The Marshall Gallery has augmented its renowned quality aesthetic with a fascinating collection of English Georgian, mid-Victorian and early modern original works. Rare antique works include Pre-Raphaelite John William Waterhouse (1849-1917), favorite of Queen Victoria Sir Edwin Landseer (1802-1873), Turneresque seascapes by Edward King Redmore (1860-1941), and rural 19th C. landscapes by listed artists. 20th century work includes Geoffrey Rhoades (Tate Gallery, London), a Henry Arthur Richard Bird nude, and Cornish watercolorist Edward Wesson. Rare needlework samplers, the earliest of which is from 1724 and the latest from 1852, depict  social history through the personal, intricate depiction of young ladies’ accomplishments. Not least of the fascinating treasures are some extremely rare, early (1609) original maps of the Holy Land and Jerusalem (1802).