Sunday, 13 November 2016

On 13th November 1916

Hello, thank you for dropping in.  Today is Remembrance Sunday and it carries special poignancy in this year, the centenary of the Battle of the Somme, the largest battle of the Great War on the Western Front.  On the first day of the conflict we often simply call "The Somme" 19,240 British soldiers died.  19,240.  The battle did not finish that day, however, as fighting continued for a further 140 days, by which time the British army had advanced just seven miles and more than one million men were dead or wounded. 
 
The last battle of the Somme Offensive was the Battle of the Ancre which began one hundred years ago today and ended on 18th November 1916.  Today I am going to tell you the story of a young man who was injured at that battle, one hundred years ago today, and died a grim and painful death.  A volunteer who lied about his age in order to join up, so keen was he to do his bit and serve his country, he left behind no wife or children to tell his story and he lay unspoken of for almost a century, his sad tale untold.  I am not going to tell you his story: my cousin Anne is, for she is his great niece.  These are her words and I am thrilled to bits that she has written this post for us. 
 
WOR JOE
 
Wor Joe, wor kid, the bairn, Able Seaman Joseph Garside. He would have been all of these names to those who knew him. He was born in Newcastle upon Tyne on 16th September 1897 to Joseph and Annie Garside my great grandparents. He was 5' 4" tall, had dark brown hair and eyes, his occupation was a pitman. I only know all this because of my research into our family history. My Mam gave me all the information I needed to get started. She told me all about her grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, who married who etc. But nothing about Joseph. Now why on earth should Joseph be missing? Perhaps it was because he died before she was born or perhaps Joseph's life was too short and too painful to talk about. But now, on this the 100th year anniversary of the Somme, Joseph Garside, along with all our brave young men, needs to be remembered and talked about.
 
Joseph joined the Royal Naval Division on 27 May 1915 giving his date of birth as 1896. In December 1915 he was drafted to Hawke Battalion and his records show the Division was moved to Egypt in January 1916 preparatory to the Gallipoli Campaign. At the end of the Gallipoli Campaign the Division were re-designated 63rd (Royal Naval) Division and were moved to France, departing Mudros 18th May, arriving Marseilles 23rd May 1916. Joseph's Hawke Battalion were involved in the Battle of Ancre, a phase of the Battles of the Somme. It was here he was wounded on 13th November 1916. His records show he was admitted to the Gen Hos Dannes Camiers on 17th November and later transferred by Amb. Train/ HMS Cumbria on 23rd November and arriving at Warncliffe War Hospital, Middlewood Road, Sheffield on 25th November. On 24 August 1917 Joseph was discharged (invalided) from the RN and spent the rest of his days being cared for by the Mary Magdalane Home for Incurables Newcastle upon Tyne, close to his family. He died on 11th June 1918 aged 20 of (1) Gun Shot Wound Spine (2) Paralysis Cystitis. It is hard to imagine how dreadful his last 19 months would have been. Joseph was buried in his local churchyard with full military honours.
 
However this is not the end of Joseph's story. I was contacted last year by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and informed that Joseph was one of several hundred servicemen who were not on any official war memorial. Many, like Joseph, had died after they had been discharged. A new 1914-1918 Memorial to include all these servicemen was to be unveiled at Brookwood and,  as Joseph's name was on this new memorial, I was asked if I would like to attend the inauguration and dedication ceremony? It was an unforgettable, very moving day and my husband Alan and I were introduced to the Duke of Kent who is President of the CWGC and I was able to tell the Duke all about Joseph Garside! 
 
Now you have been remembered and talked about. God bless you wor Joe, you were just a bairn.
 




 
P.S. A little update to this story.  Joseph's great nephew Robert Garside has discovered his burial site in St James Churchyard, Benwell, Newcastle upon Tyne and informed the CWGC who have sent the following email:
 
I can confirm that the Commission is in the process of producing a headstone to mark the grave of Able Seaman Joseph Garside in Benwell (St. James) Churchyard as his official place of commemoration. We cannot say when this work will be completed at this stage, but the Commission update you once we have any further information.
 
So perhaps another ceremony may be in the offing with his family attending.
 
 
See you soon (she said, wiping a tear from her eye as she pinned on her poppy),
 
Love, Mrs Tiggywinkle x

Friday, 11 November 2016

On Armistice Day

Hello, thank you for dropping in, you are very welcome here.  This was intended to be a Five On Friday post but there is no link-up this week, so please bear with me.  Actually, that may be a blessing in disguise as I am not sharing five things today anyway!

There were several things I considered sharing with you this week, but then I realised that today is Armistice Day and that I couldn't write about anything else.  Remembrance Sunday, the second Sunday in November, has been marked in my diary for more than forty years: as a child, I was a keen Brownie Guide, Girl Guide and then Ranger Guide which meant attendance at church parade and the wearing of a paper poppy.  Armistice Day itself didn't seem as important as it does now, certainly we never observed a national silence at 11am as has become fashionable, although not compulsory, over the last twenty years or so.  Perhaps it was the Falklands War in 1982 which changed the general attitude, or the Gulf War in 1990/1?  As I have become older it has seemed increasingly important to remember the fallen and the terrible toll that war takes.

I haven't always worn a poppy.  There is a current dispute with FIFA over whether or not the England and Scotland football players should wear poppies on their shirts during their match this evening as FIFA says that the poppy is a political symbol and it doesn't allow political symbols.  I do think that it is used as a political symbol sometimes, which is what stopped me wearing it for a few years, but a friend of mine, a wise ex-serviceman who has been involved in the theatre of war, put me straight and told me, "We wear a poppy to remember the fallen.  That's it."  I have worn a poppy ever since; I don't think it's glorious to die in war, "fighting for one's country", I think that war is bloody and cruel, but I choose to honour the fallen.
 
I mused over five things for this post.  My first thought was five war poems; my second thought was to show you photographs of five members of our family who served in the armed forces during wartime (and, thankfully, all came home); my third thought was to show you five artefacts we own associated with twentieth century wars.  All of those ideas seemed rather trite and undignified when faced with the reality that we mark this day because so many people have died due to humankind's inhumanity to humankind.  So instead, I ask you to take five minutes today to focus on that thought, to remember the fallen and to thank them for their sacrifice, whether voluntary or not; and if you can't take five, please take two, perhaps at 11 o'clock.
 
On Sunday, I shall, as usual, be at the cenotaph in our parish at 11am, wearing a poppy and my grandmother's regimental brooch.  The Best Beloved will join me, and may even wear his father's medals.  We will remember them.
Image result for remembrance day free downloadable poppy image
 
I shall be back here on Sunday with a very special post, the story of a young man who was unknown for decades but who has been recently discovered.  See you then.
 

Love, Mrs Tiggywinkle x
 

Monday, 7 November 2016

Drops Fabel Socks

Hello, thank you for calling in, you are very welcome here.  I hope you are keeping warm and cosy - the temperature has dropped sharply here and vests, socks and hot water bottles are the order of the day.  Last time I promised a post about knitting so I thought I'd share my first adventure with Drops Fabel with you.  I had seen this yarn written about online in all sorts of places and wanted to knit with it but what finally spurred me into biting the bullet was when the champion sock knitter at my knit and natter group recommended it.  I went home, went online and went shopping.  This is what I bought -

 
 
This one is called "Heather" and I chose it because it shouted my sister's name (which isn't Heather, but she wears these colours) and I wanted to knit some socks for her.  The problem with it was that much as I love these self-striping yarns, you don't really know what the pattern is going to look like when it's knitted up.  There was a tiny photo but it didn't show enough rows to give a realistic picture, so it was a bit of a gamble. 
 
I have to tell you that knitting with this yarn was an absolute joy.  As the pattern emerged the colours transported me to the moorland at the top of the Long Mynd: the pink heather, the yellow gorse, the brown bracken, the green grasses, the white sheep.  I have heard some knitters say that the yarn they buy tells them what it wants to be used for and I have never understood that, but this yarn wove its own spell as it became a pair of socks which would nurture and cosset a pair of feet as they walked through the British countryside.  I found it SO difficult to give them away, but fortunately, my sister's feet are not the same size as mine so they didn't fit me, which made it easier.


These colours are not true - blame the indoor lighting.

The yarn itself is 75% wool (warmth) and 25% nylon (durability), it's very soft and ever-so-slightly fluffy, there were no knots and it's smooth and easy to knit with.  So, when a friend saw them and asked me to knit a pair for her, I was happy to oblige. 

Outside in the sunshine, these colours are true.

This time, however, I was not so pleased: when I knitted up the second sock, the stripes did not match up with the first!  All was well until I got to the heel and even though I used the same batch of wool, the same number of stitches, the same needles and the same number of rows, they are slightly misaligned, which bothers me Very Much.  Fortunately, it doesn't bother my friend.



However, I have succumbed and bought some more of this wool, in a different colourway - these socks are for me and they tell a different story, which I'll share with you next time.  I just need some sunshine so that I can photograph them.
 
See you soon.
 
Love, Mrs Tiggywinkle x
 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, 5 November 2016

Five On Friday - About Guernsey

Hello, thank you for popping in, and thank you for your kind responses to my last post.  Lorrie captured my feelings perfectly when she described "gentle domesticity" and I have found some comfort in it this week, pottering around the house and garden.

There is also comfort in routine and so today I am joining Amy at Love Made My Home for Five on Friday.  I mentioned last time that the Best Beloved, The Teacher, Flashman and I went to Guernsey last week to spend some time with The Mathematician who is working there during her university placement year.  Here are five things we enjoyed in Guernsey.
 
1.  The Food
 
Unsurprisingly, the seafood was abundant and delicious - we enjoyed crab, mussels, scallops, prawns, calamari, sea bass... from 1st October for six weeks every year the Channel Islands run an event called Tennerfest during which participating restaurants offer special menus priced between £10 and £20.  We took advantage of this while we were there and ate some spectacular food.

Mini Fruits de Mer at Crabby Jack's

The Best Beloved's lunch at Crabby Jack's

 Seared Scallops with Rocket Salad at Urban Kitchen
  
2.  The German Occupation Museum
 
Guernsey was occupied by German forces from 30th June 1940 until 9th May 1945 and this privately-owned museum, developed from one boy's collection, comprehensively covers that period.  It is old-fashioned, stuffed full of documents and artefacts which have been put together thoughtfully in a series of themed roomsWe enjoyed it very much and told the attendant so; he replied that they have fewer and fewer visitors each year but that those who do come seem to be increasingly appreciative. 



 
 
3.  Fort Grey Shipwreck Museum
 
Fort Grey is a Martello Tower built in 1804 in Rocquaine Bay on the west coast of the island.  Getting there is an adventure as we had to walk out along the causeway and then climb the steps before entering the doorway, but it's not nearly as much of adventure as it was before the museum was opened in 1976 as until then, there were no steps and no doorway: the only way to get in was to use a ladder!  The museum is small but fascinating, the location is fab, looking out over the Hanois Reef and its lighthouse, and the attendant was lovely.  What more could you ask for in a museum?





 
4.  The Little Chapel
 
The Little Chapel is very little indeed at 5m x 3m and was first built in 1914 as a miniature version of the grotto and basilica at Lourdes.  This is its third incarnation and unfortunately, it is covered in scaffolding because the ground beneath it is subsiding.  (We have a family joke that wherever I visit, there is scaffolding - the only time I have been to Venice, the entire frontage of St Mark's Basilica was  covered in scaffolding!)  Major restoration work is underway to rescue the building and although it was closed for several months at the beginning of this year, it is now open and we were able to go inside.  Wowee!  These photographs don't do it justice; it is A-MA-ZING.


 
 
5. The Beaches
 
Ah, now you know how much I love to be beside the sea and wherever you are in Guernsey, it's never far away.  I couldn't wait to take my shoes off, feel the sand beneath my feet and paddle in the shallows.  I picked up shells - striped limpets, buttercup-coloured flat periwinkles and top shells glinting with nacre - explored rockpools and simply watched the light change over the water.  Bliss.

 






I had a romantic notion to sit on a beach with the Best Beloved and watch the sun set over the sea and although we were able to do just that one evening, the sky was cloudy so the reality didn't match my imagined scene.  It wasn't bad, though.

 
 
Of course, the best thing of all was being with both of my precious girls.
 
Now, if you have the time please hop over to Love Made My Home and see what everyone else is sharing this week.
 
See you soon with, I think, a post about knitting.  It's that time of year again.
 
Love, Mrs Tiggywinkle x


 
 

Wednesday, 2 November 2016

Coping

Hello, thank you for your patience, for your kind thoughts and your condolences, all very much appreciated.  September and October were very difficult months: two family deaths in September, both long lives lived well but suddenly gone, during which I worked for three weeks under a redundancy notice which was rescinded with five days to go.  "Phew!" I thought - my job is part-time but I love it and the meagre wages have made a big difference, so those weeks were stressful.  We spent the first half of October in that terrible limbo between death and funeral and to be honest, we didn't feel much better afterwards.  We live almost two hundred miles away from the rest of the Best Beloved's family and the inherent communication problems make things difficult.  There seems to be quite a lot of treading on eggshells. 

Last week was half term week so we went to Guernsey for five days with The Teacher and Flashman to see The Mathematician, who is working there for her university placement year.  The break and the time together did us all the power of good...although while we were there, my employer went into liquidation and the Best Beloved's school decided that they don't need him back, so we both became unemployed on the same day.  My employer owes me six weeks' wages and I might receive them before Christmas, or I might not.  Thank goodness for duty-free gin.
 
So, here we are back home.  The agency found some work for the Best Beloved on Monday and he is now booked up for the rest of this term - hurrah!  The trees are dressed in my favourite autumn colours and I can see lots of them from my windows - hurrah!  The sun is shining in a  blue sky with white fluffy clouds - hurrah!  I am taking deep breaths and trying to gently unwind the tightened ball of grief and anxiety I have become.
 
Yesterday, this involved a session of homely, old-fashioned, domestic cooking.  I made cottage pie for dinner - is it the ultimate comfort food? - and cooked enough mince for a couple more, now stashed away in the freezer.  I put the remnants of a chicken carcass in a pot with onion, carrot, peppercorns and herbs, covered it with water and simmered it for two hours.  At the end of that time, I lifted the lid and there it was: the smell of my parents' kitchen, the nostalgic smell of home.  My parents always made stock with a chicken or turkey carcass and then used it to make a homely soup with vegetables and lentils.  When I was first married I did the same, but soon discovered that the Best Beloved only really liked soup if it came out of a tin (57 varieties) so there seemed little point, and once The Teacher became vegetarian when she was nine years old there was no point at all.  Any need I had for chicken stock was satisfied by a cube (which, of course, is not the same thing).
 
So this is the first time I have made chicken stock for many years.  Recently, the Best Beloved has discovered a liking for chilled tubs of soup from the supermarket and he expressed a willingness to give my homemade soup a try, so tonight was the night.  I finely chopped an onion and a carrot, softened them in a smidgen of butter, added a handful of red lentils and the precious stock, added herbs and seasoning and let it all simmer for twenty-five minutes before adding the chicken I had stripped from the carcass. 
 
 
 
 
Gentle readers, I have to tell you that it was...a triumph.  The Best Beloved said that it was "really nice", which is as complimentary as he gets, and he pointed out that it is the third meal we have had from the chicken - roast on Sunday, sauted with vegetables and rice on Monday, soup today - which thriftiness is immensely satisfying.  That soup was delicious, nurturing body and soul.  Slowly, I am unwinding.
 
I'll be back soon to tell you about Guernsey.
 
Love, Mrs Tiggywinkle x