Archives from the Attic; The Thomas John Armstrong Papers.

Charles Armstrong, born about 1800 at Heddon on the Wall in Northumberland, worked as a Land Steward on various estates in County Durham. At some time around 1860 he established his family home and a business as a Land Agent in Hawthorn Terrace, Elswick, Newcastle upon Tyne. The house would be the family’s home for about 100 years, but Charles’ tenure was short; in 1868 he died and the business was continued by his two youngest sons, Thomas John Armstrong, then only 18 and Robert Lamb Armstrong, then 16.  Later practising under the name of T. & R. Armstrong, they worked for a number of large local land owners as well as taking commissions in County Durham, Cumberland and farther afield. Robert died in 1889 but Thomas continued, perhaps into his seventies.

It seems as if Thomas never threw anything away; as papers became redundant he deposited them in the attic or a disused coach house, the work of 50 to 60 years resulting in a vast accumulation of documents, accounts, maps and plans as well as personal papers. The collection also includes a large quantity of the business papers of Robert Nicholson (1808-1855) and his half-nephew John Furness Tone (1822-1881), Civil Engineers, of Newcastle upon Tyne. Their consulting practice was active from about 1830 to about 1880, specialising mainly in railways but also undertaking various dock, harbour and water works. After Nicholson’s death, the practice was continued by John Tone. For the next 14 or so years he maintained an astonishing workload. His railway works extended to Somerset and Devon but here he became involved in projects with shaky finance and poor management who could or would not pay his fees. In 1869 he was declared bankrupt and, although discharged in a few months, this seems to have heralded a general decline in his activities. In 1879 he was declared bankrupt again and he died in 1881, after a long illness and in reduced circumstances.

How and why these papers were taken over by Thomas Armstrong remains a mystery. No evidence has been found to show that Thomas Armstrong ever worked professionally with John Tone, although he may have done so. The only proven link is that they were both Freemasons.

It appears that after Thomas’ death in 1927, all the papers were left undisturbed, although it is possible that the practice was continued by Thomas’ son Robert. After Thomas’s widow Annie died in 1961, her three children, all unmarried and still living in the Elswick house, offered the collection to Newcastle City and the bulk of it was transferred in 1963 and 1964, after which the family moved to Hexham. In 1966 the collection was offered to and accepted by  the Northumberland Archives and was then described as “…rather scattered, about 5 tin trunks (mostly plans) at the Old Town Hall and a large pile of volumes and some more tin trunks at Saville Place”. Later it was described as being “an extremely large collection, in an extremely dirty condition and a very confused state.”  These assessments have been confirmed by recent work; time has not been kind to the archive. Some of the documents have been damaged by water, some are too fragile to unwrap or unroll, ‘bookworms” have bored through bound volumes and some boxes contain mouse droppings. Soot or coal dust coats many items.

Some cataloguing was done in the 1970s but some general sorting and listing was carried out in 1981 and a paper catalogue from this era on is available at Northumberland Archives and is on-line at www.discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk  Recently all of the Nicholson-Tone papers have been re-catalogued in much more detail and work is now in progress on some large uncatalogued collections of maps and plans which include much Ordnance Survey material as well as Parliamentary Plans for various public works and engineering drawings. In spite of the poor condition of many items, the collection as whole is a valuable archive of the work of two nineteenth century professional practices in Newcastle.

An extract from a plan by Robert Nicholson showing proposed docks at North Shields in connection with the Newcastle and North Shields Railway, 1833. The plan is badly stained by water but still legible.

 

This Week in World War One, 14 June 1918

 

BERWICK ADVERTISER, 14 JUNE 1918

 

WAR NEWS

 

PRIVATE PETER WAITE A PRISONER

We are glad to hear that news has come to hand that Private Peter Waite, nephew of Councillor Robson, Duns, reported missing since 11th April, is now a prisoner of war in Germany. This soldier who was only 19 five days before the above date was serving his apprenticeship as a draper with his uncle, and was called to the army in June last, when he was first of all in the H.L.I., and afterwards transferred to the Royal Scots Fusiliers. He spent a few days’ leave in Berwick-on-Tweed and Duns before crossing to France on 30th March. His grandmother, Mrs Robson, resides in Berwick, and his mother is presently serving with Queen Mary’s Army Auxiliary Corps in the South of England. Private Waite’s elder brother was killed in action in France about eighteen months ago.

 

LOWICK

We regret to announce that  Mr. G. Trotter of Beal Farm, Beal, has received word that his son, Private R. J. Trotter, whose photo we produce, has been wounded in the left leg and right shoulder, and is now recovering from his wounds in West Didsbury Military Hospital. Private R. Trotter joined a Training Reserve in January, 1917 and went to France in July, 1917. After having been there about a month he developed an attack of bronchial pneumonia and was sent over to Edmonton War Hospital, London, in August. After having recovered and received more training, he was again sent to France, this time with the West Yorks in January, 1918, and while out there was transferred to another Battalion and remained with them until wounded on May 27th, 1918. Private Trotter, being of a very quiet disposition, was respected and liked by all his chums. Prior to enlistment he was employed as a farm servant on the farm of Mr Davidson, Beal.

 

TWEEDMOUTH

Mr and Mrs Gray, Seton House, West End, Tweedmouth, have received a letter from their son-in-law, L. Cpl. E. Pilmer, informing them of the death of their eldest son, Signaller Jas. Gray, N.F. he states that he was killed by a sniper. His brother-in-law was with him when he was killed. Signaller Gray joined up over three years ago, and after doing some months’ training in this country he was drafted out to France. He had been there for over two years, and had been home once on leave during that time. He was of a very quiet disposition, and one who was highly respected by all whom he came in contact with. His younger brother, George, was killed in France over two and a half years ago. Previous to enlisting he was employed as a gardener, having served his apprenticeship with Mr Anderson, East Ord. We extend to Mr and Mrs Gray and family our deepest sympathy in this sad bereavement that has befallen them.

SCREMERSTON

The news was received in Scremerston by his relatives that Sergt. Wm. Mowitt, Duke of Wellingtons, has been gassed and sent to the Base Hospital. Sergeant Mowitt, who resides at Deputy Row, has been once wounded before and before joining up worked at Scremerston Colliery as a weighman. His sister is a teacher at Scremerston School.

LOCAL NEWS

About a dozen signallers of the Northern Cyclists, under the command of Lieut. Meek, attended morning service at Scremerston Church on Sunday last. The service was taken by Mr Peacock, Diocesan lay reader, in the absence of the Vicar, who is again under medical treatment in the hands of Dr Chas. Fraser.

British cyclists passing through the ruined village of Brie, Somme, France. © Ernest Brooks. This is photograph Q 1868 from the collections of the Imperial War Museums. Crown copyright expired.

Captain D. R. Herriot, Northumberland Fusiliers, the youngest of the three sons serving of Mr David Herriot, Sanson Seal, who has been in hospital suffering from slight gunshot wound in the jaw, is progressing favourably, though not yet out of hospital. He was educated at Cargilfield, Fetes, and Cains College, Cambridge, and is still an undergraduate and mathematical scholar of Cains. He distinguished himself highly both in the class room and cricket field at School and college, and at the commencement of war got his commission in “The Fighting Fifth,” and was wound in the second battle of Ypres in April, 1915.

Fettes College, Edinburgh, where Captain D. R. Herriot, received part of his education. © Author: Stephen C. Dickson. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.

At a quiet family gathering on June 1st the golden wedding of Mr and Mrs Joseph Redfearn, Parade, Berwick, was celebrated. Fifty years ago in the Parish Church, the couple were united in matrimony by the Vicar (Mr Rowe), and there have been eleven of a family, seven of whom survive. Prior to her marriage, Mrs Redfearn was a Miss Margaret Yeaman. Mr Redfearn was by occupation a cabinetmaker, and worked with Mr Patterson, who at one time had businesses in Bridge Street and Hide Hill. A piccolo player of repute, he was one of the original members of the now defunct Mechanics Band, and he also was a member of the old Berwick Volunteer Artillery Band. Mr Redfearn joined the Artillery in 1860, and took part in many big gun and carbine shoots. He was the first member of the Volunteers to win the Commercial Travellers’ Cup, and he has also a treasured possession, a gold scarf pin, presented by the father of the late Duke of Northumberland, for big gun shooting. We trust Mr and Mrs Redfearn will be spared to spend many more years of happy married life.

HORNCLIFFE

A correspondent informs us that even the birds of the air are becoming a little exasperated with the food restrictions. At Horncliffe, or at least about half a mile above the village, up stream, he witnessed a short engagement between a crow and a big seagull over a small piece of war bread which some angler had let fall by the riverside. The crow had found the prize first and was pecking vigorously at the indigestible stuff when the seagull which was circling over a neighbouring cliff observed that there was something going past him. He immediately swooped down on the crow which showed a reluctance to leave its legitimate find, crouching back over the disputes piece of bread with outspread wings and open beak. The seagull continued to set up a most appalling noise, screaming and turning just over head, and evidently this proved too much for the nerves of the crow, which ultimately evacuated the position before the superior strength of the enemy. We must say, it has been reported to us from other sources, chiefly at the seaside, that gulls are becoming very quarrelsome amongst themselves in the last year or so, whenever food is thrown to them.

 

Henry Norton of Hexham – The Last Civil War Soldier?

The Northumberland Quarter Sessions files contain four surviving petitions to Justices of the Peace from old royalist soldiers of the British Civil Wars. These provide valuable evidence of how people looked back on this terrible conflict. The latest one is from Henry Norton of ‘Turfe House’ in Hexham, aged ‘near upon 90 years’, which was presented to the Midsummer Sessions at Hexham in July 1710. This made Henry among the very last soldiers from this conflict who was still alive. He may have been living in a house with a turf roof, or a hamlet in Hexham parish named after such a structure.

In his petition, Henry claimed to have borne arms for King Charles I ‘of blessed memory’. Henry’s three sons had left to join ‘the Queen’s service’, and were probably fighting in Europe under the command of the Duke of Marlborough. This, he claimed, had left him in ‘miserable and deplorable circumstances’, wanting friends, and utterly dependent upon ‘the charitable help of well-disposed persons’. For good measure, he added that he had always ‘been of a good life & Conversation & a True Member of ye high Church of England’. This was likely a calculated appeal to the Tory Justices on the County Bench. Henry did not sign his petition himself, and it is likely that it was prepared for him by a literate acquaintance in the parish, possibly the minister or churchwarden. The narratives in petitions like Henry Norton’s demonstrate the strategies and language used by claimants and their sponsors in order to appear as deserving cases to Justices and other authorities.

 

QSB/32/28
Petition of Henry Norton of Turfe House, Hexham, July 1710

 

Henry’s petition was successful. On 12 July 1710, Northumberland’s Justices at the Hexham Sessions ordered the churchwardens and overseers of Hexham to provide Henry with eight pence per week towards his maintenance. This was a pitiful sum, but still very much worth the effort to obtain to help him get by in his last years. The stories of old soldiers like Henry Norton, and those of the Civil War’s widows and orphans too, are being uncovered by a new Arts and Humanities Research Council-funded project, entitled ‘Conflict, Welfare and Memory during and after the English Civil Wars 1642-1710’.

Reproduction of the Seal of the Parliamentary Committee for Maimed Soldiers (1640s), courtesy of Dr Eric Gruber von Arni

 

The project team is drawn from the Universities of Leicester, Nottingham, Cardiff and Southampton. Its free-access project website will be launched on 26 July 2018 at the National Civil War Centre, Newark Museum in Nottinghamshire. It will contain images and transcriptions of the petitions and certificates submitted by maimed soldiers and war widows in order to claim military pensions. These stretch from the 1640s to as late as 1710 (Henry Norton’s is the latest one so far discovered), and will include examples from Northumberland. We are very grateful for the co-operation of The National Archives and the county record offices of England and Wales, without which this project would not be possible.

The project’s research builds on the inaugural conference at the National Civil War Centre that produced a temporary exhibition there entitled ‘Battle-Scarred’ which examined medical care and military welfare during and after the Civil Wars. The exhibition remains in situ until the autumn and free exhibition brochures are available there to visitors. A collected volume of essays, entitled Battle-Scarred and based on the proceedings of the conference is available with Manchester University Press from July 2018: http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526124807/

Maybe there are things we might still learn today about care and welfare for those wounded, maimed and worn out by war from this landmark moment in our Civil-War past?

http://www.civilwarpetitions.ac.uk