Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Monday, 9 December 2013

It was among some unclaimed papers

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No one seeing James Worthington outside of his own home town would have given him a second look. He was just an ordinary man. Everything about his outward appearance said so. Even he himself, one month short of his 25th birthday, would have agreed, had he been asked. Yet deep within his heart there lay the seed of an idea sown years before by a teacher whose name and face had faded from his memory. Poverty and the struggle to exist surrounded him back then, fitting into the scenery as he joined others going to school in threadbare clothing. At home his father, like so many others, desperately sought work to keep food on the table and the rent paid, with five mouths to feed and his wife dead these seven years now.

It was at school where James found his self-esteem matching the lowest level of existence. The awareness of this standing was a gradual thing and came about by observation. He noticed some teachers favoured pupils who were generally better clothed and better fed because their parents were better off. As a consequence they received more attention and performed well at school. This did not sour his attitude toward those pupils or the teachers. He continued to live as carefree a life as we possible amidst such surroundings. In any case, self-esteem was an unknown term to pupils, and apparently to teachers too in those days.

Considering the start he'd had, James succeeded remarkably well, quite in keeping with the seed sown in his mind by his teacher. As the ground is not aware of what is placed within it, so to his knowledge, no conscious thought made James aware that the seed had germinated and begun to grow. If his love of words and books, the feeding of his imagination by an ever-widening choice of reading, his thirst for information and knowledge was apparent to others, it did not register in his mind, but in the process he was becoming an educated man.

At some point James left the country of his birth and set out to settle in New Zealand where he was accepted for what he was. With his achievements recognised and rewarded he was encouraged to further study and develop his skills. Some years later, now happily married and with children, he returned to his homeland, keen to know more of his family and background. He'd given himself a month to research at the Public Records Office in his home town.

The year was 1988, the month was December, and having completed as much of his research as he was able, he boarded the plane that was to take him home to New Zealand, via the USA. That hight he disappeared in an explosion which blew apart the Pan Am flight 103 he was on high above Lockerbie in Scotland. Whatever may have been left of James and most of his fellow passengers was buried in a mass grave not far from where they came to rest. The terrorists who planted the bomb saw and cared nothing for the horror they had created.

James' son visited Lockerbie after he had completed his studies and made his way slowly through the memorial hall set up there. At one stage he came across some pages of unclaimed papers, miraculously having survived the explosion. Tears filled his eyes as he stopped to read one of them. It said,
As the twig is bent, so the tree will grow.
These words were written by his father, James Worthington, in his own handwriting, and were among the last words he wrote. His son wept.

Dennis Crompton © 1998

Friday, 29 November 2013

International citizen

hands_world_sm

Ponder, I bid you, on our corporate existence
appearing with time, earth
and humanity's persistence.
A mystery!
along with all the rest
to rouse the mind and set the eternal quest.
*
Homo sapiens, erect, keen brain and senses,
prompted by insight sought
answers to some questions.
A revelation?
Perhaps it could have been,
presenting abstracts as possibilities.
*
Thinking and logic discerned the inbuilt pattern.
Body, soul and spirit we,
foundation of humanity.
A family.
Gregarious with outlook divarious,
nomads and tribal, populating terra firma.
*
Growing, we pledge allegiance to our nation
proud of our flag
we sing its adoration.
A tragedy
eventuates. We volunteer, take up arms
brother fighting against brother, forcing us apart.
*
History, alas, reveals its sad beginning
Cain slew Abel
or is that mere fable?
A discovery
from time to time sees progress intercede
with warfare indiscriminate, and car bombs in our streets.
*
Let's end this utter waste of brain and human flesh.
All of us are human,
kith and kin of all the rest.
Agreement
with each other, whate'er the colour of our skin.
Our own flag underneath the one, international citizen.
*
Dennis Crompton © 1995
Humanity Healing logo

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

A word to the excluded...

mandela


I think tonight of those excluded
from the normal company of others
by whoever and for whatever
in village, town or city...
I think of you.
*
Somewhere tonight some are excluded
from the family of their birth
gender and cold ignorance robs them
of their true worth...
I think of you.
*
Some are in exclusion though
the politics of small minds
their iron fists and iron bars
confine them and their words...
I think of you.
*
I wonder what you miss
all you confined
kept from the normal living of your life?
Do you wonder if there's still a future
something still to look forward to
another chance for you?
*
My word to you is
'Mandela.'
*
Dennis Crompton © 1996

Thursday, 21 November 2013

Black Magic

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It was dreary at times, going through the Depression years, but one day I discovered that Dad had a way of his own to brighten things up a bit. When it happened, it would be on a Saturday afternoon. He would suddenly look at me and say, "How about some Black Magic then, Den?" Smiling, I would agree. He would produce half a crown and off I'd go to a pub about 10 minutes walk up the street.

As first I felt very small and uncertain going into the pub. What if a policeman should see me? But Dad had said it would be alright as I would only be getting Black Magic chocolate , or icecream or even dandelion and burdock fizzy drink. And in I'd go.

It was a strange place to me at first. The gleaming glassware, the solid timber and highly polished furniture, but I did enjoy the heady assortment of smells. I'd take several slow deep breaths; it was so nice.

None of my mates ever saw me going into the pub. I always hoped I'd be seen going in there. I wanted to hear them ask me what I was doing, going into t' pub. I would have felt just a little bit superior-like, being able to say to them:
"Oh, I often go into t' pub; I'm well know there you know."
But they never did ask me and my moment of superiority was lost.

Well anyway, that's where I got those special little Depression-time treats - the Black Magic chocolate, the icecream and the fizzy drink. If I had bought the icecream, then by the time I arrived home it would be just at the right stage of runniness that I liked. It tasted so rich and creamy, and was worth a few minutes walk up the road. Then, the Depression didn't seem so bad.

© Dennis Crompton 1995
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

I saw the doc' today

blue_ecg


I saw the doc' today.
Things are okay, but...
Better have it checked,
exercise ECG for you, he said.
I, of course, agreed.
*
I've seen pictures
of a treadmill in a prison.
Dreadful thing to torture humans on.
Grey lives made grayer,
to pay for crimes that
never could be paid for;
they hardly saw the light of day.
*
Thankfully the one awaiting me
is part of modern therapy,
hooked up to such gadgetry
it will record how I do
or don't perform, heart stressed
and under pressure...
*
From the data, all being well,
specialists will then meditate,
then medicate, and hopefully
I'll say: The doc' saw me today.
*
© Dennis Crompton 1996
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

A good time?

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How good it was to be alive,
feeling, enjoying my exuberance of spirit,
slim teenager then, still foot and fancy free...
I strolled with ease the main streets of our city,
looked kindly on those who looked kindly on me.
*
Then there came towards me, smiling,
a slim and fresh teenager like myself.
In the midst of people passing on the pavement,
she came up close, and speaking softly said to me,
Hello. Would you like a good time, with me?
*
I smiled, shook my head, and walked on
before what she'd said had registered with me.
I stopped, turned  'round, saw people watching,
knowing, as I knew, what she'd just offered,
bewildered she'd just propositioned me.
*
A few work mates would have laughed
and mocked my quick innocent rejection.
What they'd have done had they been in my place...
but, oh, how sad I felt as I looked on that maiden,
I never could have used her as she'd suggested then.
*
Where is she today, I wonder?
How often have I thought on that,
that and her thoughts on my refusal that day.
Was it her looks, her form or personality
I disapproved of, rejecting what she had to say?
*
I do wish I'd had
the chance once to meet her,
on equal terms, both innocent and unstained.
How different then would have been our conversation,
leading to who knows? Well, I think a better way.
*
© Dennis Crompton 1985
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

A dip into the past

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What do you think that:
  • Mr. W. Newman, of 4 Dalhuusil Square, Calcutta, India,
  • the Bengal United Service Club Library, and
  • Mr. Herbert C. Fyfe, author of Submarine Warfare,
have in common with yours truly and the Opportunity Shop, Morrinsville, New Zealand?

I'll tell you:

A book was bought by Mr. W. Newman, of Calcutta, which was then purchased from him by the Bengal United Service Club Library in August 1902. I found it in the Opportunity Shop in Morrinsville in 1999.
Apart from its loose stitching and some pages tending to crack and break if not carefully handled, it has survived remarkably well, even to the Bengal United Service Club Library label on the back cover, which states:
'Members may keep the book for thirty days and are reminded that unless books taken out by them are entered as "returned" in the book kept for that purpose, they remain responsible for them'.
The last issue label of September, 1916, pasted inside, records just one issue, 22 March 1917. It was returned on 8 September 1944, and with no evidence that the book was 'Withdrawn' from the library, prompts the question: Where had it been during its twenty-seven years’ absence?

Published in London in 1902, with its 50 illustrations and readable text, 'Submarine Warfare', by Herbert C Fyfe, is an absorbing read. What intrigues me most about my Opportunity Shop find is the identity of the member who, in 1917 took out P 99, as the book is designated. Why wasn't it returned by the due date? Some call to active service perhaps, or dare I suggest, the strangling rope of a thug, devotee of the Indian god Kali, still active in some areas?

And after all that, how did it come to be in the Morrinsville Opportunity Shop, 55 years after it was returned to the place of issue?

I say! Damned perplexing! What?!

(Any ideas?)

Dennis Crompton © 1999
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Talking stones

stones

One visitor moved away, wandered out through the gate, down the street and into the countryside. She found a hollow in a field, sat down and looked around. Gradually the occasional hum of insects and twittering of birds gave way to a quietness which eased the tension inside her. At some point her fingers found a stone in the loose soil at her feet. She picked it up and gazed at it. Slowly, as if a curtain was opening somewhere in her mind, it seemed to speak, linking her with an event that happened there in the past.

It was just a suggestion, she reasoned at first, trying to ignore the prickly feeling in her eyes; but the suggestion persisted and eventually, with flushed cheeks and tightening throat her emotions took over. Even as she fumbled for her handkerchief, low cries bubbled up from deep inside, a few tears followed, glistening as they trickled down her cheeks before the dam burst and a kind of healing took place in the flood. When it had finished she looked again at the stone before lifting her eyes to look around, and like watching a scene in a play, this is what she came to understand:
Jim could hardly believe his luck. Three years now since he'd left home. Home! How eagerly he'd left. Nearly didn't though, after his father embraced him. He could still see his face and hear his voice struggling to say, “I'll probably never see you again, son.” That was true. His Dad had died two years later. Still, lots of Canadian lads found themselves in the same position. He’d done a lot of growing up since then.

He'd been looking forward to Christmas, still over five weeks away, but today ... well, it was different ... with his thoughts centred on himself, he'd become vividly aware that he was a person in a way he had never felt before. It started that very morning. He was more than the body he inhabited, but why had he come to that knowledge now? And in his mind, he thought perhaps a new beginning was being offered to him. He felt the tension ease from his mind and body and smiled, feeling more like the young man he still was. Some of his mates called him 'dreamer'. “You'll still be dreaming when it's all over,” they'd said. Many of them were dead heroes now.

He stared ahead as he thought of them, then looked again. That's odd, he thought, it seemed like he was looking at a photograph. What he saw was real and yet nothing moved. Not a cloud, wing, leaf or single blade of grass. All was still. It was the same behind him, he knew without turning round. He made himself pause in his thinking and breathed deeply and slowly, only then did he realize how tense he'd been.

He glanced at his watch. Another four minutes and he'd have a break. Then over to his right something unbelievable happened. A couple of young girls appeared, and after all the other sounds he'd heard, their happy chatter drifted across to him, sounding like the song of angels. Slowly they came nearer, hampered by the debris in their path but waving bunches of flowers in the air and calling out to him. Alarmed now, he was about to shout a warning when others appeared. More young people with a scattering of elderly folk behind . They were calling too, some with flags or flowers in their hands others with bottles of wine. Jim knew then that it must be true.

For a moment he was torn between excitement and dread, then he glanced again at his watch: 10.57am. Three minutes to go until break time, he murmured, saddened and yet happy as the faces of his dead mates came and went with each step the young girls took towards him. Something burst from his throat, a mixture of sobs and laughter. It was bloody well true! The war ... it would end at 11am today, they said!

Smiling now, Jim watched as the girls arrived safely, thanked them for the flowers, and kissed their innocent faces. Then turned once more to face the firing line, as he laughed and waved the flowers in the air, the sharp crack of a rifle shot cut through the air and in the silence that followed, he crumpled to the ground. That one single shot, fired by a German sniper gave Jim an ending and a new beginning. Just two minutes before the declared Armistice on the 11th of November, 1918, a private from Canada was the last soldier to be killed in the Great War.
All fell quiet again, but now she felt a peace within her as she placed the stone back on the soil of Belgium. Some little time later, a voice broke through her thoughts: “I beg your pardon Mrs Price. I hope I didn't startle you.” It was the leader of their tour group. She shook her head without looking at him. “We'll be having lunch in half an hour or so. There's no rush though, perhaps you'd like to stay here a little longer?”

Again she just nodded. She didn't need to say anything. He'd seen it before and waited for a moment or two before turning to leave, then he said, “Not too lonely on your own then?'”

“No,” she said. “In a way, the stones have been talking to me.” This time looking up at him she added, “I suppose that sounds strange?”

“Not at all. Quite a number of folk have said the same kind of thing on these tours. When they do, they don't seem to have the need to come back again. After all, these are the Shalom tours. Shalom, Mrs Price.”

armistice

Dennis Crompton © 1998
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Catching one's prey

finishing school

Sometime in the mid-19th century, schools of elegance for young ladies strove, according to their individual aims, to provide what was considered an all-round preparation for life for their pupils. An admirable aim, seldom achieved. Too few of the tutors were drawn from those who'd experienced life in sufficient depth and variety to acquire the skills necessary for such a task. Too many were bound to follow the pattern of their founder, in which case, their teaching centred on the fripperies of dress, deportment, entertaining afternoon teas and evening soirées.

Along the way the majority of young ladies attending such schools, being pliant and unaware that rocking the boat could have improved their lot, acquired the habit of how to be a dutiful and demure wife when and if that time arose.

There were some exciting and forcefully entertaining exceptions regarding the dutiful and demure bit. For starters, there's one notable living offspring of the Roberts family of Grantham in Lincolnshire. She didn’t attend a school for young ladies, but she changed things round a bit. Well, she changed things a great deal. Her husband, Denis, hung around in the background: he smiled a lot but wisely kept his mouth shut, while she played merry hell in politics and became a Baroness  I believe. (And yes, she has just recently died.)

The activities of the above schools make interesting reading these days and I was much entertained by a recent discovery of: 'The Isabella Sterne Academy for Young Ladies' while researching the distaff side of my own family. Isabella appeared to have bridged the gap between the lower and middle classes with some success. Her private journal offers more than just a titillating peep into the lives of titled and moneyed families scattered throughout the ruling classes of today.

As always, the best made schemes will go astray, as one story from Isabella's journal illustrates. It happened that a certain Lady Caroline sent her niece, Veronica to an academy as outlined above. After three years, Veronica began her statuary round of accepting invitations where other families had spare offspring of the male gender awaiting the net. Thus she arrived one day at Blamire Hall, where Hugh Blamire, eldest of the breed awaited inspection, snorting at the bit. His father, Sir Prentice Blamire, resembled a modern car salesman keen to see the bargain on his corner lot driven away by some equally high-spirited wench. Veronica was not impressed, and judging by the strong gammy aroma surrounding him she thought Hugh spent far too much time hunting, and she was off the estate by sundown.

Silly girl missed the point. Hugh was game in more ways than one. A pity that Young Ladies’ Academies were not familiar with a Mr Robert Smith Surtees, one of the most famous of England's sporting novelists.

robertsmithsurtees

One young lady, without the advantages they'd had, was, however. It chanced that Susan, a visitor from far away rough and ready New Zealand, found herself employment as a stable-hand at the Blamire Hall. She obviously had something of the modern touch about her and being a spirited rider, enjoyed the breathless heart-pounding thrill of the chase and many a tumble with the hunters. More so, after she'd heard Hugh quoting a well-known line from a Surtees story:
'Women never look as well as when one comes in wet and dirty from hunting'.
Aware that Hugh had quoted , where she would over-hear, Susan, the wise girl, eventually lessened her pace so that he could catch up with her. It's been a successful union for both of them.

Dennis Crompton © 1999
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

A time of remembrance


war

He’d been married three years, was enjoying life with his wife and daughter, everything was going well for them…and then the war broke out. He tried to ignore the inevitable and get on with life, together with his family but knew he’d have to leave them in the end. He was just a country lad who loved the land and animals, not up with politics and such; he just wanted - well - to be left alone and to be with his family.

Of course that couldn’t be, not with his country at war; he was a man and was expected to fight. It didn’t matter where he went, there was always something to remind him; flags flying, patriotic posters in prominent places, men and women in uniform; that and the questions folk asked, without even speaking when they saw him.

His heart was heavy; something seemed to warn him not to go; on his own sometimes he’d get a kind of a premonition, though he wasn’t superstitious. A voice, warm and proud whispering, ‘You’re going to be a hero. You’ll get a medal!’ Then a different voice, cold and matter of fact, taunted, ‘Because you’re one of those warm and sensitive types, you have to realise some things; those you leave behind; those who order you to go and those who train you, won’t have to see you shoot your rifle, use your bayonet as you advance, screaming your insane head off; and in the state you’ll be in after that, well, it’s best you don’t come back. You can see that, can’t you? But then, your country will be proud of you; you’ll be a hero!’

Of course he slept badly, waking often, imagining himself staring at his own gravestone; his name standing out amongst row upon regimental row of others, neat and trim and: ‘Ready for inspection! Sir!’
...
Whether they accomplished anything by their visits to the cemetery at Cape Helles, would be hard to say; but his beloved and his daughter placed fresh flowers on the small white slab beneath his name plate each time they went. Like all wives and family members after such visits, they both left feeling drained and unutterably sad, hating the stupid waste of it all. They left heartaches and tears as well, but you can’t record those, can you?
*
A fellow member of the Returned Services Association told me this story after he’d been to take a photograph of the battlefield where the Turkish soldier and the R.S.A. chap’s friend, a Kiwi solider, fell and died. It was through one of those strange coincidences life throws up at you sometimes, that he came to know this chap’s wife and daughter and they established a firm friendship. They met in that Turkish cemetery that day and took a photograph of his grave. The inscription read simply: ‘Private Talat Demisar, aged 22 years. He did his duty’.

And from a short distance away, the haunting strains of the Last Post hung in the quiet air as the three of them remembered, together.

Dennis Crompton © 1997
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

In passing, 1929

1929

I was side-lined by a suggestion on one of the web pages I visited recently by the words, ‘Gregorian calendar’ and decided to take a peep at the year 1929, the year I was born:
  • February 14 was the day of the St Valentine’s gangland massacre in Chicago, (not a good start … ),
  • the year ended with the stock market crash, when $26 billion dollars was wiped off US Securities.
It wasn’t all bad however, as developments in science were encouraging:
  • Albert Einstein proposed the unified field theory … seemed a good idea to me,
  • a German psychiatrist developed the electroencephalograph (EEG) for recording brain waves; useful for those told they had no brains,
  • for the first time, penicillin was used to fight infection,
  • and Bell Telephone Laboratories in New York gave the first public demonstration of colour TV: the first images were a bouquet of roses and an American flag.
And there were important (early) developments for the rights of women too:
  • the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in the UK announced that women were now "persons" under the British North America Acts, and thus eligible for appointment to the Senate of Canada.
But best of all, on 7 March, Fred and Florence Crompton welcomed their new baby son, Dennis, into their family. A baby brother for Hilda, Jean and Fred. Yes indeed!

Dennis Crompton © 2013
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

George, and leaving England


Dennis, the worker
Here’s a picture of me as a happy chappie working at Ribble Motors workshop, Frenchwood, Preston, where I worked alongside (George) Jersey Fijalkowski from Radom, Poland, over two years from 1952-1954. He was very important in my life at the time because he was the one who pointed me in the direction of New Zealand.

One day George brought me a cutting from the Lancashire Evening Post, regarding the Royal New Zealand Air Force seeking recruits from amongst ex-British Service men.

That got me thinking. Did I want to stay in this life, or forge a new life for myself? Here were some of my thoughts at the time as I continued working with my colleagues amongst the noise and bustle of the Ribble Motors workshop:

  • I had all sorts of chats and discussions with mates on the floor of the bus chassis reconditioning team, including a chat with Paddy who told me that, ‘All the world’s a stage. Do you know that Dennis?’ Paddy was someone who made Shakespeare come alive before my very eyes as he quoted, danced and acted, on the shop floor;
  • Pat, well he was a thinker, a philosopher and my first ‘university teacher’, teaching me to think beyond myself;
  • Tony was in charge of our work bench and was my immediate under-boss; a quiet and ordinary, patient, likeable man, who encouraged me;
  • Another round-face jovial type (whose name I forget) who ‘annealed’ the copper tubing which carried grease around the chassis of the bus; he annealed the tubing by throwing it onto a heap of red-hot embers then dumped the piping into cold water. This then made the piping soft and pliable ready to be replaced around the chassis to take grease to vital points such as the brake pedal and clutch pedal;
  • Plus others who gathered around our work bench for stolen moments to chat, exchange ideas or plan to walk somewhere on Saturday in the country together to enjoy each other’s company. We had some hilarious times together, with many of us joining Harry Freeman’s group as we planned where to take our August holiday that year…;
  • Harry Freeman was a secondary-school teacher who led a group of young people at a Boys’ and Girls’ Mixed Club. He taught us that an interesting world lay outside Preston, a world comparatively easy to travel around, proving that by having a group at his home once a month to decide where, for how long, and how we would manage a holiday away. And we did just that in 1951 by having a week’s holiday at a big house that we felt looked like a castle at Lochgilphead, in Scotland. We had a great time, showing ourselves that we could escape the grime and humdrum life of Preston as we began to explore the world around us.
George
This picture of George is exactly were he used to stand re-assembling the diesel motors, while I, to one side stripped them, placing the parts in wire baskets for Jock to put through the degreasing plant. Skilled and semi-skilled side by side were great boosters to me 'shifting miself' so that when the question came: 'Why don't you go to New Zealand?' I was ready.
  • Lastly, as mentioned, there was 'George' (Jersey Fijalkowski from Radom in Poland), who must have seen my wonderings and mind wanderings as I questioned my work mates, increasing my general knowledge on a whole range of subjects. He took an interest in me and decided it was about time I lifted my sights; it was time to move on. I didn’t know where to think about going until George asked me: ‘Why don’t you go to New Zealand?’ And he handed me the clipping from the Lancashire Evening Post….
George's home town of Radom in Poland
George's home town of Radom in Poland

Looking back, I know I was the lucky one in our street who escaped to New Zealand. Thank you George.

Dennis Crompton © 1998
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Shepherd Street Mission Children's Home

schoolclassroom
The interior of Shepherd Street Mission School showing a class in session
Here's some more information on the Shepherd Street Mission, Preston, Lancashire, the organisation that ran the Children's Home where I spent the first six years of my life, along with my two sisters and brother after our mother died. Our father was eventually able to take us home again, more of which I have written on my blogsite. The text in this post is taken from the website, listed below.

In 1876, Joshua Williamson, a Preston grocer was so moved by an encounter with two homeless children that he resolved to tackle the growing issue of destitution in the town. Joshua established a Mission, holding non-denominational meetings in Rose Street. The organisation rescued children and provided temporary accommodation for homeless adults.

In 1879 the charity acquired an old weaving factory in Shepherd Street which could accommodate a hundred people. Just a year later it was extended to accommodate fifty more.

??????????????

The charity, initially called the Shepherd Street Mission, grew rapidly as the need to rescue children from the dangers of homelessness and poverty became critical. The mission was not state-aided. It maintained itself with subscriptions and donations from the Preston public, along with initiating and operating its own firewood business.

In 1900 Joshua Williamson gave up his business in order to devote himself to looking after the children. The charity by now had acquired property to accommodate the needy - both adults and children - in Laurel Street, Berry Street and Oxford Street.

Crow Hill House, in Oxford Road became the primary children's home and underwent much adaptation through the vast social changes of the last century.

The main premises were eventually sold to the NSPCC in 1989. The Shepherd Street Mission became the Shepherd Street Trust.

A committee was now formed to manage the Trust funds raised from the sale of the Mission's assets: the achievement of the people of Preston.

For more information, go to www.shepherdstreettrust.co.uk

The Trust is still very active, assisting those in need, under age 21, within a 50 mile radius of Preston Town Hall.

My lone search

rings

It was a cold December day when I walked from the bus stop towards the church where my mother and father were married. St. Nicholas’s church was about five minutes’ walk from the bus stop and I had to walk briskly to keep warm. I’d made the journey from New Zealand back to England in search of my family history, particularly about my mother who had died when I was a baby, and who I had never known.

It took me some time to find the vicar who was on his way out of the vicarage to visit a parishioner. He was very helpful however, as he opened up two safes and left me to it. The Banns, Marriages and Death Registers kept me busy for some time as I was really keen to find my mother’s signature in the Marriage register. Seeing it, I thought, would help to give me a clearer image of the mother I never knew.

I found it, and I treasured the opportunity to see it. It was more than enough to see that, and to have walked up the path and into the church, down the aisle to the front, where I imagined my Mum and Dad holding hands, and gazing into each other’s eyes. They would have been hearing the words I heard then in my head:
“Whom God hath joined together, let no man put asunder”
…and no man did. Instead, death came and took her away, and separated them forever.

It was years later before I quietly asked my father when were alone one day: ‘Dad, what was my mother really like?’

I’d asked him a couple of times before but he could get no further than saying wistfully, and with emotion, ‘She was a lovely, warm-hearted woman, Den; we were soul-mates…’ and he could get no further as his eyes filled up…

I stopped asking after that, as I could see that it distressed him so. But it distressed me too for I longed to know more of the mother who had loved me; the mother I never knew. That day in December though I’d gained a little more for my mind’s picture. I’d been in that church, seen their signatures together, stood where they stood, and some years later I was able to get a copy of their Marriage Certificate.

As I left the church, the vicarage was closed and I had nowhere to leave the keys entrusted me by the vicar. I would loved for him to have been there to chat with me about the history that linked me to his church. I walked back across the main road to a school, which was probably the church school and found two or three people in the staffroom. After introducing myself, I gave them the keys and then because I was so very cold I requested a cup of coffee. They were very happy to oblige, offered me a seat and some biscuits too, and were keen to ask me about New Zealand and hear about the reason for my journey.

It was almost 1.30 p.m. as I left to walk back to the bus stop. The grey skies and the penetrating cold, combined with the fact that I was on my own made it easier to leave. St Nicholas Church records, otherwise I may have stayed there forever, connected slightly to my mother.

And I offer my thanks to the vicar for the willingness to assist me and to entrust his valuable records and keys to me. He had helped me in the search for my own identity, for which I am most grateful.

Dennis Crompton © 1998
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Preston: school and prison

prison treadmill



The Wesleyan Methodist School in St Mary's Street was the school I attended when we left Longridge to live in Preston around 1942. Across from the school was a small door set in very high brick wall that was almost a complete square. Inside was the Preston prison, complete with treadmill, for the prisoners to exercise on.

During World War II, on a siren warning of possible enemy action, all the pupils and staff from the school walked across the road, through the small door to the prison and into the air-raid shelters dug into the prison grounds. We never had to use them in the event of real enemy action but we did practice getting to them a few times.

As an older man, I used to shock some people by saying (with a serious look on my face), that I had to confess to a lie I had told when I joined the British Army and then the Royal New Zealand Air Force: that I had never been to prison ... then told them the above.

Dennis Crompton © 2013
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Duty?

mother

(This is imagined, as my mother died when I was one year old…)
*
From the earliest of days when my learning began,
‘You are beautiful’, my mother told me,
and I learned what was right in those days as a child,
all at the feet of my mother.
*
And when I reached five I was led as I cried
to the kindergarten just down the street,
told to ‘Sit on the ground’, other children around
to be taught at the feet of another.
*
I grew up quite quickly and the years they passed by,
then told that brave I must be,
I was ordered to go to the camp in the cold,
where they taught me to fight like the others.
*
In my uniform neat I marched to the beat
of the band on the great parade ground,
they gave me a rifle, learned to shoot in a trifle,
‘Now go out, do your duty’, they said.
*
I was marched up a hill and ordered to fight
or to die, whichever came first;
in my sights then I saw, the soul of my foe
and found I could not pull the trigger.
*
A rifle shot fired, as ordered out there,
found its mark and I fell to the ground,
and in dying I saw not the face of a foe
but the grief on the face of all mothers.
*
Dennis Crompton © 1994
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Our mental fight: primary school and thoughts of war

war

It was a long time ago when folk, for the most part, lived their lives in the district where they were born, shackled by a lack of money or opportunity to venture far. A few did raise their heads above it all, saw a future in the distance and with heart rending courage, wept their farewells and left. I saw and learned these things as a young boy, long ago now, attending Stoneygate Primary School in England in the 1930s.

Our school was built of stone from a local quarry, with a sombre aspect from the outside, and with little variation inside. It had high ceilings with large windows, and in the winter the rooms were nose-bitingly cold to such a degree that the cold made my eyes ache. The threadbare hand-me-down clothes most of us wore did little to keep us warm, but as many of us were in the same state, together we stamped our feet and blew on our cold hands, and managed as best we could.

The furniture was sparse and the floor of bare boards was hard underfoot and reverberated when we moved over it, or when our wooden clogs struck the legs of the chairs or desks. The largest feature in the room was a map of the world suspended above a blackboard at the front. Areas coloured in pink indicated they were part of the British Commonwealth which we were taught that, ‘Hitler despised.’ We learnt that he told the German people that they were the ‘master race’ and were destined to rule the world. The country of Poland was invaded by German jack-booted storm troopers, strutting their way through the shattered country leaving behind them misery, death and devastation.

At school and at home we had heard about the invasion of Poland and it seemed that nothing could stop the Germans taking over the world. We heard about the defeat of our armies; and the escape and rescue of many soldiers from Dunkirk.

Eventually, Hitler stood on the shores of France and looked across at Britain, and from there, echoing Napoleon just over one hundred years ago, boasted:
‘We shall soon conquer them; they’re just a nation of shop-keepers’.
One of his generals agreed:
‘In three weeks England will have her neck wrung like a chicken’.
Winston Churchill’s reply still stirs me deep inside:
‘Some chicken! Some neck!’
I wasn’t fully aware of what it all meant as Longridge, Lancashire, was still a long way from Germany; but we did prepare for it in our way. By our feet sat a small cardboard box containing a gas-mask, which we practised putting on under our desks during air-raid warnings. All the glass in the windows were criss-crossed with gummed masking tape in the hope that it would keep most of the glass from showering down on us if bombs dropped too close. We became familiar with air raid sirens, air raid shelters, and barrage balloons floating like large sausages a little distance above us.

In small parks and recreation areas anti-aircraft guns emplacements mushroomed; some even on the tops of buildings, their long, slender barrels pointing skywards with separate searchlight units close by. Deep anti-tank ditches zigzagged through fields, and barbed wire and landmines prevented anyone from using most of our beaches. The ordinary people of Great Britain had decided that Hitler would not conquer us as easily as he thought he would.

europe

The lesson on general knowledge in my primary school classroom had just finished and our teacher looked more serious now. None of us knew then that she had a fiancĂ© living in Iceland and that she would be leaving to join him in a few weeks. It was almost the end of the school day and we were asked to take out our song books. We didn’t mind, we enjoyed it when she accompanied us on the piano. We sang only one song that day; it was in the back of the book and the words were by William Blake. It was more like a hymn to me and stirred my emotions deeply as we stood to sing. I didn’t need to read the words, I knew them off by heart and hidden tears sprung to my eyes after the first few words:
‘And did those feet, in ancient times, walk upon England’s mountains green?’
The pictures in my mind varied between those feet and those of German troops marching along our country lanes.
‘And did the Countenance Divine, shine forth upon our clouded hills?’
Yes, I wondered about that too. Did the Countenance Divine shine upon Germany?

It was then I noticed our teacher’s eyes moving slowly from face to face around the classroom. They stopped on various faces as we sang: ‘I shall not cease from mental fight’. Our teachers had often told us to think for ourselves. Now she was having difficulty finding the notes on the piano and I saw her blink to clear the tears away. The few who noticed, like myself, tried to carry on singing with the rest, but I found it difficult with a lump in my throat.

Our teacher had taught at the school for six years or more; time enough to know those in the senior classes and know they’d soon be serving in the armed forces. Would they get the chance to go abroad at last, all expenses paid; free at last from the shackles that bound them to the ‘dark satanic mills’ all around? (Many years would pass before I learned that the dark satanic mills Blake wrote about had a great deal to do with the abstract mind.)

No arrows of desire would these young men receive; instead of spears, they’d carry rifles. Some would descend from the heavens in billows of silk, lucky to arrive unscathed, and those who did, still had to do battle with the waiting enemy. Others would operate midget submarines to sink Italian warships anchored in their own waters. Still others would appear in their tanks as chariots of fire, making their last brave dash across the burning sands of the Middle East.

Thus did former members of schools throughout England and the United Kingdom, together with our allies, find their way to fight against Hitler’s attempt to destroy us in order to create his master race. Family members and loved ones would write to those stationed at home and those still alive overseas on active service or in prison camps. They’d pray, and mourn, and remember them at church, at home and in memorial services.

With my teacher and all of my classmates, we played our part in the war too, striving against the mental oppression William Blake wrote of, and of which we sang from our hearts so many years ago. Whatever our teacher was thinking as she struggled through the song and shed her tears I’m sure she hoped that some of us would survive and live to be free to think for ourselves.

school

And did those feet in ancient times
Walk upon England’s mountains green:
And was the holy Lamb of God,
On England’s pleasant pastures seen!

And did the Countenance Divine,
Shine forth upon our clouded hills?
And was Jerusalem builded here,
Among these dark Satanic Mills?

Bring me my Bow of burning gold;
Bring me my Arrows of desire:
Bring me my Spear: O clouds unfold!
Bring me my Chariot of fire!

I will not cease from Mental Fight,
Nor shall my Sword sleep in my hand:
Till we have built Jerusalem,
In England’s green & pleasant Land

William Blake

Dennis Crompton © 1998
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Crompton Crompton, the grocer from Farrington


Crompton Crompton
 
Here is a photograph of my great grandfather; his name was Crompton Crompton. It shows him standing outside his grocery business in Farrington, a few miles from Preston. The family connection is thus: he was the father of Lazarus Crompton who was my grandfather, and Lazarus was the father of my father, Fred Crompton. (I write about my great grandfather again in the poem on this blogsite: 'My great grandfather'.)
Crompton Crompton was born in 1834 in Over Darwen, near Blackburn. Apparently there is a Lower Darwen and an Over Darwen as well as just Darwen, and I believe a railway line or a river caused these divisions.

In 1856 on the 5 July Crompton Crompton married Mary Morris who was born one year after him. He lived a very long life (for those times): he lived until the age of 86, and died in July 1867. An uncle, Frank Crompton showed me Crompton Crompton's grave once. It’s in a corner of church graveyard, under a big tree.

So, Crompton Crompton had these children:

Julia, born 1858;
Louisa, born 1860;
Crompton Crompton, who died young at the age of 7;
Mary Elizabeth, born 1864;
Lazarus (my grandfather) born 1865;
Crompton Crompton (the second child to be named as such), born 1868;
Albert Edward, born 1870 died 1879;
and Benjamin, born 1874.

So there’s a small snippet about my great grandfather and a great photo of him, whiskers and all. It’s not a great picture but it’s the best I have, and I guess I’m lucky to have it.

Dennis Crompton © 2013
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Stonehenge, and me

I felt a bit smug recently when Stonehenge was mentioned on the radio. Oh! Been there, done that, I thought. It was during my time in the army as a young man. A friend took a photograph as I leaned against one of the stones. You could get up close then.
dennis, army

In those days when the army wasn't requiring my services to paint this, polish that, salute those, encouraged by, ‘On the double you lazy man! What are you?’ my body would follow the routines of army life while my mind was free to think. So it was only natural that shortly after being posted to Lark Hill Camp, in Wiltshire, I'd give some thought to Stonehenge. It was after all, just a stone's throw away down the road. Who'd built it and why? What was involved in getting the stones there and then raising them up to form a circle? I'd have read up about it if there'd been a better library in the camp, so I just thought about it in the barrack room while most of my mates played cards, argued about whatever was on their minds at the time, or went over to the wet canteen for a beer or two.

As I thought about Stonehenge and its history, I wondered if there'd been a grounds man there. They'd probably have needed one; I mean, it was quite a place. People would visit it to view the stars, check their sun-dials, attend religious services and offer sacrifices or be sacrificed. With so many people, there'd be the upkeep of the grounds and rules to be observed. Yes!. By this time, the neurones inside my brain zapped by millions of electrical impulses changed thoughts into words causing me to draft an application for grounds man at Stonehenge, as it might have been around 2,000 BC.

I was going to head it simply: ‘Grounds man’, the concept of equal opportunities was a long way over the horizon back then, but I still decided to give it a more swept up modern look, and changed it to: ‘Grounds service manager’.

The introduction to the job sounded good, after I'd added a line or two from the situations vacant columns for upwardly mobile executives. It read as follows:
‘The person we seek will have a broad grasp of astrology, horticulture, architecture and religion with some knowledge of surgery. As the structure known as Stonehenge is built to last, the person sought must be able to see the big picture. The appointee will possess skills with hammer and chisel, be tidy round the house-cave and possess the ability to communicate beyond the four letter word stage. A positive but polite approach is looked for when dealing with visitors, though the Committee is prepared to look the other way when dealing with truculent Vandals, Picts, Scots or other disgruntled out-of-towners. We discourage the over-used pole-axe approach, preferring instead the more subtle use of a stone club slipped inside a cured Ursus’s scrotum.

‘The position affords sound long-term employment possibilities and could offer the opportunity to receive qualifications in the following areas:
  • Slate Plate in crowd management at wild boar wrestling matches.
  • Five-tongued Fork for fluency in Celtic speaking, chanting & singing.
  • Daubers Cap and Gown in woad body-painting, with Diploma in hard to reach or seldom seen private places an advantage.
  • at least two units for the Diploma in foreign Epi Theties, essential for crowd control during the gelding of Mammoths and de-horning stray or wandering horned creatures in the vicinity. NOTE: Our dress code requires a short back and side hair trim prior to these events as nasty accidents have occurred when control personnel became targets of over-eager short-sighted gelders.
‘The successful applicant will already have:
  • a minimum of three years observance of moon passings in Wiltshire. NOTE: Nips on cold night of wild boars fermented unmentionables will bring instant dismissal. A half-frozen inebriated Grounds man smelling of vile intoxicants is the last thing the Committee want lying around.
  • the ability to recognise and apprehend visitors leaving the area with unauthorised erections is essential. Materials   have been stolen in the past and are hell to replace.
‘The successful applicant will also be expected to lead visitors in dogmatic ‘shall and shall-not’ responses. Chanting sessions are held regularly when the correct responses are taught, necessary to thwart uncouth persons slipping in obscenities when some worshippers are off in a trance.
'Duties include the following:
  • Grounds to be kept uncluttered. Rock and stone not required by stone bashers to be removed and buried in a hole dug for that purpose.
  • Check each sunrise that monoliths have not been tagged, shifted or stolen. Those pushed out of alignment by local yokels from the previous night's piss up, must be pushed back before the early morning sunrise Druid's service.
    Missing stones must be replaced at own expense before sunset.
  • Regular checks must be made to ensure that top lintels are secure as nasty accidents have occurred after rock concerts, monthly stamping dances and various festival knees up which have shuddered lintels off their anchor points.
  • Carcases of extinct beasts deep frozen in cave-fridges to be checked regularly; any showing signs of serious deterioration may be sold to local takeaways.
  • Food scraps from Smoky David's, Wilf's Fry-ups, or Bronwyn's Bitsa Brontis Barbecues may be taken home or sold as pet food.'
Well! Would you believe it! I had been working on this masterpiece for hours when my mate from Aberystwyth, in Welsh Wales, had a look at my efforts. For some reason, his ire was really irked. Standing up close, he breathed fiercely and growled something in Welsh. Other Celts would have understood but I didn't. A pity really, as he's a lovely speaker normally. Never mind, when he's cooled down I'll take him over to the NAFFI canteen for a Welsh rarebit and a pale ale. A fed mate is generally a happy one, which I’m sure the Celts would understand.

Dennis Crompton © 1998
(first published www.denniscrompton.wordpress.com 2013)

Mind your own business!

secret

“He was spreading it around.”
“A bit of ‘How’s your father.’”
“A little bit of Hanky and plenty of Panky.”
As a boy I was constantly reminded not to ask questions:
  • Mind your own business
  • That’s got nothing to do with you
  • Shut up
  • What did you say? (said in a threatening sort of way, hand raised…)
  • What’s it got to do with you?
After a time, I began to realise that cupboards didn’t contain real skeletons but that they did have something within them that I wasn’t supposed to discover. And from that time on, my mind automatically switched on to ‘Record’ whenever there was a hint of, “This is something young Dennis shouldn’t know; hush! Whisper!”

Since then, I’ve opened up family cupboard doors wide, only to find there’s nothing to cause the brow to furrow, the nose to wrinkle in distaste or my pulse to race… I do faintly remember someone, a male, who parted his hair in the middle and wore tight pants but was never able to find out any more than that.

Ah, the bewilderments of youth!

Dennis Crompton © 2009