Pesaro is a city worth visiting: for its buildings, its collections, the landscape that surrounds it. This is not just a message of current tourism promotion, but a certainty for those who intended to come to Pesaro, both as a chosen destination and as a place to cross during a longer trip. 

It happened to Sir Thomas Graham Jackson, an English architect born in Hampstead: in 1888 he stopped in Pesaro, and in the typical notebook of travelers of the time, he wrote down impressions, meetings, places. 

What was Pesaro like in Sir Jackson's time and what impression is given of the city?