­n, in 1896, in the run up to Dracula’s publicatio­n. It is thought he may have put the finishing touches to his most famous book there. He also based part of another lesser-known work – The Mystery of the Sea – in the village.

Now – to coincide with the launch of the TV series and on the back of feverish worldwide interest in Stoker – the pub’s owners Derek and Lorraine Toal are applying for a

Historic Environmen­t Scotland commemorat­ive plaque to be erected at the pub. And they want to see the launch of the first official Dracula Tourist Trail in the area to mark his special relationsh­ip with it.

The tourism drive is being supported by Stoker’s own descendant, his great- grand- nephew, author and filmmaker Dacre Stoker, and north- east historian, writer and Bram Stoker expert Mike Shepherd. Speaking from his home in south Carolina, where he manages the Bram Stoker Estate, Dacre told The Sunday Post: “Bram mentioned the hotel in Gardentown [sic] in his novel The Mystery of the Sea.

“I visited this lovely hotel myself with historian Mike Shepherd and his wife. There is no doubt in my mind this was the Garden Arms Hotel in Gardenstow­n. There is a very good chance that a few pages of his famous novel were written there.” Garden Arms landlady Lorraine, 52, said: “The Dracula connection to Gardenstow­n came up through Mike. We have copies of documents that show Bram Stoker’s boss, Sir Henry Irving, sent letters to him here in July 1896, 10 months before Dracula was published.

“Bram Stoker loved it so much here he set part of The Mystery of the Sea in Gardenstow­n. We know, too, from newspaper archives that he got involved with local communitie­s while he was in the north- east. The Peterhead Sentinel & General Advertiser for Buchan District reported his involvemen­t in the local Horticultu­ral Society’s flower show. “We feel Gardenstow­n is a missed part of his history and a lot of the community here would agree. When Bram Stoker’s great- grand- nephew Dacre visited from America earlier this year to give a talk the place was packed with local people.

“With the new TV series launching on New Year’s Day and so much interest in Bram Stoker, we want to see the part this village played in his work recognised.”

Bram Stoker – who died in 1912 – holidayed often in Aberdeensh­ire, basing himself in Cruden Bay. A plaque commemorat­ing his stays at the Kilmarnock Arms was unveiled earlier this year by Dacre Stoker. He said: “I am sure Bram loved the quaint character and beauty of Gardenstow­n. It was his habit to use real places, real people, and real events in his fictional stories.” Historian Mike Shepherd, who penned When Brave Men Shudder: The Scottish Origins of Dracula, said: “Bram Stoker stayed at the Garden Arms Hotel on July 24, 1896 when he was writing Dracula. He was on his monthly holiday from his job as the business manager of the Lyceum Theatre in London.” Visit-aberdeensh­ire CEO Chris Foy said: “The idea of a Dracula and Bram Stoker trail sounds like a novel way to celebrate one of the greatest gothic horror stories ever written, with its roots right here in Aberdeensh­ire.”

 ??  ?? Christophe­r Lee and Veronica Carlson in the famous 1958 version of Bram Stoker’s gothic horror Dracula
Christophe­r Lee and Veronica Carlson in the famous 1958 version of Bram Stoker’s gothic horror Dracula
 ??  ?? Lorraine and Derek Toal, owners of the Garden Arms Hotel, and, below, Stephen Graham in Christmas Carol in P.S.
Lorraine and Derek Toal, owners of the Garden Arms Hotel, and, below, Stephen Graham in Christmas Carol in P.S.
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 ??  ?? Dracula author Bram Stoker in 1906
Dracula author Bram Stoker in 1906

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