Sunday, 28 December 2014
The Table
Starter:
Melon
Maincourse
Roast chicken, Roast Turkey Crown, Sage and Onion stuffing, bacon wrapped chiplolatas, Beef and Turkey Gravy, glazed carrots, sprouts and pancetta, Sweet Potatoes, Yorkshire puddings and Roast potatoes.
Dessert
Christmas pudding and brandy cream
Port and long sleep.
Friday, 19 December 2014
Drogo Castle
On a Sunday in Allington “One walked over the brass plates of dead Dales in the village Church.” Roger Carbury is Carbury of Carbury parish, Ralph Newton heir to Newton Priory within the bounds of Newton Peels, and the Greshams are Greshams of Greshambury. These are fictional portrayals of a real world and found in the pages of Anthony Trollope.
For Trollope a hierarchal
society was humanised by mutual duty and respect and found its purest
expression in the countryside, in particular the landed estate.
The most direct
relationships were those existing between master and servant and Trollope
delighted in the mutual loyalties encouraged by custom and tradition. Squire
Vavasour has an old butler who is so rheumatic the rest of the household now
care for him. Roger Carbury’s butler had never lived anywhere else. And for
Hopkins the gardener the nooks and crannies of his master, Squire Dale, are as
well known to him as those of the apple trees he has nurtured for over forty
years.
In contrast to my previous
post, which focused on decadence and froth, Trollope’s world was very much in
the Downton tradition, or should that be the other way round. What is
significant however is that this was a very real world. Trollope was an acute
and sensitive observer of Victorian landed society and how it changed over
forty years.
I was reminded of
this when we visited Castle Drogo a month or two back. The name enchanted me,
its location, too: Dartmoor, Game of Thrones
country. The reality was almost as weird and, initially, disappointing. Not
only was this a castle built to order by a rich tea magnate in late Edwardian
England, it was in such a state of disrepair it was covered in Perspex as
builders strove to restore it – something less than a hundred years old.
Julius Drewe, a man contented with life, as well he should.
Julius Drew made
so much money from tea imports and his incredibly successful grocery chain ‘Home
and Colonial’ he was able to retire at just thirty three and spend the rest of
his life hunting, fishing and looking after a wife and five children. What he
aspired to however was to be a country gentleman – a country gentleman that
could fit happily within the pages of Trollope. He added an ‘E’ to his surname
to reinforce a spurious link to the noted Elizabethan Devon family - Drewe. And
he built a granite fortress, designed by an initially reluctant Sir Edward
Lutyens. Lutyens may have been persuaded by £60,000 to play with – in today’s
money £30 -40 million.
On one level you
might see Julius Drewe as a man with more money than sense, but dig beneath the surface and you quickly
detect a warm and generous spirit. His workmen were treated kindly and with the
utmost consideration. His wife (Frances Drewe, nee Richardson) personally vetted
the plans for the kitchen, making sure it was well lit by a glass domed roof,
and spacious enough for the staff.
Castle Drogo was started in 1911, but
the family were only able to inhabit it in 1925, and it wasn’t completely
finished until 1930. A year later Julius Drewe died. During 1939–45,
Frances and her daughter Mary ran the house as a home for babies made homeless
during the blitz. One of the mothers ran back to London
in disgust with the lack of shops on Dartmoor.
For any who doubt Trollope’s
world or even that Downton Abbey existed in different forms, read this short extract from the WadhurstHistorical Society. This was a self made man revelling in and continuing a
Trollopian tradition. The link to the whole article follows it.
For those who don't want to read on but would like some idea of the setting, here be pictures. Article and link follow. And this will be my last blog post until the New Year. I hope you all have a really happy Christmas.
A purpose built and designed work table for kitchen staff - positioned under the glass domed roof.
"Life
there seems to have been blissfully happy. Frances (a daughter) has given an account of her childhood, which
reads like a fairytale; the sweet, kind parents with their five children,
surrounded by friendly, devoted servants in the most comfortable and beautiful
setting. She mentions many of the servants by name: Mr Waite, the butler, with
his marvellous mutton-chop whiskers and his wife who made dresses; Mrs Stacey,
the housekeeper, busy by the sewing machine in her work room; Mrs Chandler, the
cook, who was chef-trained; the much-loved nanny Bernie Rickwood, nicknamed
Bop; the second nanny Mary Jane Sharpe and the nursery maid Eliza Winch, who
lived with her parents in Stream Cottages by the Miners Arms. Eliza’s husband
worked in the kitchen garden. Her father prepared kindling wood in the cellar
of Wadhurst Hall. There were White, the estate carpenter; Barnes, the sweeper
of the front drive; Hutton and later on Grant, the coachmen; Mrs Bradshaw, the
head laundress, married to the previous estate carpenter. There were the two
drivers, Holter and Nethercot; Mr and Mrs Dunk - Mr Dunk nursing the Drewe boys
when they got the measles, Mrs Dunk cooking for the unmarried men living in the
Bothy. There was Mr Crawford at Scrag Oak, the estate agent, who every
Christmas handed out turkeys and geese to the people working at Wadhurst Park. There were the under-keepers,
Wickens and Everett; the latter reared the ducks at Doozes Farm. There was the
charming Irish governess, Miss Jennie Griffith, known as Griff, and the
Chaplain Leslie Stevenson at Sunset Lodge. He later became vicar of Wadhurst,
then Canon and Dean of Waterford Cathedral. In the Entrance Lodge lived the
Friend family, and at the Octagon Lodge by the back drive lived the Necklins.
Mr Friend and Mr Necklin both served as night-watchmen.
"…..Morning prayers with all the staff were held in the dining-room. The family had many clergymen among their friends, Mr Drewe being the son of an evangelical clergyman himself. Sunday service was always in the Chapel; Mr Drewe taught Sunday-school to the senior boys, his daughter Mary to the smaller children. Elaborate Christmas tree parties were held in the riding school for all the people working on the estate, with heaps of presents and a huge tea to follow. !n the summer there were garden parties with pastoral plays and tea in marquees. There were shooting parties every Saturday during the season with enormous bags of ducks and pheasants, followed by tea in the hall, alternating with dinner parties with the children kneeling in the gallery to catch a glimpse of their beautiful mother going in to dinner. Occasionally balls took place in the huge Oakroom, where the orchestra sat comfortably playing in the ingle-nook. In the summer, lunches were served on the terrace with screens to keep out the draught and light shades to keep out the sun.
"…..Morning prayers with all the staff were held in the dining-room. The family had many clergymen among their friends, Mr Drewe being the son of an evangelical clergyman himself. Sunday service was always in the Chapel; Mr Drewe taught Sunday-school to the senior boys, his daughter Mary to the smaller children. Elaborate Christmas tree parties were held in the riding school for all the people working on the estate, with heaps of presents and a huge tea to follow. !n the summer there were garden parties with pastoral plays and tea in marquees. There were shooting parties every Saturday during the season with enormous bags of ducks and pheasants, followed by tea in the hall, alternating with dinner parties with the children kneeling in the gallery to catch a glimpse of their beautiful mother going in to dinner. Occasionally balls took place in the huge Oakroom, where the orchestra sat comfortably playing in the ingle-nook. In the summer, lunches were served on the terrace with screens to keep out the draught and light shades to keep out the sun.
Friday, 12 December 2014
Not Behind Lace Curtains
I’m busy
researching for a sequel to ‘The Gift’. It involves delving into the murky
waters of the occult and sexual deviancy in the interwar years. Most would
agree that homosexuality is not necessarily deviant – though it was then most
certainly illegal. Most would agree that paedophilia is deviant and may not be
legalised for some time.
It was with this
in mind I tracked down William Cross, author, researcher, and expert on Evan
Morgan and the peculiar world he inhabited. A good two hours were spent in the
wood panelled walls of the Murenger Inn. I drank more than he did and listened
intently.
William Cross is
an exuberant man and his enthusiasm for the Morgans - Evan in particular - is
infectious. He gave me two books: NotBehind Lace Curtains, and EvanFrederick Morgan: Viscount Tredegar: The Final Affairs: Financial and Carnal.
In return, I promised to review them.
There are
grammatical infelicities, and there is none of the gorgeous prose of a Macaulay
or Gibbon. What you get instead is a potpourri of the decadent and seamy
underbelly of the British aristocracy in the inter-war years.
The predatory and insatiable Evan Morgan, Peer of the Realm
Reading the book
is akin to pot holing with a strong torch and even stronger stomach, as the
light bounces and plays upon misshapen stalagmites and strange, unwholesome
fungi. They are books of rumour and gossip, and best of all a detailed and
comprehensive index for you to check out the facts. These are books for those with Google and a craving to
research more.
In the early C20th Eton was rife with what we would now call
paedophilia. The picture above is that of the young Harold Macmillan, a
future Prime Minister. The photo below is that of the Prince of Wales
and his brother Prince George of Kent - known as PG to his friends and
the police.
There were times when I felt like Alice in Wonderland, jumping from one tunnel
to another. William Cross raises questions but provides few answers. He leaves them
for you to work out as you follow the clues. It is probably a very wise
strategy. The British Establishment is a master of the dark arts and
suppression. Cover-ups are in its DNA.
Robin Bryans wrote a series of books about
the darker corners of the establishment, much of it malicious, much of it true.
It may be coincidence that Robin Bryans’s books are now peculiarly hard to
find. Then again, his most famous book, The Dust Never Settles - has been mysteriously removed from Scribd. Why? I’ve never heard of digital books being remaindered before.
So yes, it was a
rewarding few pints in the Murenger. The books I’d recommend to any who like
well researched gossip but who are prepared to go farther.
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Ghosts walk the streets
Is it any wonder I
like ghost stories. I grew up in a ghost-ridden town. Every corner, back lane
and shadow suggested more than was seen. And if you grew up in the warrens of red-bricked
terraces, in streets poorly lit and back allies not lit at all, your senses
tingled in darkness and you ran for the safety of hearth and fire, and perhaps
cheese and toast.
One of my
favourite places is the Anglican Cathedral – the fifth largest in the world for
those who like their statistics. It glows ochre in Irish Sea sunsets and broods over the city. At night, it comes into its own.
I mentioned in a
previous post I studied in a pale blue Georgian building, an annexe to
Liverpool Institute of Further Education. It was directly opposite the
Cathedral on the corner of Duke
Street. At lunch times I would walk with my first
great love in the overgrown cemetery surrounding it.
So much has
changed and with it new ghosts. The last burial took place in July 1936 when
the graveyard was declared officially full. The authorities waited until my
back was turned and then they pounced. St James Cemetary was to be turned into
a public garden, a more fitting setting for the fifth largest cathedral in the
world. They cleared 90% of the gravestones in favour of a green, landscaped
space. When I returned from University the job had been done.
Worse was to come.
The beautiful
Georgian building, along with much else was also torn down to be replaced with
a terrace of yuppie residences called Cathedral Gates. There are restless
ghosts. You can sense them in the photographs.
A little farther afield
By now, if you've looked carefully, you should have spotted one of the ghosts. A give away copy of Dark Fire to the first person to spot it.
The two last photos are mine. The rest belong to the talented Ian Pendleton, Sharon Lewis and the equally talented and generous members of :
All these pictures have been taken from the talented and generous members of:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/friendsoforrellpark/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/waltononthehill/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/Liverpoolincolour/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/Photographsinliverpool/
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Rivers and ghosts
The Mersey broadly remains changeless
As does the sky
For much of the day
Seagulls do what seagulls do
And people stare as the Liverpool skyline slips in view.
And behind that skyline are streets and fine buildings.
Ghosts witness change more than those living it, and I always feel like a ghost when I come back to Liverpool. The streets remain broadly the same but everything
has changed.
A case in point: Matthew Street:
And
a club called the Cavern.
Ghosts caught in
the present
Ordinary people in
an extraordinary time.
All things must pass
If you look closely you can still see the remains of the cellar's arches.
Now you can't
Tourists have taken their place
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