Yes, it's that time of year again when everyone seems to make predictions about and resolutions for the New Year. For what they are worth, here are my thoughts. Nothing original, I'm afraid, as they are very similar to those of previous years. Plus ca change.
I suppose, as we say goodbye to 2013, we can take some comfort that we come to our last
full year of Posh Dave's pack of scoundrels before we are faced with arguably the most important election for a generation. So take heart my
friends. Push those shoulders back, lift those chins high and
steady your hands for this is no time to lose your nerve. There is
still plenty of work to be done and battles to be fought, for faint
hearts and weak minds will never win the day. So as we enter 2014 together remember....
''There maybe troubles ahead
But as long. as there is music and moonlight and love and romance
Lets face those Tories and dance".
But we should not forget what is going on
elsewhere in the world. We are not alone in facing huge issues and, compared with many, many others, our trials and tribulations are insignificant. Notwithstanding all of our local doom and gloom, there will be many good things
about 2014 that we should not lose sight of. Here are a few from me: add
your own to the list.
* The sun will rise and set every day.
* Most people will eat, laugh and love more than they are hungry, cry and hate.
* The world around us will continue to provide immense pleasure to those who take time to experience it.
* Many people will practice unsolicited random acts of kindness.
* Communities and organisations will continue to work together and make the lives of many immeasurably better.
* Most of us will continue to relish the companionship and support of our network of family and friends.
* Children will be born and received into the arms of loving parents.
* Most of us will still be around this time next year.
* Healthcare professionals will successfully treat millions of us for a wide variety of illnesses and diseases.
*
Other public service professionals and employees will continue to keep
us safe and contribute to our good standard standard of living.
Each
of us can accomplish something worthwhile in 2014: let's give it a go. And that brings us neatly to the subject of resolutions - but more of these in a future post.
Quid me anxius sum? (Alfred E Neuman, Mad Magazine circa 1956). Facio, ita.
Tuesday, 31 December 2013
Monday, 23 December 2013
Who do I think I am?
***************************
WHAT GENEALOGY MEANS TO ME
According to one dictionary I've got genealogy is defined as:
* A record or account of the descent of a family, group or person from an ancestor or ancestors; a family tree.
* Direct descent from a progenitor; lineage or pedigree.
* Direct descent from a progenitor; lineage or pedigree.
* The study or investigation of ancestry and family histories.
And the motives of those indulging in genealogy are:
"The desire to carve out a place for one's family in the larger historical picture, a sense of responsibility to preserve the past for future generations, and a sense of self-satisfaction in accurate storytelling".
And the motives of those indulging in genealogy are:
"The desire to carve out a place for one's family in the larger historical picture, a sense of responsibility to preserve the past for future generations, and a sense of self-satisfaction in accurate storytelling".
I'd never describe myself as a genealogist but I can identify with some, but not all, of the above. I 'do' some family history research and have done for about 15 years now. To me, however, genealogy is a whole lot more than those first three dry sentences might suggest.
* It is finding my roots, my family, and my home.
* It is seeing my great great grandparents as a young couple in a census record with their three young children; children who I know will be in the Chippenham Workhouse within the year.
* It is seeing my grand mother as a one-month-old child.
* It is seeing my grandfather's signature on WW1 records and knowing that he and others like him must have gone through hell.
* It is even finding the "skeletons in the closets" or the "black sheep" of the family.
* It is tracking how my family moved around the country seeking employment, a trait I've continued.
* It is tracking how my family moved around the country seeking employment, a trait I've continued.
* It is finding that members of my family went through some terrible times, but also knowing that they survived.
* It is seeing in my mind's eye the careworn faces of all of those who have gone before me and imagining what they were like as individuals.
* It is trying, but failing, to identify people and events that may have shaped my personality.
* It is trying, but failing, to identify people and events that may have shaped my personality.
* It is listening to stories told by my older relatives and passing those precious memories down to future generations.
* It is finding cousins and other family members I never knew existed until recently.
* It is the realisation of how important family is.
* It is the realisation of how important it is to remember those ancestors who came before us.
Great grandfather Caleb Boniface in the Royal Navy on the Royal Yacht Albert and Victoria II |
But most of all, it is the sharing of information with others who like me relish the research.
* It is not just dusty records or words.
* It is not only sharing the excitement of finding a new ancestor, but also sharing the frustrations of not being able to find what you are looking for.
* It is the bouncing of ideas back and forth, of theories of "what might be" and commiserating with another when that theory falls through, which it often does.
* It is being able to say "Look! Look what I have found!" and knowing that your excitement will be shared and understood.
* It is being able ask a question on a mailing list, knowing that what you are asking may be "dumb" but knowing that you will not be treated with disrespect.
* It is the people who give of their time and their energies to help you.
* It is the people who volunteer their time and energies to do lookups on the various county web pages.
* It is the people who volunteer their time and energies for the various historical societies.
* It is the people who give of their time to transcribe old documents and microfilm, and who share that knowledge, whether it is through books sold by historical societies or on web pages.
* It is the people who go through old cemeteries and take the time to write down those who are buried there and share that knowledge gladly.
* It is the people who share old photographs, old letters and their old family stories, not expecting anything back other than a thank you and the knowledge that they have helped another in their family quest.
* It is the people who go above and beyond what is asked of them because they love genealogy. They love the fun of it, the frustrations of it and the excitement of it.
* It is also the knowledge that you are passing down something of worth;
that you are leaving behind a little something of yourself.
* It is the knowledge that through all of your research you may have made a difference, however small it may be.
Saturday, 21 December 2013
Of bras, mud and hippopotami
A pre-Xmas ramble with our regular walking group and a route that started at Minions on Bodmin Moor. We dropped down through the Gonamena Valley, across fields to the Bronze Age Trethevy Quoit, up to Darite and Crow's Nest and thence back to our starting point. About 7 miles in some less than friendly weather, which made our sojourn at the Cheesewring Pub (the highest in Cornwall apparently) for mulled wine and mince pies all the more welcome. A few photographs for the record.
More hedgerow goodies: this time a very expensive pair of motorcycle gloves. If the owner recognises them, why not contact me and I can tell you where they are. |
And then there was the mud....................... |
........................and more mud............... |
.....and yet more mud. Aficionados of mud will be particularly admiring of this last example. As sticky as Superglue and wonderfully squelchy. A joy to slurp through. |
As our merry muddy band are all of a 'certain' age I'm positive that, at some stage on this walk, we all had the 'mud' song going through our minds. You know, the Flanders and Swann tune with the well known chorus:
Mud, mud, glorious mud,
Nothing quite like it for cooling the blood.
So, follow me, follow,
Down to the hollow,
And there let us wallow in glorious mud.
Nothing quite like it for cooling the blood.
So, follow me, follow,
Down to the hollow,
And there let us wallow in glorious mud.
Of course, its correct title is The Hippopotamus Song (but you knew that already, didn't you?) and here are the eponymous duo singing it in concert. Wonderfully literate lyrics and superb voices. Enjoy. Even better, remember it the next time you encounter mud, mud, glorious mud...........
Labels:
Bodmin Moor,
Richard's Ramblers,
Walk
Thursday, 19 December 2013
In praise of: the H2O Mop X5
Regular followers of this blog would have noticed (lamented?) a lack of posts for a few days recently. What was I doing? Confession time: I have discovered a new passion in life and, as with all passions, it seems to have been monopolising my time. It all started one night when I was unable to sleep, so I got up and switched on the television. I eventually found one of those all night shopping channels and decided that it would be a perfect cure for my insomnia. And there before my eyes at 3 am in the morning was a chap demonstrating a steam mop that seemed to be the answer to just about everyones' prayer.
It would clean everything: stone, wood, tiles, carpets, pots, pans, drains, drums, sinks, suits and all with nothing more than a cup full of water. With such a steam cleaner my life could be transformed. I could banish dirt, odour, disease, and quite probably wickedness and the Tories, from this world. I could sanitise our dog, banish wet-wipes from our nappy changing routine, make our Christmas tree baubles sparkle, deep-clean the shower nozzle and resurrect life into our upholstery. I could do all that with just the flick of a switch and a confident smile on my face. The very thought of sleep became impossible until I had acquired such a machine myself and, since it was delivered, I haven't had much time to sleep because of my passion to make everything clean. Not just any old clean but H20 Mop x5 clean. The hall carpet and the kitchen floor were fine for starters, but very soon my horizons' expanded. Friends are starting to steer clear of me because they know that they are likely to get a cleansing dose of steam if they stand still for too long. The lamp-posts up our road shine with a radiance that can outmatch any halogen bulb. It is the glow of cleanliness, the shimmer of spotlessness - as only a H20 Mop X5 can bring.
Fear not: once I have steam-cleaned the rest of East Cornwall, I will return to regular blogging. And if you don't believe the powers of this amazing piece of high technology, watch this short video and be astounded. I'm glad I bought mine before the rush.
(To avoid any misunderstanding, I should add that our house is the last place on earth that needs any steam cleaning).
It would clean everything: stone, wood, tiles, carpets, pots, pans, drains, drums, sinks, suits and all with nothing more than a cup full of water. With such a steam cleaner my life could be transformed. I could banish dirt, odour, disease, and quite probably wickedness and the Tories, from this world. I could sanitise our dog, banish wet-wipes from our nappy changing routine, make our Christmas tree baubles sparkle, deep-clean the shower nozzle and resurrect life into our upholstery. I could do all that with just the flick of a switch and a confident smile on my face. The very thought of sleep became impossible until I had acquired such a machine myself and, since it was delivered, I haven't had much time to sleep because of my passion to make everything clean. Not just any old clean but H20 Mop x5 clean. The hall carpet and the kitchen floor were fine for starters, but very soon my horizons' expanded. Friends are starting to steer clear of me because they know that they are likely to get a cleansing dose of steam if they stand still for too long. The lamp-posts up our road shine with a radiance that can outmatch any halogen bulb. It is the glow of cleanliness, the shimmer of spotlessness - as only a H20 Mop X5 can bring.
Fear not: once I have steam-cleaned the rest of East Cornwall, I will return to regular blogging. And if you don't believe the powers of this amazing piece of high technology, watch this short video and be astounded. I'm glad I bought mine before the rush.
(To avoid any misunderstanding, I should add that our house is the last place on earth that needs any steam cleaning).
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
Stumped for a Xmas present idea?
It was so much easier in the 50's and 60's when these TV ads were running. I think I may have bought some for various people at the time. I wonder if they are still alive?
Monday, 16 December 2013
RIP: The Amazing Mr Smith
Sad news today of the death of someone I used to work with many years ago during my time at the Wellcome Research Laboratories in Beckenham. Then he was a technician in the Biochemistry Department and known as Derek Smith. However his alter-ego was The Amazing Mr Smith, an accomplished musician and eccentric comedian. Think of a musical amalgam of Spike Milligan, Micheal Bentine and Monty Python and you won't be far off. He was well known on the folk club circuit and, by all accounts, he had quite an international following as well. I saw him perform a few times and he had that rare ability to make me laugh out loud. He will be fondly remembered by all who knew him.
And through the wonders of YouTube, we can all see him in action. The first clip is a compilation of snatches of several of his best routines, including Duelling Banjos, The Condom Bagpipes, The Condom Harp and The Cuckoo Clock. And the second clip is of him playing Mull of Kintyre on a condom. To paraphrase the old saying You don't have to be completely mad to appreciate the Amazing Mr Smith but it certainly helps.
And through the wonders of YouTube, we can all see him in action. The first clip is a compilation of snatches of several of his best routines, including Duelling Banjos, The Condom Bagpipes, The Condom Harp and The Cuckoo Clock. And the second clip is of him playing Mull of Kintyre on a condom. To paraphrase the old saying You don't have to be completely mad to appreciate the Amazing Mr Smith but it certainly helps.
Sunday, 15 December 2013
Mmmmmmmmmmm - Xmas goodies
I'm an unrepentant omnivore and I do like to put a face to the meat I eat. Ladies and gentlemen, allow me to introduce to you, albeit fleetingly as they are soon to be despatched, the provider of our Xmas lunch and the centrepiece of our Boxing Day table. Many thanks to Patrieda Produce, Linkinhorne, for getting them this far. They'll be in safe hands - and an even safer oven.
Our goose is the one in front, looking rather dishevelled due to the bad weather. But she will be 'dressed' appropriately on Xmas Day. We'll call her 'Birdy Lunch'. |
We'll be having a piece of the lady to the left in the form of a potentially delicious maple syrup and cinnamon glazed gammon joint. We'll call her 'Piggy Lunch'. |
Monday, 9 December 2013
Derek Acorah......again.
Schadenfreude n: Pleasure derived from the misfortunes of others. Something I try not to indulge in but I do make an exception in the case of Derek Acorah. Of course if he was a thousandth as good a psychic as he would have us believe he is, he would have seen his recent brush with the boys in blue coming. Indeed, if we take his writings at face value, he actually chose to take the path he did. In which case I do hope that the presiding judge does what he can to help Derek achieve the growth of his soul he so obviously desires.
"............it is my belief that before we enter our physical lives we choose the way in which we will live those lives. We choose the burdens we will have to carry, the things we will have to endure and also the manner of our passing".
"..................people have to undergo certain harsh experiences in their lifetime in order to achieve soul growth. In other words, they had agreed to these experiences before they had incarnated into their physical bodies".
Saturday, 7 December 2013
Who remembers Wink Martindale?
A friend of mine is an avid poker player. A game of great mystery to me and the mystery deepens every time she (Ms X mentioned in a previous post here but revealed as The Baffer in the clip above) puts something on Facebook about her latest exploits. Yesterday was no exception when she seemed to be less than happy with a recent game. At least that's the way I interpreted her remarks: I could be wrong as I don't understand the lingo. However, The Baffer's experiences with her deck of cards brought to mind one Wink Martindale.I've always had a morbid fascination for spoken word records because the chances are, if there is a spoken word passage or – better still – if it’s entirely narrated rather than sung then it’s almost preordained to be awful. And the granddaddy of all awful spoken word records must be Wink Martindale’s huge hit Deck of Cards. A little research shows that Winston Conrad "Wink" Martindale was born in Jackson, Tennessee, and started his career as a disc jockey at age 17. His version of Deck of Cards, the ridiculous, melodramatic story of a soldier caught playing snap at the back of a church, reached Number Five in the UK charts in 1959. And this wretched record just won’t die: Martindale has been in the charts with it on three different occasions, and it has been recorded by everyone including Max Bygraves (coming up shortly). And the last line of the 'song'?: "I know! I was that soldier!" Rubbish, he wasn’t. The original story, adapted for Wink's recording, has been around since at least 1762 – 180 years before WW2.
Wink has had a successful TV career over the years hosting a series of game shows, including What's This Song?, Trivial Pursuit, Boggle and Debt. Why didn't we get to see them over here? Apparently he still pops up on USA TV every now and again. Who knows, he may even still be singing Deck of Cards. Listen and, if you are of a certain age, indulge in a little nostalgia.
As an extra helping of awfulness, I’ve included Max Bygraves’ version of this appalling song. Inexplicably popular, especially as the man was a dreadful singer, pedestrian comedian and a terrible game show host (another thing he shared with Wink), old waxy Maxy’s career began in earnest shortly after WW2. He appeared in a number of cringeworthy films (believe me, they were. I saw a few of them. Why?) before
establishing himself as a housewives'
favourite, releasing an endless stream of albums and singles through the 50s and 60s (will anyone admit to remembering the SingalongaMax series?). When he issued his version of Deck of Cards (in 1973) it managed to reach Number 13 in the charts. Sniffing out the possibility of a few more sales, the Martindale version was reissued, reaching Number 22. Can you imagine - two versions of the song in the charts at the same time? What was wrong with us? Was this in reaction to Ted Heath's Conservative government? Yet another thing to blame on the Tories?
Max died last August (2012), just a couple of months shy of his 90th birthday. Married to former WAAF sergeant Blossom Murray, with whom he had three children, for almost 70 years, naughty Maxy also fathered three other illegitimate children who, although he went to great lengths to distance himself from, finally made peace with the serial philanderer shortly before his death. But this shouldn't detract from your vicarious enjoyment of his version of Wink's masterpiece. Listen and be amazed at how Max can take it down a couple more notches on the naffness scale.
Thursday, 5 December 2013
Out of Chaos comes sweet music
A regular reader of my blog (thank you, TP) pointed me in the direction of this piece of Xmas music. Called 'The Christmas Waltz' and played by the Edge of Chaos Orchestra, I think it's delightful and good enough to share more widely. Enjoy.
Tuesday, 3 December 2013
'Tis the nightmare before Christmas....
The season is approaching, folks, when we curmudgeons have lots to sound off about. And there's nothing that irritates us more than the annoying, tedious and repetitive Christmas jingles and tunes we are confronted with wherever we go. Yes, it's time to be assaulted yet again by an excruciatingly dippy version of
“It’s A Jingly Jangly Jolly Holy Holly Santa Snowy Sleigh Ride” or some such. It really is snow joke (sorry). Once I hear Noddy Holder dementedly screeching 'It's Christmas!', I want to perforate my eardrums with a hot needle.
But I never do, of course, because not all Christmas songs are totally naff. Let Santa Parsons give you an early Xmas present and point you in the direction of some festive musical fun that will make you forget the tuneless turkeys. You might just find your heart filling up with Christmas joy if you follow the link to the podcast called The Yule Log from Hell.
It's a compilation that comes out at this time of year of 'alternative' Christmas songs: some straight, some completely off-the-wall, some politically incorrect, some plain awful, some you would definitely not want your mother to hear but all of them infinitely preferable to Wham, Slade, Wizzard and their like. Take a look below at a few of the songs featured and think where else you could find them. Why not download them all and entertain your friends and family to around 10 hours of glee? I have and I will - so, visitors to Colinette Barn, you have been warned!
* Ragin’ Cajun Redneck Christmas – Willie Robertson
* It’s a Technicolor Christmas When You’re Jewish – Tommy and the Greyhounds
* Please come home for Christmas - Etta James
* Yes, Virginia. There is a Santa Claus - Burgess Merrideth
* Santa Claus is Coming in a Whirly Bird - Pat Boone
* Lumberjack Christmas/No One Can Save You From the Ghosts of Christmas Past - Sufjan Stevens
* Santa Doesn't Come to the Little Jewish Kids Houses - The Yid Kids
* Naughty, Naughty Children (Better Start Actin' Nice) - Grace Potter and the Nocturnals
* Yah Dis Ist Ein Christmas Tree – Mel Blanc
* I Saw Daddy Kissing Santa Claus - Kip Adotta
* Give Me a Second Chance for Christmas – Mike Viola & the Candy Butchers
* I Saw Three Ships - The Chieftans/Marianne Faithfull
* Santa Claus is a Black Man - A.K.I.M. and the Teddy Vann Production Co
But I never do, of course, because not all Christmas songs are totally naff. Let Santa Parsons give you an early Xmas present and point you in the direction of some festive musical fun that will make you forget the tuneless turkeys. You might just find your heart filling up with Christmas joy if you follow the link to the podcast called The Yule Log from Hell.
It's a compilation that comes out at this time of year of 'alternative' Christmas songs: some straight, some completely off-the-wall, some politically incorrect, some plain awful, some you would definitely not want your mother to hear but all of them infinitely preferable to Wham, Slade, Wizzard and their like. Take a look below at a few of the songs featured and think where else you could find them. Why not download them all and entertain your friends and family to around 10 hours of glee? I have and I will - so, visitors to Colinette Barn, you have been warned!
* Ragin’ Cajun Redneck Christmas – Willie Robertson
* It’s a Technicolor Christmas When You’re Jewish – Tommy and the Greyhounds
* Please come home for Christmas - Etta James
* Yes, Virginia. There is a Santa Claus - Burgess Merrideth
* Santa Claus is Coming in a Whirly Bird - Pat Boone
* Lumberjack Christmas/No One Can Save You From the Ghosts of Christmas Past - Sufjan Stevens
* Santa Doesn't Come to the Little Jewish Kids Houses - The Yid Kids
* Naughty, Naughty Children (Better Start Actin' Nice) - Grace Potter and the Nocturnals
* Yah Dis Ist Ein Christmas Tree – Mel Blanc
* I Saw Daddy Kissing Santa Claus - Kip Adotta
* Give Me a Second Chance for Christmas – Mike Viola & the Candy Butchers
* I Saw Three Ships - The Chieftans/Marianne Faithfull
* Santa Claus is a Black Man - A.K.I.M. and the Teddy Vann Production Co
Sunday, 1 December 2013
In praise of: The Commonwealth War Graves Commission
If you've ever been involved in researching a member of the UK forces who was killed in WW1, you'd have given thanks to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Their records are invaluable as they detail the burial
place of nearly two million dead from not only the two 'great' wars but also many other minor conflicts. The CWGC database, accessible free via their website, is the first place to go to get started. I've used it many, many times but I'd never given much thought to the origins of the CWGC. Reading David Crane's recent book, 'Empires of the Dead: How one man's vision led to the creation of WW1's War Graves', has changed that.
Before WWI, little provision was made for the burial of our war dead. Soldiers were often unceremoniously dumped in mass graves whilst officers were shipped home for burial. The great cemeteries of WWI came about as a result of the efforts of one inspired visionary. In 1914, Fabian Ware joined the Red Cross, working on the front line in France. The sheer scale of the killing and maiming presented unprecedented challenges. Horrified by the hasty burials, from the first he tried to establish a method of uniformly recognising the fallen with a simple cross and template to stencil on the name, rank, number and unit. Within three years he had established a War Graves Registration unit, which in 1917 became the Imperial War Graves Commission, and later the CWGC.
How Ware achieved this, quite often in the teeth of opposition from the politicians, the Crown, the Army and Whitehall bureaucracy, is the subject of Crane’s book. It is not a biography of Ware as such, but it does put the early years of his creating the commission into the context of the times and, as such, it gives extraordinary insights into the prevailing prejudices and hang-ups of official and unofficial Britain.
Ware's vision was based on the simple and egalitarian proposition that the dead should be buried as close as possible to where they fell (many objected and wanted their sons brought home, but Ware’s vision prevailed – until the Falklands War in 1982, when families could choose to bring their fallen home). They should be buried irrespective of rank with privates and soldiers alongside colonels and brigadiers. This philosophy translated into the simple 'standard' headstone, modelled by Edwin Lutyens on secular lines, thus making it suitable for the dead of all the countries of the Empire, irrespective of their religions. The cemeteries themselves were designed by Lutyens and his rather combative fellow architects Reginald Blomfield and Herbert Baker and were set off by flowers of the English countryside — a touch of inspiration from the Gertrude Jekyll. These cemeteries were designed to be commemorative, to mark the dead and provide sites of mourning, and not to trumpet military or imperial glory. Rudyard Kipling, who was mourning the loss of his 18-year-old son Jack at Loos in 1915, for whom there was no grave, added the poignant phrase “a soldier of the Great War known unto God” – to offer solace.
Given the subject matter, I'm not sure that 'enjoyed' is the right term to use about the book but I did. Understanding the establishment of the CWGC and the trials and tribulations underlying its prime task - identifying, retrieving and burying a body - somehow adds to the search for those commemorated. Recommended reading.
Before WWI, little provision was made for the burial of our war dead. Soldiers were often unceremoniously dumped in mass graves whilst officers were shipped home for burial. The great cemeteries of WWI came about as a result of the efforts of one inspired visionary. In 1914, Fabian Ware joined the Red Cross, working on the front line in France. The sheer scale of the killing and maiming presented unprecedented challenges. Horrified by the hasty burials, from the first he tried to establish a method of uniformly recognising the fallen with a simple cross and template to stencil on the name, rank, number and unit. Within three years he had established a War Graves Registration unit, which in 1917 became the Imperial War Graves Commission, and later the CWGC.
How Ware achieved this, quite often in the teeth of opposition from the politicians, the Crown, the Army and Whitehall bureaucracy, is the subject of Crane’s book. It is not a biography of Ware as such, but it does put the early years of his creating the commission into the context of the times and, as such, it gives extraordinary insights into the prevailing prejudices and hang-ups of official and unofficial Britain.
Ware's vision was based on the simple and egalitarian proposition that the dead should be buried as close as possible to where they fell (many objected and wanted their sons brought home, but Ware’s vision prevailed – until the Falklands War in 1982, when families could choose to bring their fallen home). They should be buried irrespective of rank with privates and soldiers alongside colonels and brigadiers. This philosophy translated into the simple 'standard' headstone, modelled by Edwin Lutyens on secular lines, thus making it suitable for the dead of all the countries of the Empire, irrespective of their religions. The cemeteries themselves were designed by Lutyens and his rather combative fellow architects Reginald Blomfield and Herbert Baker and were set off by flowers of the English countryside — a touch of inspiration from the Gertrude Jekyll. These cemeteries were designed to be commemorative, to mark the dead and provide sites of mourning, and not to trumpet military or imperial glory. Rudyard Kipling, who was mourning the loss of his 18-year-old son Jack at Loos in 1915, for whom there was no grave, added the poignant phrase “a soldier of the Great War known unto God” – to offer solace.
Given the subject matter, I'm not sure that 'enjoyed' is the right term to use about the book but I did. Understanding the establishment of the CWGC and the trials and tribulations underlying its prime task - identifying, retrieving and burying a body - somehow adds to the search for those commemorated. Recommended reading.
A view of the Railway Dugouts War Cemetery near Ypres in Flanders. It's a typical CWGC site and is the resting place of William Conibear who I mentioned in a recent post. |
William Conibear's headstone in the Railway Dugouts Cemetery, showing the simple, clean lines of Lutyens' design. |
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