Who are some underrated people in history?
The doors wooshed shut and the train pulled away from the station. I was left alone with a sense of awe, the blue skies, and the sweet air of northern Yorkshire.
I couldn’t believe it.
I’d finally made it.

One of my favorite authors as a kid was the English veterinarian James Herriot, whose All Creatures Great and Small series became a worldwide sensation. He lived and practiced in rural Yorkshire from the 1930s until the late 1970s.
His stories are timeless, weaving a tight sense of community, the simple farm life of his clients, the town church, the village pub, and veterinary medicine. I was already a nut about animals, but something about his writings awoke in me a great love of all things English.
I read and re-read his books so many times they became tattered and dog eared. I could recite long passages from memory and the vet at the Boca Humane Society was startled that I knew so much about veterinary medicine.
I was determined that someday, I’d get to Yorkshire and see where it all happened. It was a dream deferred for almost 50 years.
Similarly, Dr Herriot always had vague ambitions of writing. He loved books and during his rounds of the farms and dealing with clients in his house/surgery, he internalized countless interactions…some poignant, some hilarious, some tragic. He always intended to commit them to paper.
One day he came home after a long day and put his medical bag down. He was in his fifties by now and had never written anything. He looked at his wife. “I’ve got another story for my book,” he said.
“Book?” she answered. “What book? When are you going to stop talking and start writing?”
Something inside him snapped. That night, as she watched the BBC, he got out a ream of paper and an old typewriter and started. Night after night, the stories flowed unceasingly. Thirty years of pent-up content appeared with the staccato clack clack of his typewriter.


After our anniversary cruise last week, I decided it was finally time to visit the place I had dreamed about for so long. Instead of flying home, I flew from Barcelona to London and bought two tickets on the train to Yorkshire.
I had only been to England once before, three summers ago, but the people were as polite and kind as I remembered.
The barmaid at the pub near our hotel insisted on buying us a round after learning it was our anniversary. “Look at you two,” she smiled. She had a London accent and pronounced it yew teww. “That’s fantastic.”
A stranger gave us a double take as we were studying the tube map. He paused, then came over. “Can I help?” he asked politely.
On the train, the ticket lady came around and asked for my pass. Her device chimed and she smiled. “Lovely,” she said as she handed it back. She asked where we were from and we chatted for a few minutes.
The pastoral English countryside rolled by as I sipped my coffee. In a very short time, I was standing on the platform as the train pulled away.

It was less than a mile from the train station to the town of “Darrowby” (actually, Thirsk, a name from the Viking era). Halfway to town, we passed the Thirsk horse race track, now named after Herriot.


We found our way to The World of James Herriot visitor center. I was surprised at the number of people there; the hostess said they receive tens of thousands of visitors each year.

Herriot initially produced a series of short stories and articles which he hopefully mailed to publishers and the BBC. It was a frustrating experience as one after another rejected his work. Apparently, no one was willing to gamble on a collection of vignettes and short stories from an obscure Yorkshire veterinarian.
“There’s a special noise that a rejected manuscript makes when it comes through the letter-box and hits the doormat,” he wrote. “It’s more recognizable than that of a ewe in labour or a cow with a prolapsed uterus. I would call it a sickening thud and it was a noise I learned to hate.”
But when the breakthrough did arrive it came in an avalanche of sales, and it came not in Britain but in the United States.

Henceforth all of the James Herriot stories would be runaway best sellers, not only in Britain and the US, but throughout the world.
The Herriot stories have been translated into at least eighteen different languages. Over sixty million copies have been sold worldwide.

His house and surgery were exactly as portrayed on the TV series, as they had been filmed there.

But seeing his house… the smells, the surgery, the kitchen and living room, the restored car… blew me away. It was like I was there in the 1930s.



Afterwards, standing in the nearby 900-year old marketplace, seeing his favorite pub, seeing how it was all those years ago…left me deeply satisfied. I’d finally scratched the itch.

After all that, I thought that the English and civilized thing to do would be to hit the pub with Sue for a few pints of and discuss the day.

So as we sat in The Grapes… one of London’s oldest pubs, now owned by Sir Ian McKellen (“Gandalf” in the Lord of the Rings series)…I pondered the oddity of a writer who made his living doctoring animals.
Of a man who, although fabulously wealthy, still chose to kneel in snowy, windswept fields to deliver animals. Who sat down with farmers for breakfast after a difficult calving. Who viewed the world with a gentle humor and self-deprecating style.
Who chose to live out his life out in a humble farming village, wanting nothing more than to share the goodness of humanity as he saw it with the world.
The world could use more James Herriots. 😎

© My little corner of the world 2026 | All rights reserved
Images by author and the World of James Herriot, Ltd.
I suspect far more people have seen the series on BBC TV than ever read the book. I’ve done both and loved them both and unlike the first series which ran 7 seasons, they have already guaranteed an 8th season for the current batch.
You have inspired me to reread the books!
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Ralie, I’m so glad! Like many book-to-film projects, SO much is lost in the film versions… the movies are only the Cliff’s Notes. So much subtle humor, pathos, love goes by like leaves in a stream. I hope they bring you joy 😎
Thanks for reading and commenting! 😎🙏
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I have never read the books, but have loved the modern series. I suppose the books should be next. I read about walking the “Herriot Way”, which sounds both daunting and lovely…maybe…
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Could we but all find such motivation, and possess such determination and stamina. Thanks Darryl!
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Dalton, thanks much for reading and the comment! Agree he was a great man. Part of my writing this was to encourage those WP folks who I follow, who have a book in them, to get going! 😎🙏
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My son has read the books more than once and our family really enjoys the T.V. program. Thank you for sharing.
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You’re welcome! I’m glad you liked it. Thank you for reading and commenting! 🙏😎
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You’re welcome! 😊
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I’ve enjoyed every story… Collecting used books. I did buy a new one – the Treasury for Children for my grandson. He loved reading it. ❤
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That’s great! I’m so happy for you and your grandson.
Thank you for reading and the comment… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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Your story is so heartwarming that there were tears in my eyes at the end. What a truly great man! ❤️
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Awww! You’ve got a tender heart, my friend. I’m glad you enjoyed it. Thanks so much for reading and the kind words… Much appreciated. 🙏😎
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FABULOUS!! I’m so happy you had this chance. Wonderful idea. You must have been thrilled!!
I adore England. Can’t wait to go back!
Once again – Happy Anniversary kids. Lots of life and many more adventures! ❤️❤️❤️
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The Kikster… my twin 😂 I’ve had the best time running around England… The people here are so cool and the beer is so good!🍺🇬🇧
Today we went to Wales, drove around the coast where they filmed Doc Martin… Incredible sights, and the weather was crazy. One minute it’s raining… Five minutes later, the sun is shining and there’s no wind… The next minute the wind is blowing so hard, It’s difficult to hold your phone steady to get a picture.
Thank you, my friend, for reading and the comment… Much appreciated! 🙏😎
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How fantastic that you were able to finally scratch that itch, Darryl.
“The biggest regret of your life won’t be what you did, It’ll be what you didn’t do.” — Lee Brice
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Terry, what an awesome quote 🎯 So much truth packed into so few words.
I’m so glad too… I guess why enthrallment with Yorkshire and the characters in Dr. Herriot’s books are not unique… As I mentioned, the lady said they had tens of thousands of visitors a year. I was also surprised that the proximity of everything… Less than 1000 steps from their house to the church where he got married… Less than 1000 steps in the other direction to the market square and the pub… So cool to see it in person.
Thanks as always for reading and the nice comment… Much appreciated! 🙏😎
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Good trip to Yorkshire to study the place of the great writer Herriot, Darryl. I imagine it was very helpful for you.
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Tim, thanks for reading and the nice comment. I have a plethora of pent-up stories about Florida as it was in the 70s and 80s before they ruined it with overdevelopment. I’d love to someday commit them to paper and help people understand how it once was.
Thanks again for reading and the kind words… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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My pleasure to read and say my opinion, Darryl. 😊 I hope you do what you want to with the writing and it works good for you. 🙏
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I just love All Creatures Great and Small series. DVD CD’s of all the series. I read all the books too. Big fan!
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Thanks! I’m so glad you liked my story. I think there’s something universally appealing about his stories… They’re so uplifting, funny, poignant all in one. I’m so glad his wife made that comment and got him writing!
Thanks again for reading and the comment… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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That’s so fantastic, Darryl! You finally scratched that itch. 👍
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Thanks, Aptivi! It was indeed so satisfying after all these years… Better than I had ever imagined. I couldn’t believe how close everything was… His house… The local church… the pub… the market square… All only a few hundred paces apart.
Thanks again for eating in the comment… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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You are most welcome, Darryl!
I agree with you 💯👍
Eating in the comment? You just made my day with this statement! ☺️ Of course, you are welcome. I appreciate you, too. 🙏
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Oops! Sorry! I’m on a train and I must have missed that
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It’s OK, it happens. No worries.
Enjoy your day! ☺️
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Yass!! the world def needs more James Herriot! That’s so awesome that you were able to go to Yorkshire
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Thanks, Rojie! Yeah, I’m so stoked… It was better than I ever imagined. The countryside, the people, the village…all so very cool… And the way they had maintained his house just as it was in the 1930s and 40s… They had a “wireless” playing in the living room with an old-fashioned newscast and music…It was so life-like!
Thanks much for reading in the comment.🙏😎
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Beautiful pictures. It’s like traveling through time through the book’s lens. 👍
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Thank you! I’m so glad you enjoyed my story. It really was like a time travel experience… The house was just as it was back in the 1930s and 1940s… The old medicine bottles… A radio playing old-fashioned music and newscasts… The food containers in the pantry. After reading his books, seeing it all in person was amazing.
Thanks again for reading in the comment… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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Now you’ve got me dying to thread the books! I have watched the show- but this has really whetted my appetite- and just like that whoosh! I got a copy oof the first in the series on my Libby account! Thanks Darryl!
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Haha, Violet, that’s classic! The books really are amazing… So many subtlies and things that they just couldn’t fit into the TV series or the movie. I really like the phonetic spellings of the Yorkshire dialect… Words like nowt (nothing)…nobbut (only)… summat (something)… And so on. His stories of Tristan and the local pub are just a riot. I’m sure you will love them.
Thanks, my friend, as always for reading and commenting… Much appreciated! 🙏😎
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Ohhhh! 🥰 James Herriot! I have read all of his books, they have a special place in my bookshelves, and I have the complete TV series on DVD – the whole family loves it. But I didn’t know that you can actually visit the place and that there is even a museum! Hmm – I think one day I need a trip to Yorkshire! Combined with horse riding maybe..? Ideas are forming in my head… 😉
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Andrea, that’s so cool! I’m glad you are a fan as well. I think with your interest in horses, you definitely should plan a visit… The nearby racetrack that now bears his name is evidently a big draw on race day… The whole area is filled with animals… And it was so cool to see how close everything was… His house/surgery, the pub, the church, the marketplace… All just a few hundred paces apart. I can see how it was so easy for them to “nip over to the Drover’s Arms” for a few pints after a long day.
Thanks again for reading and the nice comment… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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I love James Herriots stories. This is a wonderful tribute to him and his world. So well written Darryl! I loved this story.
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Thank you! I’m so glad you enjoyed it. It was so deeply gratifying to finally see after so many years were it all happened. Dr. Herriot’s presence was almost tangible as I wandered through the rooms… I could just imagine every interaction between him, Siegfried, and Tristan… With Mrs. Hall, trying to referee things, lol. I was amazed at how close everything was… The house/surgery… The pub… The church… The marketplace. Now I understand the dynamics and how farmers coming at daybreak in freezing weather and pounding on the door would have looked.
Thanks again for reading and the comment… Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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Darryl, I’m so glad you made it at last to this place you’d wanted to visit for so long. I remember how they televised the Herriott books too; he was a runaway success, to an extent he never could have imagined, showing how so many people admired the simple lifestyle he lead. I’m happy for you and Sue, that your anniversary cruise also went off well; may you enjoy many more, my friend. 😎
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Thanks, Laura! Sometimes when you wait a long time for something, it ends up being a disappointment; but not Thirsk and the James Herriot center. They took such care to recreate everything just as it was back in the great man’s day. The “wireless” was playing old-fashioned music, the kitchen was stocked with ancient cans of food, the dispensary was filled with bottles of medicine that had hand-written labels. So cool! And Yorkshire… we hit it on a nice day, I can see why he was so fond of it.Beautiful.
Thanks for reading and the comment! 😎🙏
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No trouble, Darryl, it was a pleasure to read, with your own enjoyment standing out of every word. It sounds like they’ve got the James Herriot time-capsule just right, and a good thing too. As to Yorkshire, there’s a reason the locals refer to it as ‘God’s own country’; a beautiful part of the country indeed. I’m sure you’d be welcome back anytime. 🙂
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I read some of his books way back in the day. I don’t think I ever saw the series though. That’s a cool tour, and I love the old cemetery. We used to haunt places like that back East. (The old cemeteries out West are not the same, more Boot Hill than Ye Olde England.) Anyway, you’re right, anybody surrounded by that many happy dogs is somebody we could use more of.
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Man, we have a lot of common interests. I was fascinated by the old stones… tried to read them, old fashioned lettering that was in varying states of decay. The oldest I was able to make out was from the early 1700s. I wondered who was there, what their life was like, did they have a good life. So cool 😎
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I’m so glad you finally got to fulfil this dream! A lot of writers change the lives of kids who read their books. I grew up reading a lot of Enid Blyton books and don’t think I would have fallen in love with reading if it hadn’t been for her books.
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Pooja, great point… and it was so very cool! Better than I ever expected. And especially after memorizing all the details of his little town…loved how everything was so close. Sometimes when you look forward to something for so long, it’s underwhelming, but this was not that 😎
Thanks, my friend, for reading and the great comment! 🙏❤️
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Always a pleasure and glad it was even better than you expected, that’s really cool 😊
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This was such a beautiful tribute. I actually found myself slowing down while reading it, the same way you slow down when you’re somewhere meaningful and don’t want to miss a detail.
You’re right, the world could use more people like James Herriot. Not necessarily famous ones, but people who still notice life closely, treat others gently, and stay faithful to the work in front of them, even when no one is applauding.
This was thoughtful, grounded, and genuinely moving.
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Awww! Thanks, brother! What a compliment about slowing down to read it. I’m honored and touched.
Yeah, he was not a showy guy. His books were on the NYT best seller lists for months and the TV series pushed him into the limelight… but he said no, no thanks, I just want to keep doing what I’m doing. Don’t know if you’ve ever read any of his stuff, but it’s wonderful. The things he frets about, laughs over, ponders quietly are so relatable…think that’s why he was so popular.
Thanks again, my friend, for reading and the super comment. Much appreciated! 😎🙏
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No, I haven’t read any of his work yet, but I appreciate you sharing that. It actually makes me more curious about it, especially the way you describe how real and relatable it is.
And I get what you mean about staying grounded and not chasing the spotlight. There is something powerful about just being faithful to what you are called to do without all the noise.
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That was an enjoyable read, and for me a timely reminder to keep going with projects and ambitions other than the day job! (I live in UK and not been to the Yorkshire Dales yet!)
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Oh wow, you have a gem up in that region! The dales, the stone walls, brooks… the village itself… all so beautiful. My pix don’t do it justice. 🏔️😊 I’m sure your trip would be well worth it.
And yes, very encouraging that Dr H didn’t start until he was in his 50s… pushed through numerous rejections and setbacks… and became the world’s most famous vet 😎
Thanks so much for reading and the kind words… much appreciated!
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Being s country girl from The Cotswolds the James Herriott books were a rite of passage. Devouring page after page, dreaming about his life as a vet.
I never quite got the grades in the right subjects for studying to be a vet but have lost myself in both the original series that was started back in 1978 with Christopher Timothy and the more recent one that began in 2020. Callum Woodhouse was a natural candidate for Tristan following his appearance in The Durrells!
Despite both series having a slightly different approach I feel they do follow the books well. As another reader says this isn’t always the case and it can be disappointing when this happens.
I’m pleased you finally made it to Yorkshire. We did a road trip up there a couple of years back but I didn’t even know about the places you visited to follow your Herritt passion
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Thank you! Much appreciated! I agree, the TV series pretty much follow the books, but some are changed a bit…but it’s all good. When I was at Florida, intending to be a vet, “Tristan” came and gave a presentation. Afterwards, he was mobbed by student fans, everyone wanting to take him out for a pint 😂🍺
Thanks again for reading and the kind words… much appreciated 😎🙏
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How wonderful that you were able to travel to Yorkshire! I loved watching that show on PBS.
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Dawn, same! When I was at UF in the pre-vet program, the real Tristan came and addressed our class. The questions were all about the events in the books. Afterwards, he was mobbed at the podium by kids wanting to take him out for a pint 😂🍺 The Yorkshire Dales were beautiful, he wasn’t exaggerating in the books!
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I will have to read the books now!
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They are great… so full of pathos, so relatable. He is really a gifted writer, his style draws you in and you’re part of the story. So cool to see where it all happened. Thanks for the comment! 😎🙏
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It’s actually better late than never . . .
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Great read, Darryl. The thought that he picked up and pen in his fifties to start a writing career is amazing and comforting at the same time. We all have stories to tell, no matter what age we are.
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