There was an amazing response to the call for volunteers to
join the Twixt Thistle and Rose project with about 40 people of all ages coming
to the two introductory sessions held last week.
SATURDAY’S DROP-IN
They heard about the opportunities to get involved from
Teresa and Linda, including transcribing, typing up, helping with cataloguing,
or repackaging documents from the Borough Archive which detail the running of
Berwick from the day to day to longer term building projects.
There was the chance to look at the account book from 1611
for the Old Bridge when it was the new bridge!
Or the need to repair the Town Hall 200 years ago. Or look at the ‘wanted posters’ sent to the
Berwick police force, which was independent from Northumberland service until
the 1020s, from around Britain. A glimpse of crimes and suspects over a century
and a half ago. Or taking it a step
further, looking at the documents from the Quarter Sessions.
There will be a short series of training sessions to pick up
or brush up palaeography skills for those wanting to work with the hand written
documents and then dedicated weekly sessions in the archive search room on
Tuesday afternoons or project work can be done on Wednesday or Thursday, the
public access days. Volunteers don’t
have to commit to every week, just a reasonable number of sessions over the
year. There is still time to get
involved…….just get in touch!
The
Berwick-on-Tweed War Hospital Supply Depot was closed on Friday, 21st March. It
is exactly three years ago since Berwick decided to start a Surgical Branch of
Queen Mary’s Needlework Guild, Central Depot of which was in London. The title
of this Depot was later changed to The St. Marylebone War Hospital Supply
Depot, when Queen Mary resigned and handed over the duties as President to
H.R.H. Princess Beatrice.
The idea of a depot in Berwick was first launched at a Public Meeting held in the Council Chamber on March 24th, 1916, where it met with enthusiastic support. A subscription list was opened to gather the necessary funds for the purchase of materials, etc. Premises in Bridge Street, at the head of “Sally-port,” were secured, and eager, willing “probationers,” set to work to scrub.
They scrubbed floors, paint, everything scrubable, cleaned windows, and soon all was ready for the opening day on 14th April. Over 70 members joined, the subscription fee being 2s 6d per head. This money, together with a weekly subscription of 6d per member, was the depot’s only source of revenue until 1917, when the increase in the cost of material rendered it necessary to appeal to the public for money to carry on the work.
BERWICK LAD’S TRAGIC END
A tragic
occurrence took place on the Berwickshire Branch of the North British Railway
near Edrom on Monday, when Charles Morrison (19) a fireman employed by the
N.B.R., and son of Mr Morrison, Weatherly Square, Berwick, met his end by his
head coming in violent contact with a bridge over the line.
The train
had left Edrom station and was proceeding on its way to Duns when the
unfortunate lad for some reason or other mounted the tender of the engine.
Evidently he had misjudged the distance to the bridge over the line near
Crumstane for his head caught the crown of the arch as the engine passed
through. Death was instantaneous.
The news of his death has caused profound gloom in railway circles, where the deceased lad was held in respect for his genial disposition. It is not long since he took up duty as a fireman. The deepest sympathy goes out to the family in their sorrow.
SUICIDE AT MILFIELD
Mr Hugh J.
Percy, Deputy Coroner for North Northumberland, held an inquest at Milfied,
Wooler, on the 20th March, on the body of Richard Lee, aged 48
years, formerly a farm labourer at Milfield.
Jane
Fairbairn, widow, of Milfield, and mother of the deceased, stated that her son
had suffered some paralysis for the past two years, and has not been able to
work, and had at times been depressed about it. Early on the morning of
Saturday, the 15th, he went out of the house, having just got out of bed, and
he did not return. His body was found the following day by John Coutts, a
quarryman, who, when out for a walk by the side of the river Till, saw the body
in the water.
P.C.
Sanderson, of Ford, gave evidence, saying he received information from Coutts,
and proceeded to the river, where he found the body entangled in some bushes.
The water at the foot was about 6 feet deep. He got the body out, and it was
identified as that of deceased.
After hearing the evidience, a verdict was returned of suicide whilst temporarily insane.
LOCAL NEWS
On Friday, March 21st, a draft of 150 men from the 1st
K.O.S. Borderers Depot left Berwick for Dumfermline. The band from the barracks
accompanied the men to the station, where a good crowd of people had assembled
to give them a hearty send off.
The Army and Navy Recreation Rooms, Hide Hill, which have been open since March 1915, are to be closed on Saturday 5th April. The percentage of men stationed in the town is now very small compared with the past four years and it is felt that the need for this valuable institution no longer exists.
SALE OF WOOLER AND GLANTON PROPERTY
An important
sale of property was held in Newcastle this week, when Mr Robert Donkin,
auctioneer of Rothbury, disposed of property owned by Mr G. P. Hughes,
Middleton Hall, Wooler, as under:-
Bidding
commence at £800 for the Anchor Inn, a fully-licensed and free house at Maiden
Knowe, Wooler, which was eventually sold for £1,300.
The small
holding, Wand House, near Wooler, comprising a cottage, with stable and garden,
and about four acres of grass land, let on an annual tenancy at a rental of £12,
commenced at £300, and was sold for £430.
Three
cottages, with garden ground, at Tenter Hill, producing a net annual rental of
£28, commenced at £400, and was bought at £500 by Mr Nicholson of Monkseaton.
Mrs Frazer bought for £200 the garden ground situated at the rear of the Black Bull Hotel, Wooler. There are about 1,556 square yards, with stables and coach-house, let on a building lease for 29 years, from November 11th, 1910.
The Queen’s
Head Hotel, Glanton, comprising dining room, smoke room, bar, five bedrooms,
long room, kitchen, two stables, coach-house, byre, etc., and vegetable garden,
and 2¼ acres of land let at an annual rental of £70, was started at £1,000, and
was sold at £1,700 to Mr Hare, for the Alnwick Brewery Company.
The accommodation holding, “The Dovecote Fields,” Glanton, comprising 500 acres of old grass pasture, let on a ten years’ lease (expiring 1922), at a rental of £120, started at £2,500, and was sold for £3,100, to Mrs Mary Joicey, of Linhope.
MAGDALENE FIELDS GOLF CLUB
Devotees of the Royal and Ancient Game will be glad to know that Berwick’s Town Club is to be re-opened after having been closed since the Spring of 1917. Preparations are being put underway, and it is hoped to have the course ready for play by the Easter holidays.
The plan of
the course has not yet been decided upon, but it is the general opinion that a
nine-hole course to begin with would be a wise thing. This does not, however,
necessarily mean the old nine holes that constituted the course before it was
extended in 1915. In planning out the course, the question of grazing, which is
such a valuable financial asset, will have to be studied. The question of funds
will also be a big item. In addition to the high rental, a further tax, which
it is expected will amount to nearly £70 per annum, will have to be met, as the
ground is being used for sports and not agricultural purposes.
This is the second post for the Wellcome Trust funded
project Under an Artificial Sun by
filmmaker and writer Debbie Ballin from Leeds Arts University. I am researching
the Stannington Sanatorium archive and using the research to develop a
multi-disciplinary arts project. I have now finished the initial archive
research phase of the project and am working on the creative writing phase of
the project. I am using the archive materials and oral history testimony as
inspiration for a collection of short stories.
In my last blog post I had just started listening to the
twenty-six oral history testimonies recorded for the ‘Voices of Stannington’
project. It took me until the end of October 2018, to finish listening to this
extraordinary collection. I learnt a huge amount from these recordings and was
deeply moved by many of the experiences recounted in the interviews. Then in
November 2018, I had the pleasure of meeting four former patients of
Stannington Sanatorium face to face: Nora, Tom, Eleanor and Muriel. They very
kindly shared their memories with me over tea and cake. Meeting former patients
and hearing their testimony first hand added further layers and depth to my
growing understanding of childhood hospitalisation at Stannington.
Then in early January 2019, I finished transcribing a large
number of the oral histories. I wanted to personally transcribe many of the
interviews so that I could really listen in depth to the memories and hear not
just what was being said, but the way it was being said. Listening intently in
this way, allowed me to connect with the emotion in people’s voices as they
recalled their childhood experiences. Some people spoke about that time with
ease and warmth, others found it very difficult to find words to express what
had happened to them. Some memories provoked laughter and happiness others
great sadness. It is sometimes what is not said that is most telling in oral
history interviews, the moment when someone pauses to gather themselves after
recalling something particularly painful, or the way their voice trails off as
they reflect on an experience.
One of the most resonant memories in all the oral histories
and one of the things that moved me the most in the interviews I recorded with
Tom, Nora, Muriel and Eleanor were stories of being separated from parents and
family at such a young age.
Eleanor who was around five years old when she was admitted
to Stannington, recalls: “Me and another
little boy both had TB and we were both sent to Stannington Sanatorium on the
same day. That was the worst day of me life …I was screaming the place down.
I was really terrible, so they had to put me in a strait jacket and of course
that upset me grandmother …., well I was just distraught but any way time got
on and I settled in.”
This is echoed by Muriel who was only two years old when she
first arrived at the sanatorium says, “My sister
said … they took me in and they put me in a cot and it was a long corridor
and they could hear me screaming all the way as they walked out. Me, sister
says to this day she can still hear me, ‘don’t leave me Mammy’ you know, but. I
must have settled in alright.”
Visiting day was only for one Sunday afternoon, every two
months. Nora who was nine when she was admitted to Stannington spoke of her excitement at seeing
her father on her first visiting day: “I
remember looking around and seeing me dad and saying ‘Oh daddy,’ I remember that and I made a beeline straight
for my father and of course he said, ‘hello pet,’ you know lifted us up and I
jumped into his arms and I nearly knocked him out. I give him such a crack on
the head …always remember that.”
Whilst Tom who was five, remembers the terrible experience
of waiting all day for his father to arrive: “I remember sitting up in bed all day on the Saturday waiting for me
father to come in through the gates cos he said … ‘I’ll come and see you
tomorrow when he left,’ and I looked for him all day and of course he never
came, so I was in tears all day waiting for me father to come.”
Later, Tom relates how it felt when his parents did
eventually come and visit him; “I felt
strange … quite frankly. I hadn’t seen them for two month you know.”
Once I had finished transcribing the interviews and
collating the archive material I had gathered, I began thinking about how to
develop the creative writing. This phase was initially really challenging. I
had read and listened to so much material that it was hard to know where to
begin. I knew I wanted to explore the experiences of children of different
ages, background, genders and with different forms of TB. But I also wanted to
collage together the archive materials I had found in the Matron’s Medical Day
Book, redacted medical records, the Educational Logbooks from the Sanatorium
School, the Management Committee Reports and the publicity brochures from the
sanatorium.
I fumbled around in early February experimenting with
different approaches that combined the oral history and archive materials. I
edited together extracts of the oral history to create themed segments and
inter-cut these with sections of archive material. But couldn’t find a way
forward that didn’t feel stilted, awkward or forced.
Then one warm morning, in mid-February I started to write a
short story about a seven-year-old girl, Elsie’s experience of arriving at
Stannington Sanatorium. It flowed easily and I found I could explore the themes
and emotions that resonated with me by telling the story from a child’s
perspective. I have now finished a draft of Elsie’s story and started a second
short story about a seventeen -year-old girl called Sylvie with TB of the hip.
I am planning two other short stories, one through the eyes of a nine-year-old
boy called Eddie and one about an older boy at Stannington during the Second
World War whose name I haven’t decided on as yet.
The intention behind the short stories is to encourage enhanced empathy with the experience of childhood TB. Once I have competed all four short stories I want to find a way to collage factual material together and interweave it between the short stories. The aim of bringing factual and fictional together in this way is to highlight the contrast between the child’s eye view and the ‘official’ institutional and medical records of the sanatorium. I hope this will allow new and extended readings of these ‘official histories’ that can help us to develop our understandings of the emotional legacy of these personal experiences.