Same as March 1st
Category: Uncategorized
Tuesday 13th February, 1917
A day off. Had a good look round. The French are still here but we take over the railway from them on 20th February. A cigarette will work wonders with them, and we usually cadge bread.
The following additional information is from Martin Farebrother:
Froissy [is] now the museum and yard area of the Froissy-Cappy-Dompierre Heritage railway (Chemin de Fer Cappy Dompierre, CFDS, or Petit train de la haute Somme). At this time the line had been built by the French along the Somme canal to Frise, and probably then across the Somme to the lines west of Cléry. The lines also went north through Bray to Plateau, and back south-west to Proyart, La Flaque and Wiencourt. A pre-WW1 metre gauge line (Albert to Montdidier) also ran north-south through Froissy providing military traffic, and by later 1917 was also providing a civilian service as far as Bray. By this time or very soon after a standard gauge French/British army line was built south-north from Wiencourt to Plateau, joining the west-east line from Albert towards Péronne. So Froissy was a very important railway yard and transhipment.
Saturday 27th January, 1917
Heard we are stopping at Audricq for a week. Laid down several sidings for the light railway – 2 Ft. gauge. Saw two armoured trains also a German Taube**. Can hear the guns quite plainly here.
*Audruicq is a small town 11 miles south-west of Calais/16 miles from Port Boulogne, the Wikipedia entry for which is remarkably unforthcoming about its wartime activities. (It was apparently bombed by the Germans in 1916, however.) Its greatest claim to fame is that that pilot who disappeared with Roald Amundsen in 1928 was apparently born there.
**The Taube (Dove) was a type of monoplane developed in the years leading up to the war. It’s impossible to guess which of the many variants may have been involved in this particular sighting.
The following additional information is from Martin Farebrother:
British Army L[ight] R[ailway]s in France were 60cm gauge, the same as French and German military light railways. In Imperial units this is 1ft 11⅝in, but was often equated with the British industrial 2ft gauge, and was also very close to the 1ft 11½in gauge used on some Welsh lines, such as the Ffestiniog and Welsh Highland Railways.
Merry Christmas from France

In the family’s possession for more than a century, this is the card Leonard sent to his brother Don at Christmas 1918.
A (tenuous) sort of Jack the Ripper connection? Part Two

Frances was born at her family’s home in Southwark on September 17, 1859. Her father was a master bootmaker from Publow, Somerset, and her mother from Armagh, Ireland. The Coles already had two daughters, and their last child and only son would be born on August 30, 1862. Despite living together for eight years and raising a family, the Coles weren’t married.
Eventually the family moved to Bermondsey, where they all shared one room that also served to James’s workshop. Frances may have attended St. John’s Charity School at the nearby corner of Tooley Street and Potters Fields, although this cannot be verified as records have not survived.
The family still lived together at the 1871 census, after which Frances’s mother’s disappears from the records; afterwards James was unable to provide his family with the basic necessities of life and made his way to the nearby St. Mary Magdalen Workhouse. It is not known whether or not his children were with him.
Frances’s sister Selina was unmarried and pregnant in the spring of 1877 when she entered St. Olave’s Union Workhouse in Southwark and there gave birth to a daughter, who only lived for seven weeks. Frances, on the other hand, found a job as a trainee in the packing department of a soap and toiletries manufacturer at 65 Southwark Street, and moved into a nearby lodging house, giving her name as Coleman. Reportedly Frances soon advanced at Sinclair’s, and was promoted to the position of forewoman at a weekly wage of fifteen shillings.
Frances was around 22 when the 1881 census was taken, and still calling herself Coleman. She reported her occupation as “powder packer”. By now she had left her job at Sinclair’s and was working at Winifred Hora & Co., a small wholesale druggist company in the East End, located at 58 Minories Street. The company’s flagship product was Macord’s Transparent Waterproof Isinglass Plaster, but they also produced a variety of medicinal drugs and medicated powders for the wholesale and export market, packaging them in square glass bottles that were sealed with snug-fitting cork stoppers. Paper labels were then affixed to the bottles to identify the contents; Frances took turns between inserting the cork stoppers and applying the paper labels with glue. She wasn’t a full time employee at Hora’s but a day laborer; some weeks she earned nothing at all. She remained there as an occasional day labourer for at least a few years but may have left the firm as early as 1883.
Frances never held a permanent job again, and no one knows when she first became involved with prostitution. After her murder in 1891, one newspaper reported that Frances had worked as a packer for nine years, and a night watchman at a doss house in Spitalfields – who knew her – suggested that she may not have become a full-time prostitute until as late as 1887. The deputy of the lodging house echoed a similar sentiment.
Frances never earned enough to escape the poverty of her surroundings, and her dingy clothes had become so worn that they kept her from being considered for any type of employment. She was quiet, almost aloof, and tried to avoid clients she considered “rough”. At some point she picked up the street name “Carroty Nell”.
James Thomas Sadler, a merchant seaman, who first met Frances around September 1889, noticed a steep decline in her circumstances when he returned from sea in February 1891. Her fall from grace, however, was a secret she did her best to keep from her family. She still visited her father in the Bermondsey Workhouse regularly, and kept up the pretence that she was living with an elderly woman in Richard Street, Commercial Road, and still working at the chemist’s in the Minories. Her sister Mary Ann sensed something was awry, noticed that she poor and looked dirty, and thought she could detect alcohol on her breath on many occasions.
The landlady at Frances’s lodgings sometimes let her spend the night even though she couldn’t pay for the bed, but by early January 1891 it was happening too often and they had no choice but to turn her away. Now, her only option was to seek shelter in the lowest and meanest doss houses.
The last time Frances saw her father was on Friday, February 6 1891, a week before her murder. She apparently revealed the fact that she had left her position at the chemist’s, but she told him that she was still renting a room in the home of a respectable older woman at 32 Richard Street.
Sadler was discharged from his ship on February 11 1891, and made his way toward Commercial Street and The Princess Alice pub, where he met up with Frances. They went on to a pub on Old Montague Street, and afterwards to The Swan on Whitechapel Road. They spent the next day barhopping across the area, and at around 4:00pm Frances and Sadler went into The Bell, at Middlesex Street, at the City. They remained there for about an hour, and when they left they went separate ways. Frances walked around the corner to a coffee house on Wentworth Street, where a few minutes later Sadler joined her; according to a witness they were both perfectly sober at this point, but their next stop was a pub called The Marlborough Head on Brick Lane. There is some question as to exactly what the two of them had to drink as the witnesses at the inquest didn’t agree, but Sadler himself testified that he was becoming quite drunk.
About 7:30pm Frances went to a millinery shop at Bethnal Green, and purchased a new black crêpe hat. The man who sold it to her later commented that she was the worse for drink. For the price of the hat, she could have gotten almost 6 nights lodging in a doss house.
At some point between 8:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m., Sadler told Frances he was going to meet a friend on Spital Street, gave her money to pick some drinks, and told her to go to Spitalfields Chambers and get a double bed. She went with him part on the way, but when he turned into Thrawl Street she tugged on his arm and warned him it was a very dangerous street, to which Sadler replied that he had travelled all over the world and in all kinds of company and had never yet turned back on anything. He should have listened to her; he hadn’t gone fifty yards before a woman in a red shawl came up behind him and hit him over the head with a folded umbrella. He fell on the ground and two men came from the shadows and began to kick him in the ribs, taking his wallet and his watch. This made Sadler extremely angry at Frances and he accused her of not doing anything to help him, but she reasonably pointed out that if she had tried she would have been a very easy target for the men. However Sadler was now penniless, and the two of them parted company again.
Frances was drunk when she returned to their lodgings at Spitalfields Chambers. Sadler came back an hour and a half later, face bloodied and bruised, and in a belligerent mood. He asked Frances if she had the money he gave her for their bed, but she replied she didn’t. Sadler thought they would trust her for one night. Although he had no money, he was still owed his pay for the seven weeks he’d worked since December 24, which he planned on collecting the following morning. The night watchman at the lodging house helped Sadler wash himself in the back yard but was forced to ask him to leave as he hadn’t the money for a room. Frances remained at the table, fast asleep, until about an hour later when she woke up and left since she also lacked her doss money.
At Shuttleworth’s eating house in Wentworth Street, Frances Coles purchased three half-pence worth of mutton and some bread, which she ate alone in the corner. After some fifteen minutes she was asked to leave but refused three times, eventually leaving about 1:45am and heading in the direction of Brick Lane through Commercial Street. She bumped into a fellow prostitute on Commercial Street, who later said that she had seen Frances with a man – not Sadler – who had behaved violently towards them both.
Meanwhile, Sadler had got into yet another fight as he tried to force his way back onboard his ship. Left bleeding from a sizable scalp wound, he tried twice to enter a lodging house but was refused. Soon after this he was seen drunken and bloodied on a nearby pavement by a police officer who reported that he was ‘decidedly drunk’.
At about this time three men walking through Swallow Gardens saw a man and a woman at the corner of Royal Mint Street. One shouted “Good night” to the couple but received no response. The woman was said to be wearing a round bonnet.
At 2:15 a.m. on Friday morning a police constable on his beat along Chamber Street heard the retreating footsteps of a man in the distance, and a few seconds the light from his lantern fell on the body of Frances Coles. He had passed the spot fifteen minutes before and was adamant that she hadn’t been there then. Blood was flowing profusely from her throat, and he saw her open and shut one eye. Since the woman was alive, he was required to remain with the body and was unable to pursue the fleeing man. He blew his whistle to raise the alarm and the neighbouring beat officers came running to the scene, soon joined by another officer who had been on plain clothes duty in Royal Mint Street. They found the woman to be quite warm, with a very faint pulse. One constable went for the local medic, who pronounced life extinct. Another constable headed to the Police Station to fetch a senior officer, who promptly ordered the officers arriving at the scene to search the area and to stop and question anybody suspicious or who might be able to provide any information. More senior officers soon arrived, and meanwhile the body was to ordered to remain in the position in which it was discovered while an in-depth search for clues was carried out.
At 3:00am Sadler returned to the lodging house, bloodstained from being robbed, but the deputy turned him out as he was so drunk he could barely stand or speak. Two hours later Sadler admitted himself into the London Hospital for brief treatment.
Sadler was the immediate suspect in the murder, thanks in no small part to the testimony of witnesses, and a subsequent investigation into his past history and whereabouts at the time of the previous Whitechapel murders indicates that the police suspected him to be the Ripper. On February 16th he was charged with the murder of Frances Coles. Luckily for him, the Seamen’s Union paid for proper legal representation, and – perhaps even luckier – the inquest into Frances’s death was headed by a very thorough coroner. The testimony of witnesses who had seen Sadler hopelessly intoxicated at 2:00 and 3:00 a.m., respectively, made it unlikely that Sadler was capable of committing the murder.
The jury returned a verdict of “Willful Murder against some person or persons unknown” on February 27, and four days later the Magistrates’ Court dropped all charges against Sadler. As he left the court on March 3rd, crowds of people cheered his release.
Frances Coles was buried on Wednesday February 25th in the afternoon at the East London Cemetery, Plaistow. About two thousand people had assembled in the roadway and on the pavement, but they were refused admission to the cemetery where there was already a gathering of several thousand. The grave was situated on rising ground, close to a young poplar tree – and beneath and around, extended for a considerable distance in all directions, was a sea of human faces. She was buried in plot number 21, grave number 19270.
Frances’s father remained living the Bermondsey Workhouse. Her sister, Mary Ann, an unmarried house cleaner, lived in Shoreditch. Frances’s other sister, Selina, who in 1891 was a 32 year old book folder, was listed as a lunatic in the Leavesden Asylum, Watford, where she died aged 37 in the early summer of 1897.
This text was adapted from a very comprehensive article on the subject at https://victorianwhitechapel.tumblr.com/Frances-Coles, retrieved on 4 December 2021.
A (tenuous) sort of Jack the Ripper connection? Part One
It’s astonishing what a little undirected Googling will turn up! I was actually trying to pin down some further information about Macord’s Rents, which you may remember we talked about in It’s time to talk about the Huguenots Part Two, but instead I stumbled upon a reference to Macord’s Waterproof Isinglass Plaster. This was something I had actually encountered briefly ten years ago, when searching Trove, the invaluable online archive of the National Library of Australia. However this time it took me in an entirely unexpected direction – to probably the most infamous series of murders of all time, and to a young woman who very briefly wandered through the furthest reaches of my family history.
Let’s start with Robert John Macord, born in 1815, who was the third child and second son of John II and Elizabeth Macord of Limehouse Hole. In the 1841 Census he is a ‘chymist and druggist’, operating out of premises at 58 Minories, London. Those familiar with the Jack the Ripper saga will already recognise that this address is pretty much ‘Ripper Central’.
Robert seems to have been the inventor of a very successful new type of medical plaster made out of isinglass* – a natural product which clearly had a bewildering variety of uses at the time. There are a number of instances in online records of this product being advertised: the text below appeared in The Medical Times in 1848-49, for example, and some of the same testimonials also appeared in the Sydney Empire on Saturday 3 January, 1852.
_____
Macord’s Transparent Waterproof Isinglass Plaster, and Isinglass Plasters on all fabrics, are manufactured at 58, Minories, London, and can be obtained of any druggist or surgical instrument-maker.
*
January 31, 1844
After having used in the London Hospital Mr Macord’s Isinglass Pluster, I am enabled to say that it has afforded me much satisfaction. I have found it to adhere well and to be free from any irritating property.
James Luke
*
February 26th, 1844
I have now repeatedly made use of the various forms of Isinglass Adhesive Plaster manufactured by Mr Macord, and am of opinion that they are likely to prove very useful in the treatment of wounds.
William Fergusson
Professor of Surgery in King’s College, Surgeon to King’s College Hospital, etc.
*
March 8th, 1844
I have directed the application of Mr Macords Prepared Isinglass Plaster in cases of ulcer and recent wound, and I think very favorably of the Invention. It is clearly an effective dressing, and easily applied.
Benjamin Travers Jr.
Resident assistant surgeon.
*
March 27, 1844
The Isinglass plaster as prepared by Mr Macord is superior to any I have had made elsewhere, being both more adhesive, more transparent, and altogether more easily applied.
Robert Liston
See Lancet Jun15, 1844, page 365.
*
May 21 1844
I have made trial of Mr Macords waterproof transparent plaster in the treatment of wounds, and have been quite dissatisfied with its adhesive properties. It is, moreover, an irritating, and in most circumstances must be more advantageous than plasters containing resin.
James M. Arnott
Surgeon to the Middlesex Hospital.
*
May 30, 1844
I have used Mr Macord’s Transparent Plaster for the last three years with much success, and am happy to bear testimony to its great utility, also his Sedative Solution of Opium, which proves most effective.
C.L. Vidal
Surgeon, Royal Ordnance Hospital, Purfleet.
*
October 24th 1844
Sir – having used the different specimens of your Isinglass Plaster, I beg that you will be so good as to send me, for the use of Sligo Infirmary, twenty yards each of the four kinds you sent to me. Your transparent plaster may be considered expensive for hospital use. I consider it otherwise: through it you can see the state of the surface underneath ot, and thereby only have to remove it when it necessary, this measure being economical of your plaster and of the state of the wound to which it may be applied. I look upon your plaster as being cleanly and nice, as well as as being more applicable to most parts than any oily or resinous plasters can possibly be.
Your obedient servant ,
Thomas Little MD, LL.D., F.R.C.S.I
Surgeon to the Sligo Infirmary
*
September 1st 1845
We have employed Macord’s Transparent Sticking Plaster during the last twelve months, and in all cases where sticking plaster is required, except in operations for hare-lip, we prefer it to any other.
William Wright
G.M. White
H.C. Attenbury
Surgeons to the General Hospital Nottingham.
*
November 5th, 1848
I feel great pleasure in testifying to the utility of Mr Macord’s Transparent Isinglass Plasters; in small flesh wounds, they surpass in efficacy any I have ever used. In haemorrhage, from leech bites, they form a crust with the blood which effectually covers it.
J.J. Rygate, M.B. Lond.
*
November 23, 1848
Sir – I have used the plaster you sent me, and have much pleasure in adding my favouritable testimony to those you have already received. Its transparency permitting without disturbance the satisfactory inspection of the wound. Its adhesiveness superior to that of any other application, and unaffected by washes, which are so frequently necessary to moderate inflammation in wounds. Its complete freedom from any irritating quality; and its cleanliness will render it henceforward and indispensable requisite to every practical surgeon.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
Henry Thompson, M.D., F.R.C.S.I.
Surgeon to the Tyrone Infirmary
To Mr Macord, 58, Minories.
_____
Macord’s Isinglass Plaster, 1s 6d per yard: 14 in wide, on white or black calico. Directions – wet the plaster well with a damp sponge, or dip in water.
Macord’s Waterproof Isinglass Plaster, 1s 6d per yard; 14 in wide, on white or black calico. Directions – wet the plaster well with a damp sponge, or dip in water.
Macord’s Transparent Skin, 2s 6d per yard: 5 in wide. Directions – wet well the part, and apply the plaster dry.
Macord’s Waterproof Transparent Plaster, 4s and 6d per yard; 14 in wide. Directions – wet well the part, and apply the plaster dry.
A discount of 15% on purchases to the amount of £2.
_____
The Medical Times: a Journal of Medical Science, literature, criticism, and news. 1848 – 49, October – June. Retrieved via Google Books on Friday 3rd December 2021 from a volume held in the Bavarian State Library at Munich.
Robert John Macord died in 1863, but his business interests clearly outlived him; after his death the plaster (still bearing his name) continued to be made and packaged at 58 Minories, by a company named Winifred Hora & Co. They employed a number of day-labourers to accommodate fluctuating demand, and one of those day-labourers was Frances Coles, aka Frances Coleman, who at the time lived in Union Street, near Southwark Bridge. More information about Frances will be found in Part Two.
Of the names listed above, J.J. Rygate (who seems to have qualified in 1847) is of particular interest: Robert John Macord’s fourth son, Herbert Rygate Macord, born in 1849, is clearly named after him – and at just the time when the medical plaster business seems to have been flourishing. Herbert Rygate did not go into medicine or any related career; he seems to have been happy enough as a stationer and later a lodging-house keeper.
Robert John Macord’s third son, however, Horace Walford Macord, might fairly be called the ‘black sheep’ of his particular family. He described himself as a ‘druggist’ in the 1871 census, with premises in Kemp Town, Brighton. He married Alice Hurn in 1869 and they rapidly had three children; however the marriage seems to have broken down in 1878 when he alone emigrated to Australia – claiming to be an M.R.C.S. – leaving his wife and three children behind with her parents. Alice subsequently reverted to the use of her maiden surname, although I have been unable to trace a divorce. For the next few decades Horace Walford seems to have lived in New South Wales – where it is quite possible he started a whole new family which has descendants in the area to this day. He did, however, return – and indeed officially immigrated – to England in 1918, possibly reconciling with his wife Alice. He died in 1924, but a shop bearing his name – H.W. Macord, Chemist – was trading at 120 East India Dock Road, London, until at least 1934.
Obviously there are a lot of gaps in this narrative and lot of questions remain to be answered – what, for example, were Robert John and Horace Walford’s qualifications, and did Horace Walford father another dynasty in Australia? Watch this space, or one very much like it, for further details!
*If the word has ear-wormed you, be reassured that it gets a passing mention in the lyrics of ‘Surrey with the Fringe on Top’ from Oklahoma!
The Strand Cinema Fire – Southend, 14 November 1926

The Strand had originally opened in 1909 as a skating rink and was converted to a cinema in 1911, opening as the Kinemacolour Theatre with seating capacity of 1,000.
The following text is taken from Roy Dilley’s ‘Southend’s Palaces of the Silver Screen’, published in 2011 by Phillimore & Co Ltd., ISBN 978-1-86077-680-9
“On 11 September 1919 the cinema was renamed The Strand, and the ownership changed to Mr Frank Baker*. A magnificent pipe organ was installed at a cost of £4,000. The advertisements proudly proclaimed the Strand as being “The Home Of The Pipe Organ”. This instrument had been supplied by William Hill and Son of London. Solo organist was Florence De Jong (late of the Marble Arch Pavilion). The cinema also hosted a full orchestra (musical director Mr Harry De Jong, former conductor at Sexton’s West End Cinema). The Strand also held first exhibition rights of all the Famous Lasky pictures.
…
On Sunday, 14 November 1926 the Strand was completely destroyed by fire. The blaze was discovered at 5 a.m. and caused £35,000 damage. By 5:30 a.m. the building was a raging furnace, with flames leaping 40 ft high. The roof slates exploded like rockets, and pieces of blazing wood were carried by the high wind onto the roofs of houses in Southchurch Road. Some blazing debris struck a woman standing in a doorway in Warrior Square and burnt her badly. There was no hope of saving the cinema. All the fire brigade could do was try to save adjoining properties, which they were successful in doing. People in their night attire flocked from the surrounding streets to see the spectacle.
The only part of the cinema left standing was the box office and projection room, which were situated at the High Street end of the building. One projector was destroyed; the other was damaged, but was repairable. The film was undamaged, being stored in steel boxes. The roof had caved in and the organ melted. The only part of the organ left was the two pedals. £6,000 would not replace this instrument. 40 people including the orchestra were thrown out of work. The cause of the fire was unknown; a cigarette had been discounted as the fire had started near the roof**. In those days telephones were few, and the owner Mr Frank Baker lived at Leigh***, so friends rushed to his house, to tell him the cinema was destroyed. Mr Baker was then driven to Southend, in dressing gown and pyjamas, to behold the tragic sight.
“Billy”, the mottled cat who slept and lived on the premises, was missed after the fire, and everyone feared the worst, but, to the astonishment of all, the feline was seen prowling around the debris the next day****.
. . .
A new picture house was built on the site, the general contractor being Arthur J. Arnold. The frontage of the building in Warrior Square was 90 feet wide, the entrance being in modern Renaissance style, with ‘Hathernware’ Faience tiling, to match the adjoining Strand Arcade. The auditorium was 131 ft long and 70 ft wide, with a sloping floor, which had a comfortable rake of seven feet. The proscenium width was 34 ft and the depth of the stage 16 ft. The seating capacity was 1,640, and the walls were finished in cream fibrous plaster, the curtains (by Messrs. Kimballs of Westcliff) and seats were in a restful shade of blue. Heating was achieved by a hot water installation with radiators, while the lighting effects were secured by electricity, with an auxiliary gas lighting plant in case of a breakdown.
The cinema opened on Saturday, 28th January 1928. A distinguished company gathered for the opening, which was performed by the mayor, Councillor A. Bockett. The guests included many members of the town council, Mrs Eleanor Percy (chairman of directors of the Warrior Square Picture Theatre Ltd) and Mr Frank Baker (managing director). After Mr Harold Judd had sung ‘Land of Hope and Glory’ and Mr D H Burles (architect), had briefly described the new building, the Mayor was invited formally to declare it open.
. . .
A Western Electric sound system was installed for the ‘talkies’, which was changed in April 1934 for Western Electric Wide Range sound equipment. On 7th March 1937 the cinema was sold by Mr Frank Baker to Messrs. Mistlin Theatres Ltd who were building up a new circuit. The directors of the company were David and Louis Mistlin, the latter becoming manager of the Strand.”
____
*Frank was never the owner of the Strand; he was its manager, installed by his sister Eleanor Percy who had inherited a number of businesses on the death of her husband John Stewart Percy in June 1926. He was also manager of the Mascot Cinema which itself burned down – but not until many years later, by which time both Frank and Eleanor had also died.
**An entirely uneducated guess might focus on the projector that was destroyed. At the time the projector’s light source would almost certainly have been a carbon arc, and having witnessed first-hand carbon arc projectors being operated in the late 1960s/early 1970s I can testify that this was a dangerous business and that small fires in projection booths (and the attendant melting of the film) were still a relatively common occurrence. Back in 1926, also, film stock could be highly flammable, especially if kept in a particularly dry atmosphere and not handled with great care.
***Frank must have moved to Leigh when John Percy died, and may actually have been in lodgings at the time of the fire, as his eldest three children were born sixty-odd miles away in Cambridge – one of them, Pauline, within three days of John Percy’s death.
****This not only explains the old photograph shown above, which has been in the family collection for nearly a century, but also dates it precisely. (It may have been taken on the same day, and by the same person, as this one: http://cinematreasures.org/photos/155121) Billy’s ultimate fate is not recorded, although possibly he hung around long enough to supervise the rebuilding of the cinema and may even have been able to take up residence again in the new building – but sadly this will have to be left to the individual imagination!
Sunday 17th September, 1961
Alec to his parents:
Dear Mum and Dad
Thank you once again for weekly letter, arrived this time after some delay. Instead of arriving at 8 a.m. or thereabouts it did not turn up until about 9:30 a.m., well after breakfast was over. Cannot think what caused the delay as I do not think there is a normal post at that time. Perhaps it went into someone else’s box, or maybe the post itself was late.*
The children do not seem too bad at the moment, Carol is getting over her cold and Susan has not had it so far. Yesterday Carol dropped off in the afternoon, obviously flaked out, and although she woke some half hour later went back to sleep again and much resented the final coming round. Must admit I could have done with a sleep at the time what with a good dinner in the recent past, and Carol’s cold which she has kindly passed on. By the way I find your cherry wine excellent for it. If it does not do you any good, at least it makes you feel better, and I am afraid the cherry wine has had a bit of a bashing over the last few days, and I see there is only about one-third of a pint left. If you have any going begging, will gladly accept some more when you come up. It is very good stuff.
I told Susan that has all the boys and girls had gone back to school, the donkeys had no one to ride them so she said she would write a letter to Punch. Have not seen it yet. Susan has had the best part of a week back at school and so far no incidents. She seems to like school dinners and tells us she eats them all up. No second helpings of pudding apparently.
Glad you were able to get a good supply of blackberries. I have no idea what blackberry wine tastes like, but I should be very surprised if it was not a good one. One thing about it, the fruit comes free, and the cost per bottle is that much reduced. Note the weather was fine for that jaunt, but at the moment it is pouring here. I am afraid we have had a lot of rain over the last week or so, and the slugs are here again in force. They are playing havoc with my dahlias. A small plant with about eight heads in bloom is now just a mass of slime and broken stems. The same applies to most of the others, but as I have so many this year, we are still able to get all the blooms we want.
Susan just arrived in shorts, coloured top, and small bow and arrow and announces she is Robin Hood.
I do not think I told you but last week I took several cuttings of the honeysuckle, potted three in those fibre pots you gave me, watered them, and placed them in the polythene bags you brought the rose cuttings up in. The rest of the cuttings, of somewhat lesser standard, June planted in the ground outdoors. I am not able to see any apparent progress in the outdoor cuttings, although they still remain green, but the ones put in the pots are throwing out young buds. I shall keep them there for a little while, then if they are still satisfactory I shall put them along the wire where the other honeysuckle used to be before it died.
Glad the ivy is growing. Should think most things ought to in this sort of weather. I should add that it has been very warm and far too muggy both yesterday and today. Yesterday fortunately was dry and sunny with it.
Your figures for the beans and tomatoes are truly astronomical. Have you yet worked out the relative cost per pound and receipts per pound to show you which is the more profitable to grow?
Still nothing on the Pools. As far as I can see there were few draws this week but I did manage to get one. Not nearly enough I fancy.
Westgate is near Margate and the whole of the Kent area (Isle of Thanet) is very pretty country. Unfortunately it is very overcrowded and it is a somewhat long-range dormitory for London. I do not know the distance from London to Westgate, but I would say that it is very considerably further than Ruislip. I doubt whether anyone would want to travel from Westgate to London to work for more than a few months.
I note your route as supplied from the AA but I would avoid Staines like the plague if I were you. There is a turning off the A30 to the north before you get to Staines (left-hand fork) which takes you through a village called Englefield Green. If I recollect this should take you into Datchet, and you should also be able to avoid most of Slough, and run out via Iver Heath. Have not looked at the chimney since writing, hope it is alright as plenty of rain to test it now.
I did not know what Bert Pearce was getting and I am rather surprised they are paying him so highly. I suppose he is getting more now than before he retired. Which brings me to the question of Godfrey. I had not heard that he had died, until last week. The following day John Lewin brought up the cutting. I suppose if he did not live at Maidenhead, and had not known him, I should not have heard by now. It is a funny thing, he used to be such a known person only a few years ago, but I find now that there are few in the D.T.M.O. who have ever heard of him. I gather you had not heard otherwise you would have mentioned it in your letter of 13th which presumably was despatched before you got my extra one.
Note Uncle Arthur spending this weekend with you. I hope your weather better than ours, otherwise you will have had difficulty in entertaining. By the way, I think you meant a ten-gallon hat. No doubt you will have more to say about his visit next time. I expect he will have been asked to try the wine.
Glad you have been able to consider going back into the choir. I expect it was all very familiar, but several faces missing. I believe old Les Garland still takes part. Who are the others?
I thought you would be interested in the Wootton Bassett episode. No doubt there are more like that waiting to happen these days.
No more news about applications. The Paddington Freight Shunters Report was circulated to the offices on Thursday. Bryant has already said that it can’t be done, while Phillips wants it introduced immediately. I gather that it caused a bit of a hubbub down at the morning conference – a sort of verbal free-for-all.
Susan was able to sort out the drawings that Mum put in her section of the letter. I had to explain what Grandfy had been up to though.
Pauline back from her holiday in Italy. She went to Sorrento but said it was a bit disappointing. The sand was black – volcanic ash. Not much to do there apparently and her friend was taken ill and had to stay in bed for several days. The flights were uneventful in either direction.
Well that is the budget of news for this week hope you are both keeping well.
Love from us all…
*”First World Problems”! In hindsight this looks like over-privileged carping at a time when there were two post deliveries on most days and still IIRC one on Sundays. Imagine a letter actually arriving a whole hour-and-a-half late!
Sunday 10th September, 1961
Alec to his parents:
Dear Mum and Dad
Thank you for latest letter, another full budget. Drawings were appreciated by the children – must admit you can see what they are supposed to be. Yes, school starts again on Tuesday for Susan. She was really very good up until her holiday, but I suppose the break has been too long away from school and she is now getting bored with herself, so no regrets on our part. She said the other day that she did not want to go back to school, but I do not take that very seriously.
We liked the paper picture of Susan and the other children very much. We showed it to Ethel yesterday and she thought it was good. I am surprised you are able to get actual pictures (photos) from the Evening Post but should imagine they will be worth having. Should imagine the donkeys thought that summer had started all over again last week considering the weather we had. It was very good. There were about three days this end when it remained overcast and cold all day, but it was not overcoat weather. The remaining days including Saturday were very fine, and again today the weather promises to be good. (9:30 a.m.)
I thought perhaps you would not have heard of dahlias being moved when in full bloom, but those in the front garden have survived and are beginning to look quite respectable. I am inclined to agree with Percy Thrower about the dahlia being popular. a colleague has given me some mauve and black double ones, plus a large variety of unknown (as yet) colour and they are a great improvement on what I had before. We shall shed some of the lesser varieties this year as we are now getting more than we really need. The tall dahlia has not produced a bud yet, and I think it is touch and go whether we shall get a bloom this year or not.
Again yes, June did mean runner bean seeds, but obviously there is no need to have them before May of next year. They would be required to be planted directly out in the garden as I have nowhere for them to be brought on. We like broad beans but really have no room to grow them. It is planned to put the runners up the fence wire – I hope the children leave them alone, but I am not optimistic.
So your score of beans and tomatoes continues to mount, should imagine this must be a record year for you – how does it compare with last year? Good you were able to persuade Elford to take some tomatoes – query conditions of sale? Glad you did manage to get enough elderberries to make some wine. It is a good wine and as you say just like burgundy, but perhaps it might be a good idea to try a bottle or two with a little extra sugar as I think it would also make a good sweet wine as well as a dry wine. It seems as if if all the plants brought back from Burnham are living. We did have a lot of rain early in the week, and the ground and the cuttings got well saturated. I seem to be lucky of late when planting out cuttings. I can recall that on the last three occasions when seed or plants needed nursing along for a bit a series of heavy showers has relieved me of the necessity of going round with the watering can.
Thought you would like the dog skin rug – what next?
Had another go at the treble chance this week. Only ten draws on the coupon this time and I only got two of those. With only three ways to go with them I did not look any further.
I gather that the snowdrops are now planted in the rockery. Must wait patiently now. We had some once before – or twice before to be exact. The originals were already in garden around the tree in the front, but they diminished yearly. When at Reading in 1957 I bought two dozen and planted out, but after an initial show in some numbers they went, and have not been seen since. Perhaps your general remarks referred to snowdrops planted in decent soil. I am inclined to agree that once in you can forget them.
The children are inclined to be a bit noisy in the library, but gradually improving. I have explained to Susan that the library is a ‘quiet place’, and the penny is beginning to drop. They know where their type of book is located and soon rush off to that corner. Incidentally there are usually one or two children already there.
The property at Westgate is let out in the same way as Joe’s bungalow. It is probably much more modern and slap up as it is reported to us. Doug and Ethel say they had a couple of glorious weeks, and the report is that Ethel had to restrain Doug from buying a house down there. Said only the fact of having to consider Ronny prevented them etc. etc. etc. Surprising you have not seen or heard of Arthur. Perhaps he is not going to visit you after all. If you knew where he was you could write.
So Ted Caple has had another banger. It could only happen to him. We had no news of the Spanish visit, perhaps you have more information.
McDonald had his interview on Monday of this week. He says he has not got the job but does not say who has. It appears he sank his own chances by gabbling on about Work Study at the interview. Should think it was deliberate. I take no notice of McDonald’s reported remarks. Time to do something about them is when he makes them to me personally. Sauce for the goose etc. anyway.
I have just turned up my letter to you after our June holiday and find that the mileage we covered on our return journey was 152. No doubt we went somewhat out of our way, in fact I recall two such occasions and a slight deviation in the Windsor area. The route to West Harptree is as you know very countryfied and includes several miles of narrow lane with only room for one vehicle.
The railway accident at Wootton Bassett arose through a parcels train over running a signal. The guard was a West Indian, and the only man on the station was a very junior porter. The train had to set back through catch points so the latter was sent out with clips and padlocks and in due course train was called back. Unfortunately the lad had clipped the wrong set of points. (This is all hush-hush of course.)*
The kitchen chimney job here not a proved success yet as June noticed last week that the inside wall was still a little damp. It may be that these things take a little while to dry out. Have not looked since.
You did not say if Dad accepted the invitation to ring with the Colchester people. Should think it would prove a diversion.
Not much local news this end. They have not taken our phone away yet which of course is causing trouble as it has to be dusted to no purpose.**
Used up the last of my cement on the coal bunker yesterday. There were and still are a few patches around it that need my attention.
They have opened one of the new shops in Whitby Road. (New premises for Fine Foods.) it is larger than the old place, and we find that they sell meat in addition to the usual mixed groceries. This should save a bit of shoe leather. Their older shop has been taken over by a firm of cleaners and there is a large electronic type of cleaning machine in the shop exposed to the public gaze. All most efficient except that on Saturday water was pouring out from under it in a steady stream, so much so that no one could enter, and the female assistant was sweeping it out onto the path where it formed a stream out onto the road. I expect the proprietors were a bit livid at that.
Ran into Bert Pearce in the week. He wished to be remembered to Dad. He tells me he is working at the BTC on the new timetable that is to come into operation next summer.
Both Susan and Carol have been a bit off colour this week. I think there is something going around. First Carol had it then after three days Susan got it then after the same interval Carol had her second dose. The thing consists of biliousness with high-temperature flushed appearance and lasts about four hours. Next day on each occasion they were as right as ninepence. The last session with Carol (on Thursday) caught her really low. A hair appointment had been arranged and she was taken out but wanted to lay down in the street as she felt so groggy. When at the hairdressers the assistant said that they were not expected as she had the dates down wrong.*** After that I gather the band began to play.
Well there is not much more I can say at the moment so will close once again. Hope you are both keeping well. Love from us all.
*It has not been possible to discover much online about this incident, which was clearly considered an ‘operating mishap’ rather than a major disaster – although it presumably required considerable clearing up. The most readily available information is from the GoogleBooks entry relating to Adrian Vaughan’s ‘Railways Through the Vale of the White Horse’ which includes the following paragraph and image:
There was another crash at Wootton Bassett on 5 September 1961. A Down goods train passed Wootton Bassett East box without a brake van. The signalman realised instantly that the train had become divided and the rear part was following, on a gentle downgrade, so he turned the facing points for the Down goods loop to prevent the wagons running away down Dauntsey Bank. The wagons crashed through the buffers beyond and spread wagons across the up-and-down main lines.

**OMG the horror, having to dust the phone! People’s priorities (June’s and Alec’s in particular) never cease to amaze me.
***Which whole situation could have been avoided by phoning to cancel the appointment, which would of course have made dusting the phone a worthwhile exercise after all – I mean, who wants to use a dusty phone? /cynicism.
Tuesday 29th August, 1961
Leonard to the family:
Dear Alec June Susan and Carol
Many thanks for all your letters received this morning. Glad to hear Alec and Susan arrived home safely on Saturday in spite of luggage and umbrella. As you already know we were delighted to have Susan for a few days and I’m sure she enjoyed every minute of it. No doubt though that she was pleased to see Mummie and Carol on Saturday as she was to see Daddie on Friday. it was however a magnificent effort for her on her first time away from home.
What did you think of photograph in the Evening Post?* We thought Susan came out very well. Sent on two papers as we thought June might like to let her father and mother have a copy. I took along some tomatoes for the lady in charge of Mobo toys on Saturday afternoon when I went along to get the papers and thank her for being so kind to Susan. She was delighted. On my way home I went over to the place where the donkeys stand but Punch was not there, Susan – he must have been having a rest day. They all have a day off per week apparently.
What a difference in the weather this past weekend. Mum and I actually went out at 9 p.m. last night to see the high tide which was due at 9:40 p.m. Fortunately there was no wind blowing but the water was well over the Lower Promenade path running alongside the Swimming and Boating pool.
Noted how busy you both have been on the garden and lawns and that rose cutting has turned out satisfactorily. Your dahlias must be a picture and should continue flowering until the frosts come.
I made a start yesterday on the collection of things to bring up to you in due course by putting up some mint roots. Walked down the field just now and found birds playing havoc with the elderberries so must get busy with wine making again in a day or two. If you can get blackberries in Burnham Beeches it would be worth collecting some for jam and or wine. Incidentally if weather is kind when we come up we should like to go there and collect leaf mould and bring home – it’s very valuable stuff for seed sowing et cetera. How far is it from Queens Walk? Hope you succeed in getting the heather and beech trees to grow. **
Referring to June’s letter and glad tomatoes and beans came in useful and hope it was not too much of a burden for Alec to carry them home. It was the only opportunity of getting some more to you. Expect you had a nice weekend with Eileen and no doubt Susan and Carol kept her busy. “Read me another one – just one more” says Susan.
So Pauline has gone to Italy for her holiday – probably scorching there considering what it is like here at the moment. Quite a coincidence that Eileen’s father and mother should visit Burnham-on-Sea whilst on their holiday at Bridgwater. There have been a lot of people in Clevedon these past two weeks the front has been more crowded than I’ve seen it for a long time. It may partly be due to the Bowling Tournament on the green near the Mobo toys. Quite a lot of children about too but Susan had her share of the swings, slide, roundabout etc. apart from the miniature train and Mobo toys, donkeys and bridal coach. I wish you could have seen her sometimes. We have missed her this week and I’ve lost my little shadow. Both of us here have had to get back to normal.
Mum did a big wash on Monday and I’m trying to catch up in garden. Total weight of runner beans to date 250 lbs and tomatoes 112 lbs. Latter selling very well again now to local inhabitants. Today I’ve been taking out the old raspberry canes and tying in the new ones for next year’s fruiting but it got so hot early afternoon that I gave it best for time being. The young married couple (next door) who are on holiday in Cornwall sent us a nice tin of Cornish cream which we much enjoyed.
That train of stock labelled Paddington we saw at Yatton on Saturday Alec, I passed on my way back to Clevedon. It was going in there for a works outing Clevedon to Paddington and formed the 8 a.m. Clevedon as between Clevedon and Yatton.
Did you say what happened to the draws Saturday? If Portsmouth had won instead of drawing*** I should have had 12 results up. Still a miss is as good as a mile.
No further news of Arthur Fewings yet as presumably he is still at Taunton. Mum and I are going to Bristol tomorrow Wednesday to visit the Staceys at Henleaze hence this letter being written today. Note you have put in snowdrop bulbs; that was just a little present from Susan and we went out specially to get them on Friday, Susan watching saleswoman count them out as they were put in bag. Susan also picked out the jigsaw puzzle for Carol in Woolworth as well as the toy writing paper and stamps for herself as well as Carol. The African violet has improved wonderfully.
Must tell you that the gardening gloves you gave me some months ago I had their first really hard work today – on the raspberry canes. Result no thorns in hands or fingers. Have used them on previous occasions but today was the real test.
How did car go since you have had it back from Jackson? Mine will have to go in for servicing sometime in September. It was last in just before coming to you at Easter. It is still quite alright but with a couple of long journeys soon (Exmouth and Ruislip) feel it it must have a once-over and greasing.
Not a lot more to say this time I’m but I can repeat that we were delighted to have Susan, that that she was a very good girl and that all three of us enjoyed every minute of it and we shall look forward to her next visit. Now I will leave Mum to fill up this page I’m sure she will have a lot more to tell you. all our love to you both and lots of kisses for Susan and Carol.
Mum and Dad
Eva to the family on the remaining three-quarters of a sheet of Leonard’s writing paper:
Dear Alec June Susan and Carol
Many thanks for all the letters. I see Susan put in an extra stamp, for me to reply I expect. There is no doubt that Susan enjoyed every minute of the few days and was a very model girl. I’m afraid the needlework did not get a look in beyond finding a needle and threading it, there was so much else to do. I believe it would have been too hot for us this week as it’s simply baking here can hardly bear our clothes on. The thought of going to Bristol tomorrow makes me shrivel. I hope Pauline will have a good time in Italy. Wonder if Geoff etc will find it too ’ot in Spain.
I believe we have another lot of plums coming on trees there are several green ones there so should think it was a second session. Hope you liked the photo in paper the boys were nowhere in that one.
Several more came out from the Mobo place but Jessie only let six have their photos taken. We happened to go along there at the right time. I think Dad bought six copies before the photos appeared.
Hope you are keeping OK lots of love to all and kisses xxxxxxx for Susan and Carol.
From Mum and Dad
[Drawing of a donkey labelled ‘Punch’ with the comment ‘He is too fat’. His tail also reaches the ground!]
*Briefly, the story was this: I was at the Mobo Park when some people came along and took six children outside in order to photograph them for the local newspaper. (I remember two tall men in suits and pullovers – it was a bit of a grey day – but that may be imagination; I was only five, after all.) Being incurably nosy I rode up to the top of the slope to watch, and when one child burst into tears and had to be sent back into the park they saw me there and invited me to take its place. The picture was actually on the front page of the paper, and in recent years I have been trying to track down a copy – not helped by the fact that until I reached this letter in the sequence I did not have anything resembling a date for it, and had also thought it was actually a different newspaper. Now that I have the correct information it should be possible to pin it down and get a copy, although searching local newspaper archives is not as simple as it might once have been. Watch this space, or one very much like it, for further details.
**The distance was about thirteen miles. For more on my feelings of disgust about the planned theft of leaf mould from Burnham Beeches, see previous entry.
***1-1 at home to Halifax Town.