debris4spike: (M&D wedding)
I have just skimmed through my friends lists (while I am meant to be ironing!!!), and spotted that [livejournal.com profile] tellshannon815 had sneaked a question from another blog prompt. I decided I would post here, rather than answer on her post.  It will make a change from my many photo posts ... another coming up soon (and I stll haven't posted my Flanders pictures).  So, the question -

Do you know how your grandparents met?

My Mum's parents were older than my Dad's, so will start with them.

My Grandma Alice Victoria was born in June 1892, in Toronto (as her father moved around USA, Canada and England).  My Granddad, Charles William (whose story I followed in Flanders), was born in December 1896.

Grandma worked as a VAD during the war, and then went back to working in the shoe factory that she had been in before the war.  In 1919, as part of Granddad's rehab, they were shown around varying job oppertunities , and thus the factory was first on the tour (as Northamptonshire was a shoe (& leather) centre.  Grandma was one of the tour guides, having been a VAD, and they got chatting ... the rest is history!

26/12/1920
 photo img015_zpsuywmnntb.jpg


My Granddad John, was born in 1900, so only joined up as the was was closing, so served in 1919, then he joined the Coldstream Guards as a regular soldier and was based in London (having been born in Lincolnshire), and my Grandma Ada Victoria Francis was born the day Queen Victoria died in 1901.  During the war she worked as a "Canary" in the East End .... ie she worked in an ammunition factory (they turned yellow working with the TNT).

After the war Grandma was the original Essex girl!  She took a day off work (and lost her job because of it), and she and her friend went up to the city to see who they could meet ... and on spotting a couple of Guards walking to duty, they stopped them, and chatted them up.  Yes, Grandma picked up her soldier!!

8/02/1924
 photo img016_zpske5k2hov.jpg
debris4spike: (Mum)
I had 2 reasons for going to Northants this weekend. Firstly to visit Auntie Mary but also to visit as it would have been Mum's 90th birthday. So I wanted to do some sight-seeing of the village of Stanwick I knew as a kid. Until I was 18/19 we used to go up every 6 weeks, or so.

ExpandStanwick )


When Mum was a kid, and in fact as I remember it, the village was surrounded by fields. However they have made a nature reserve there ... and Jiffy and I visited it in the afternoon -

ExpandWalking around Stanwick Lakes )
debris4spike: (Child)
It was when I started to check up on this I realised how long I have been missing.  So this is a big catch up ... here are the questions:-

52 - What is your most treasured item?
53 - Your biggest insecurity.
54 - Something that you want to do before you die.
55 - What is something that makes your heart break?
56 - Something that you’re extremely afraid of.
57 - What food are you craving right now?
58 - What was the last dream you remember about?
59 - A habit you wish you didn’t have.
60 - Describe the room you’re in right now.
61 - A dead person you’d like to talk to and why?
62 - Go look in the mirror. What’s the first thing you notice?
63 - What song makes you dance?
64 - Name a cartoon you loved as a kid.
65 - Your ultimate feast?

ExpandAnd here are the answers )


The list of 365 questions can be found here

Lest We Forget

Thursday, June 30th, 2016 08:46 pm
debris4spike: (WW1 Grave)
I will admit this post is very much "copy and paste" from a link that Tim sent me.  Our Grandfather was one of those thousands who, 100 years ago tomorrow, went over the top at the First Day Of The Battle Of The Somme.

 photo DSC_0252_zpsxkxnemoa.jpg

For on July 1, 1916, following a seven-day British bombardment, some 120,000 men clambered from their trenches and went ‘over the top’ — to be met by a hail of German machine-gun fire that mowed down half of them. With 20,000 dead and 40,000 wounded, it was the bloodiest single day in British military history.

Relaxing before the carnage: Heartbreaking photos of our troops on the eve of the Somme 100 years ago shortly before they went 'over the top' on the bloodiest single day in British military history. The weeks leading up to the bloodiest battle in British history were gentle, compared with the horror that followed.

Rolling countryside north of River Somme was home to more than a million British servicemen, mainly volunteers. Haunting photographs from 100 years ago show the men relaxing, released to mark the centenary of the WWI battle. But the lush, green, springtime lands would shortly be turned into a muddy moonscape by the horrifying conflict.

By NIGEL BLUNDELL FOR THE DAILY MAIL


 photo 1_zpsvhc5foyr.jpg
A welcome rest: Exhausted soldiers of the 9th Rifle Brigade take a break — and a chance to have a smoke — in a field away from the front line. From left, Second Lieutenant Walter Elliott, who was killed on November 20, 1916, Second Lieutenant Roger Kirkpatrick, wounded (date unknown), Captain Herbert Garton, who was killed on September 15, 1916, Lieutenant Evelyn Southwell, killed on September 15, 1916, and Second Lieutenant Herman Kiek, wounded on April 27, 1918. Southwell told his mother in a letter he was so tired he fell asleep while marching

 photo 2_zpsdfauncit.jpg
A chance to wash: Officers of the 9th Rifle Brigade bathing in a stream behind the lines are (from left, excluding obscured faces): Captain Arthur Mckinstry — wounded, Second Lieutenant William Hesseltine, killed August 21, 1916, Captain William Purvis, wounded September 15, 1916, Second Lieutenant Joseph Buckley, killed December 23, 1917, Lieutenant Morris Heycock, wounded August 22, 1916, Captain Eric Parsons, killed September 15, 1916, Second Lieutenant Sidney Smith (in background) killed August 25, 1916, and Second Lieutenant Walter Elliott, killed November 20, 1916

 photo 3_zpslrymkosz.jpg
Knee-deep in mud: Wading through a trench on the Somme are Major Beauchamp Magrath (left) of the 8th East Lancashire Regiment, killed on June 2, 1916, and Captain Paul Hammond, right, who died on February 25, 1916. The other two soldiers are not identified.

As you can see here, the water and mud were horrific - Granddad was lucky to survive with both his legs.

 photo 4_zpszgsbk51j.jpg
Captain William Johnson, of the 18th Manchester Regiment, was photographed by a friend on the afternoon of July 1, 1916, walking along a captured German trench. He was killed six hours later

For more photos and information, here is the full article

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old
Age shall not weary them, or the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun, and in the morning
We will remember them.



As a PS - here are Grandma and Granddad on their wedding day in December 1920
 photo img015_zpsk0yptxhs.jpg

And this is their Golden Wedding Anniversary ... and yes, that's the rest of the family in 1970! (I was 9)
 photo img008_zpsuzvbpr5l.jpg

Mum, Tim, Me (!), Grandma, Granddad, Nick, Dad

Was Amused!

Wednesday, November 19th, 2014 07:14 pm
debris4spike: (London)
I don't have a TV, but do watch a few things on catch-up on my computer.  The only series that I watch is Strictly Come Dancing.  This Saturday one of the dances (not my favourite couple) is Caroline [Flack] and Pasha [Kovalev] and they danced the Jive.



Anyway, in 1920 (before the time of the Jive) I know of one lady (and a friend) who were at Trafalgar Square, spotted 2 Coldstream Guards, and went up to them. Three years later one of the couples got married -

Expandclicky )

My Grandparents

Thursday, October 11th, 2012 08:24 pm
debris4spike: (Family)
For those who didn't look at my latest set of icons here, I thought I would upload the 2 pictures that I used for AC 1 & 5 .... my Grandparents wedding days.


ExpandThe Ancestors )

My Grandparents

Thursday, October 11th, 2012 08:24 pm
debris4spike: (Family)
For those who didn't look at my latest set of icons here, I thought I would upload the 2 pictures that I used for AC 1 & 5 .... my Grandparents wedding days.


ExpandThe Ancestors )

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