Tuesday, 24 April 2018

Memories, Farewells, Travels and Ancestral home visits!




"La Maison" ~ The family home to three generations since it was built in 1920


Farewell to a Family Home and generation
as another chapter of life closes...






Well it's been an extra busy time since my last sharing at Easter and we have now booked our flights for Guernsey to help sort and empty my partner's family home before it is sold. With both of his parents now passed, the house has just been listed for sale.

Guernsey is one of the beautiful Channel Islands which lie in the English Channel between England and France - the others being Jersey, Alderney, Sark and Herm.


Map showing the location of Guernsey
 and the other Channel Islands

The Channel Islands from the air

Guernsey from the Air
Naturally I am looking forward to travelling and being there again and this will be my 7th visit! I love the island - and have been fortunate in getting to know her wild beauty during family trips since our son, now 32, was seven years old! We have many wonderful memories of holidays spent there during Spring, Summer and one icy Winter for Christmas which will live forever in our hearts. Sadly this trip will be more of a bitter-sweet time filled with a lifetime of memories and farewells...

It will also be a kind of "working holiday" as we sort and empty the house! However I know we will have fun catching up with friends and family and hopefully also enjoy some sunny weather with my favourites ~ the bluebells ~ and other gorgeous Spring flowers doing their thing! Perhaps this trip we will also finally have time to visit Jersey and/or Alderney - the two islands which we haven't been to before.

I am looking forward to visiting Guernsey's heavenly scented
 and magical Bluebell Wood again!
I was delighted to have a bird's eye view of "La Maison" in this wonderful drone shot below which the Real Estate agent has used in the For Sale brochure...

Centre of the photo is "La Maison" and the back garden which was
once filled with glass greenhouses where tomatoes and roses
were grown and sent abroad. 

Past times and happy days in one of the glass greenhouses
It was the Grandfather who had come over from France and built the home and for many years the land at the back was covered in glass greenhouses for growing. 
I remember the first time I went to visit the family in Guernsey back in 1992 and as we flew in, seeing all of the shimmering glass reflections from the greenhouses blinking in the sun as far as the eye could see... what a magical sight! Sadly over time, the growing industry in Guernsey waned when it could no longer compete with the prices and produce of Europe so many of them now lay broken and in ruins throughout the island.

Naturally the family have a long history of mixed memories since arriving on the island all those years ago. During the Second World War the Channel Islands were occupied by Nazi German forces from 30 June 1940 until their liberation on 9 May 1945.
Mothers with children below school age were authorised to go on the first ships, as were men of military age. Older children were evacuated ~ many to England and in this family's case, Scotland.
I can't begin to imagine the heart-ache of families torn apart and affected by the cruel suffering of war, which also invaded this family home, their lives changed forever and never to be forgotten.



A photo from the occupation of the Channel Islands
during World War II

As fate would have it, the new film called "The Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Society" was released here just this week and we plan to see it before we head overseas.

Years ago when the book was first published, I enjoyed reading it and then gifted a copy to my partner's mother on our next Guernsey visit. She devoured her book and was finished even before our holiday was over!
There have been a variety of opinions about the book and consequent movie - despite having a fine cast - but I think that my main criticism will be the fact that for whatever reason they shot the film in Devon, England and not in Guernsey!

I have no doubt that the scenery will be beautiful and there is bound to be token historical war footage from the Islands, however for native Channel Islanders and frequent visitors like myself, not being able to enjoy watching the story in its original "local" Guernsey setting is such a shame and disappointment.

                    

While reflecting upon past times and visits to the family home in Guernsey, I recall my delight and amazement when first shown inside the linen cupboard and invited to "choose" some pieces of Grandma's exquisite tatting work. Every shelf from floor to ceiling was full to overflowing with hand crafted tablecloths, doilies and assorted other works of art  which had been painstakingly stitched over many years. 

Grandma shown here busy working on one of her
many exquisite tablecloths made by lace needle tatting.
Mother and Grandma also knitted all of the family's traditional "Guernseys" (a seaman's knitted woollen sweater) and in fact, were part of a group that had one of their Guernseys presented to the Queen during a visit to the Islands!

Variations do occur, but this is probably due to embellishments by individual knitters,
rather than any strictly defined parish pattern.



Guernseys are traditionally navy blue and are made to the same pattern with a square neck, making them reversible, and patterning at the shoulders which in the past were often specific to a parish or family. One reason for this was to help identify the bodies of fisherman lost at sea when they were washed ashore. In addition, the rib at the top of the sleeve represents a sailing ship’s rope ladder, the raised shoulder seam a rope and the garter stitch panel, waves breaking on the shore. And so was born the now famous oiled wool Guernsey, renowned for the warmth of its tight knit and its rain resistant qualities.
                       
Some happy Guernsey knitters busy at work!





Guernsey and the Channel Isles have such incredible beauty and a also have a fascinating history and culture which I shall share more about another time. There are also many more family stories and memories I could continue telling now, but I am mindful of the length of this post already!
So best if I take a pause on our lovely Guernsey and Channel Islands for the moment and return with more travel tales and photos when I get back from our trip!
But there's just one more thing I must share 
before I leave you... 

I am really excited about the last week of our trip because once we have said our farewells to Guernsey, we will head over to the South West of England and travel to the village of Sparkford in Somerset, which is the family home of my Bennett ancestors!
Even though I visited Sparkford many years ago (sadly when I had much less family history information or even considered trying to find or visit the Ancestral Manor House) I never in my wildest dreams could have imagined it possible to actually STAY at Sparkford Hall!!! Which is what we are going to do!

This is where my Maternal Great, Great Grandmother Susan "Fanny" Bennett was born (and married!) and where many generations of our Bennett family lived.


A Past Times photo of Sparkford Hall
Sparkford Hall as it is today ~ a beautifully restored venue which caters
for weddings, corporate functions and other events & celebrations


I was so happy to find that the Manor House is not only still there, but that the current owners have restored it beautifully to cater for weddings, corporate functions and other events & celebrations.
To find out more and see breathtaking photos of the beautifully renovated and restored Sparkford Hall please visit here:
www.sparkfordhall.co.uk

One of my family history treasures is a copy of Edith Mary Bennett's daily journal which she kept during her life at Sparkford Hall. Reading about the family and their daily activities during those past times is fascinating and really brings the people and place to life once more!
My Maternal Great, Great Grandmother, Susan "Fanny" Bennett
who was born here in 1838 and was later married to Archibald
Hamilton Grahame in 1861 in the St Mary Magdalene church
 at Sparkford by her father, the Reverend Henry Bennett.

Archibald Hamilton Grahame ~ Taken from the original hand tinted photo

St Mary Magdalene Church in Sparkford where they were married
and many of my Bennett family are buried.

A Bennett family gathering in 1927 at the Sparkford Rectory.


A charming photo of Emily Margaret Grahame visiting her Bennett family.
Emily was one of my Great Grandfather Henry's sisters.

So the travel countdown is on! 

Meanwhile... I shall return here with some other to things to share before we head overseas in less than two weeks but will leave more on Guernsey and my very special trip back to my Ancestral home until I have returned with more photos and tales to tell... 

For now I will excitedly leave this chapter to be continued...!




Quw'utsun' Made © Be A Good Ancestor





Sunday, 1 April 2018

Easter/Ostara Greetings! | Reminiscing & Pondering Traditions and Seasonal Contrasts...



"We are homesick most for the places
we have never known."
~ Carson McCullers

I just love this quote which rings so true for me...

Perhaps it comes from having no siblings with a relatively lonely childhood and the awareness of living far, far away from the lands of my Ancestors... so often spoken about by my Nan who was very proud of her Scottish heritage and loved to tell stories...


I have always wondered what their worlds and customs were like in places where they experienced the full spectrum of the changing Seasons... (with holiday calendars to match!) and I suspect those nostalgic pangs of longing and curiosity actually came from a much deeper desire to simply "belong" to a larger family or community which I've never experienced...


Easter nostalgia ~ both foreign and familiar...

Matryoska Egg for Easter

Growing up in the flats next door to mine is where I made my very first best friend. A girl two years older than me whose parents were born in Czechoslovakia and had fled to Australia for refuge and start their new life.
My Czech dolls in traditional costume
There were many things that I loved learning about in my new friend's family, culture and traditions but Christmas Eve and Easter were my favourites.
Don't get me wrong... I adored every kind of chocolate as all children do! But in their home, I also enjoyed discovering that there was so much more to Easter than chocolate eggs and bunnies... 
Like helping them dye and decorate their eggs with food colourings and vegetable skins; also adorning them with special transfers and using wax to carefully draw the designs.

The Ukrainian word for these eggs is pysanky. In Czechoslovakia they are called kraslice


My other Easter favourite times were the visits with my Mum by bus and train over the Harbour Bridge to my Nanna & Pop's house out west ~ via the magical Darrell Lea shop on George Street to buy one of their to-die-for nougat eggs with the wee chick on top!

It was always a long journey, but with my favourite comics to keep me company, the ride on the classic "Red Rattler" trains (which my Pop used to build!) was always an adventure!

The usual Easter egg hunts in the garden - which also sometimes came in a cute new egg cup of some sort - were our family traditions, resulting in quite a collection over the years!

Myself with Mum and my Pop "Tom" in later years.
My favourite Easter Show treat ~ The magical Kewpie!

During these younger years, I could never quite understand the connection between Jesus and Chocolate nor bunnies and eggs (not that I complained!) so it wasn't until later in life that I started to explore the wider origins, meanings and customs of Easter - and other traditions - which didn't relate to us at all seasonally, being in direct opposite to our world down here in the Southern Hemisphere. 



How did it get so late so soon?
It’s night before it’s afternoon.
December is here before it’s June.
My goodness how the time has flewn.
How did it get so late so soon?
~ Dr. Seuss




A world of confusing contrasts...

In keeping with the Christian belief of resurrection at Easter and the promise of new life, there are the fertility symbols of bunnies and eggs with the new growth of Spring; and yet our days here are shortening as golden leaves fall from the trees which are turning in preparation for the Winter months ahead... 

Then after their precious warmer Summer months, the North are observing the ancient traditions of Halloween/Hallowmas/Samhain and the shortening days of Autumn which then creep into Winter and the next thing, everyone is rugging up for a White Christmas complete with Yule log fires burning...

Meanwhile in the Land Down Under, we are at the beach with our salads and seafood, desperately trying to cool off while watching our Summer Santa surfing!

I think you get my drift!

Over the years I have discovered that for me, living by the seasonal calendar (as our earliest Ancestors would have once done) simply made alot more sense! So while we would still participate in all the usual community holidays of the year, I found that being aware, observing and living by Nature's cycles rather than because a calendar said it was the "right time" felt a whole better and helped to be more connected to the land and traditional ways of my Ancestors...

With love and Easter/Ostara Blessings to all...
Happy Month!


An after note:
My thoughts above are simply me reflecting on life!
Please know that I respect and honour all of the spiritual and sacred beliefs and traditions of others. Ho!





Photo by Sarachmet





Quw'utsun' Made © Be A Good Ancestor








Saturday, 17 March 2018

From my heart to yours... “Lá fhéile Pádraig sona dhaoibh!” ~ Happy St Patrick's Day to you all" with a Blessing and some unexpected and delightful surprises for me!



On this special day... I am remembering my Irish/Celtic Ancestors... their lives, loves, hopes, dreams and stories... with love and gratitude.



Does this day have special meaning
for you and your family? 

Like so many Australians, my Ancestors before me arrived in this wild and beautiful country in another century and so very far away from their homelands, family and friends... I can't begin to imagine what that separation and journey would have been like for them, nor the many challenges they faced in creating their new lives here.

Although grateful to have some  treasured family photographs and basic information, sadly I know very little about these pioneers and their lives. Now they are gone and there is no one left to ask or share their stories...
However, my determined curiosity to remember and discover more about these people by searching, finding and gathering pieces of my family jigsaw puzzle is a constant source of joy and satisfaction in my life.

Even better are the occasional exciting and heart-warming new finds such as a couple of wonderful photo gems from long ago which I discovered by accident via a local history page on Facebook last night just before heading to bed!

I had originally been looking on the internet at some beautiful scenic photos of a small town in British Columbia called Enderby because I have always known that my Maternal Grandmother's Scottish Aunty had married and bravely gone to live and raise her family in this wild frontier in the late 1800's and early 1900's.

As I have always been the "keeper of the family photos" there are a few precious images I inherited of this family and I have always wondered about their lives back then and how life would have been way over on the other side of the world in the land of mountains, snow and bears!

As I sleepily clicked from one photo to the next of this Museum's fascinating historical collection in the hopes of possibly finding a scrap of information or even a mention of our family name, I never imagined that I would actually not only see one of the photos in my own collection, let alone some brand new ones. However it was when I found myself gazing into the living room at the children and their brightly lit Christmas tree that I swear my heart actually stopped and then skipped a few beats! There they were! Isobel, Barbara wee Richard "Dickie"- partly appearing at the far right of the photo. This is the image that delighted me so... (unedited or touched-up)

The Grahame-Moore Family Xmas Tree, ca 1913
- photo from Enderby & District Museum & Archives

So my message to you, my fellow travellers and Ancestor Seekers is this...


Firstly, please take every opportunity to talk to your family ~ especially your elders ~ about their lives and stories. Write things down and collect copies of photos and memories!


Do this while they are still available to ask! I know that it seems like our beloved family will be with us forever... and if only they could be... but sadly, the hands of time are always turning and one day they will be gone from our worlds and any un-asked questions shall remain forever unanswered mysteries.

From my experience, photos and historical details are very interesting and essential for our collections however in all honesty, nothing can compare with the magic and power of their own lives and personal stories.

So then, allow your curiosity and love of family to take you on an unknown voyage of discovery and inspiration into the past of those who paved the way before us. I think you will find this journey to be enriching and empowering as you grow an even deeper sense of belonging, I know I most certainly do! Plus you just never know what unexpected treasures you may find in your travels!

Thanks to my Nan (uncannily who, like my son today, was also an avid photographer) this photo below is from my inherited collection and which I also excitedly found in the Historical Archives online. Here in the centre of the photo holding the lambs, you can see the same girls as were in the Christmas photo taken above, except a few years older.


Photo taken at Enderby Farm - "Woodcliffe" - Left to Right: Agnes "Margaret" Louise Moore,  Lilias Edith "Isobel" Grahame Moore, "Barbara" Helen Grahame Moore and Richard "Dickie" John Archibald Moore.

I will leave you for now with the other wonderful new surprise family photo which I found last night in the Enderby BC Historical Museum Archive and also a beautiful Irish Blessing to carry with you....

Washing J.F. Moore's first Ford - ca 1920

I shall share more of my treasured photos and family history stories in the blogs to follow! So please come back and visit often!






If light is in your heart you will find your way home.

~ Rumi




Níl aon tinteáin mar do thinteáin féin (There's no hearth like your own hearth) 



“Beannacht / Blessing

On the day when
the weight deadens
on your shoulders
and you stumble,
may the clay dance
to balance you.
And when your eyes
freeze behind
the grey window
and the ghost of loss
gets in to you,
may a flock of colours,
indigo, red, green,
and azure blue
come to awaken in you
a meadow of delight.


When the canvas frays
in the currach of thought
and a stain of ocean
blackens beneath you,
may there come across the waters
a path of yellow moonlight
to bring you safely home.


May the nourishment of the earth be yours,
may the clarity of light be yours,
may the fluency of the ocean be yours,
may the protection of the ancestors be yours.
And so may a slow
wind work these words
of love around you,
an invisible cloak
to mind your life.”

~ John O'Donohue from Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom










Oh and if you live in the Southern Hemisphere as I do,
St Patrick's Day is also the time to plant your Sweetpeas!







Quw'utsun' Made © Be A Good Ancestor



Monday, 12 March 2018


Electric Edwardians:
The Films of Mitchell and Kenyon

Probably the most exciting film discovery of recent times, the films of Sagar Mitchell and James Kenyon take us on a tour of everyday life in Edwardian Britain.

Electric Edwardians - The Lost Films of Mitchell & Kenyon - DVD

In the earliest years of the twentieth century, enterprising travelling showmen in the north of England hired pioneer film makers Sagar Mitchell and James Kenyon to shoot footage of local people going about their everyday activities. These films would be shown later at nearby fairgrounds, town halls and neighbourhood theatres. Workers, school children, sports fans and seaside vacationers all flocked to see themselves miraculously captured on screen!

The astonishing discovery of the original Mitchell & Kenyon negatives in Blackburn, England — in a basement about to be demolished — has been described as film’s equivalent of Tutankhamen’s tomb.
Preserved and restored by the bfi National Film and Television Archive in collaboration with the University of Sheffield National Fairground Archive and featuring a hauntingly beautiful score by In The Nursery, this treasure trove of extraordinary footage provides an unparalleled record of everyday life in the years before World War I.

Mesmerising scenes of trolley cars and crowded streets, soccer matches, temperance parades, throngs of workers leaving the factory and a myriad of simple pleasures transport us to another — lost — world. The effect is as if H.G. Wells’ marvelous time machine had come to life.

The films are grouped into five sections: Youth and Education, The Anglo-Boer War, Workers, High Days and Holidays, and People and Places; a total of 35 full-length films in all, plus five ‘hidden’ items. They are set to a specially commissioned score by Sheffield-based duo In The Nursery and presented with extensive extras offering much background material.

Here is a sample:


THE MUSIC:
The specially commissioned score for Electric Edwardians was written and performed by In The Nursery - the Sheffield-based musical project formed by twin brothers Klive and Nigel Humberstone. ITN's musical history spans more than two decades.

This wonderful DVD is available from Milestone Films:

https://www.milestonefilms.com/products/electric-edwardians


DVD BONUS FEATURES:
  • Optional Voiceover Commentary by Dr. Vanessa Toulmin, National Fairground Archive, University of Sheffield
  • Filmed Interview With Vanessa Toulmin
  • “Pictures of Crowd Splendour” video introduction by Tom Gunning, University of Chicago
  • Featurette on the restoration of the films
  • “Diving Lucy” and additional shorts by Mitchell and Kenyon




Some more film footage ~ this time accompanied by the
hauntingly beautiful music of Dirty Three. 
This track: "Long Way To Go With No Punch"



I hope you have enjoyed discovering these remarkable, time-capsule footage treasures from the past as much as I have!



Quw'utsun' Made © Be A Good Ancestor