The restoration and living in of an English country cottage
Author: cottagecapers
Hi, I'm Hazel....
I write purely for pleasure; I love to delve in history, customs, traditions and nature....or whatever else grabs my attention at the time....
I am in no way an expert on what I choose to write about - I simply love to find out about things.... Whilst I always endeavour to get the facts right - occasionally I may get things wrong.... I guess you could call this my disclaimer....
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On this day in history : 23rd October 1922 – Andrew Bonar Law becomes the British Prime Minister – with a tenure of just 209 days it is the shortest of the twentieth century….
Andrew Bonar Law – Bain News Service – Public domain
Canadian born Bonar Law, who was of Scottish descent, was the first British Prime Minister to be born outside of the British Isles…. He was born on the 16th of September 1858 and the family moved back to Scotland in 1870…. After leaving school at 16 he initially worked in the iron industry before entering the House of Commons after the 1900 General Election….
When Herbert Asquith formed his coalition government in May 1915 Bonar Law was made Secretary of State for the Colonies and was a member of the War Committee…. After David Lloyd George replaced Asquith in 1916 he became Chancellor of the Exchequer and then Leader of the House of Commons….
Andrew Bonar Law – Bain Collection, Library of Congress – Public domain
Bonar Law retired as Leader of the House of Commons in March 1921, due to ill health…. However, when Lloyd George was removed from office in October 1922 he agreed to become Prime Minister and formed his own Conservative government…. But his health continued to deteriorate and on the 20th of May 1923 he resigned…. Bonar Law died of throat cancer on the 30th of October 1923; his funeral was held at Westminster Abbey…. He is often referred to as ‘the unknown Prime Minister’….
On this day in history : 22nd October 1707 – Four Royal Navy ships run aground near the Isles of Scilly – over 2,000 sailors are lost, resulting in the Longitude Act 1714 and the invention of the Marine Chronometer….
Harrison’s Chronometer, on display at the Science Museum, London – Image credit : Rocklever at English Wikipedia CC BY 2.5
The fleet of 21 ships entered the English Channel during a storm and were heading for home from the Mediterranean…. They sailed under the command of Sir Cloudesley Shovell, who was onboard his flagship Association…. He consulted with his navigator and it was determined that they had arrived at Ushant, off the French coast near to Brittany…. Whereas, they were in fact near to the Isles of Scilly – much further north…. The next night Association, along with Fireband, Romney and Eagle smashed on the rocks off of the west of Scilly…. Only 25 sailors survived – over 2,000 were lost….
18th Century engraving of the Scilly naval disaster with HMS Association at the centre front – Public domain
The problem at the time was that navigators could only find accurate Latitude…. By using the sun they could determine north to south…. But when it came to Longitude, east to west, this was a more difficult proposition and open to error…. It had to be calculated by an estimation of speed between one point and another – a method known as ‘dead-reckoning’…. Factors such as wind, tide and current had to be taken into account….
After the catastrophic disaster off of the Scilly Isles the government realised something had to be done…. This resulted in the Longitude Act 1714…. A prize of £20K was offered to the person who came up with the means of determining an accurate Longitude measurement….
It took years but eventually in 1773 clockmaker John Harrison presented his Marine Chronometer as the solution…. For whatever reason he only ever received £8,750 of the prize money….
The remains of Association and the other ships still lay scattered across the sea bed off of the rocks of Scilly – and will remain so under the Protection of Wrecks Act 1973….
Portrait of John Harrison by Phillippe Joseph Tassaert – Public domain
On this day in history : 21st October 1966 – A coal-slag heap slides downhill and engulfs the Welsh mining village of Aberfan, including the village school…. 144 people are killed, 116 of whom are children….
Aerial photograph of Aberfan following the disaster – Fair use
It was a Friday and the last morning before the school broke up for half term…. It was raining, hard and relentlessly, as it had been for days and days before…. At 9.10am the 240 children of Pantglas Junior School, who had been gathered for morning assembly, filed into their classrooms – a few late stragglers were still in the playground…. At 9.15am a large section of the coal spoil heap, that towered domineeringly on the hillside above, broke away and began to avalanche towards the village beneath…. Tons and tons of black sludge engulfed the school, along with a row of terraced cottages and a farm….
Numerous complaints had been made regarding the safety of the seven gigantic coal spoil heaps over the years – including a petition from the school itself in 1963…. But the National Coal Board took no notice…. Matters were not helped by the quarter-of-a-mile high heaps being built on ground riddled with natural springs…. With the constant rain the heaps had become completely saturated….
At first the rescue operation was hampered by thick fog…. Eventually though there were some 2,000 rescuers, many of them local miners, working non-stop to free survivors…. All the while the slag heap was still shifting…. In one classroom 14 bodies were found; in another the school dinner lady was discovered, clutching 5 children to her, trying to protect them – all had perished…. In all 116 children aged between 7 and 10 years old had died; 28 adults were also killed, 5 of them teachers at the school…. Many of the dead had died from suffocation; it was a week before the last body was recovered….
The rescue operation – Fair use
The National Coal Board blamed the abnormal rainfall, claiming it had caused the coal waste to move…. A later inquiry found the NCB solely to blame – and ordered that compensation should be paid…. However, the NCB refused to accept full financial responsibility – and would only do the minimum to make the remaining slag-heaps safe…. It was only after an additional grant from the government and a contribution of £150,000 (almost 10% of the value) from the relief fund that had been raised by the public, that the heaps were finally removed…. The enforced use of the relief fund money caused national outrage…. In comparison the NCB paid out compensation equating to just £500 per child’s life lost – for what had been a totally preventable tragedy….
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip travelled to Aberfan on the 29th of October, to pay their respects – the Queen visited four times altogether…. In May 1997 Her Majesty and the Duke planted a tree in Aberfan Memorial Garden…. The children are buried high on the hillside in Aberfan Cemetery….
Image credit – Llywelyn2000 at Welsh Wikipedia CC BY 3.0
On this day in history : 20th October 1960 – Penguin Books find themselves in the dock of the Old Bailey being prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act 1959 – over their intention to publish Lady Chatterley’s Lover….
First Penguin edition of Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence – Image credit : Twospoonfuls – own work CC BY-SA 4.0
The sexually explicit story of a young upper-class woman, Lady Chatterley, whose husband was paralysed from the waist down following a World War One injury and her relationship with working-class game keeper Oliver Mellors…. With its detailed sexual references and use of bad language it was deemed to be too shocking for the British public….
Lady Chatterley’s Lover was the last novel of English author D.H.Lawrence…. It was first privately fully published in Italy in 1928 and then in France in 1929 – but was banned in many countries…. It did not openly appear uncensored in Britain until 1960 – when Penguin decided to publish it in paperback form, making it affordable and available to all….
D.H. Lawrence (passport photograph – unknown photographer) – Public domain
However, before they could publish there were one or two hurdles in the way…. The Obscene Publications Act 1959 was a Bill introduced to Parliament by Roy Jenkins and came into force in August 1959….The Act created a new offence for publishing obscene material, repealing the former common law of obscene libel…. Police were given the power to seize such material and prosecute…. Penguin’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover was to be the first to be prosecuted under the Act’s provisions….
The highly publicised landmark obscenity case come to trial on the 20th of October and lasted until the 2nd of November…. Mervyn Griffith-Jones acted for the prosecution and Gerald Gardiner was counsel for the defence…. The case was presided over by Judge Laurence Byrne – who used a well-thumbed copy of the book in question for reference…. The trial concluded with the acquittal of Penguin Books, with the jury of 9 men and 3 women ruling the publication not to be obscene….
The court case questioned the publishing and decency laws….seen by many as outdated…. Penguin published Lady Chatterley’s Lover a month later; all 200,000 copies sold on the first day…. The gates had been opened for the publishing world to publish books with more explicit content….
On this day in history : 19th October 1745 – The death of Anglo-Irish author, poet and satirist Jonathan Swift – most famous for his masterpiece Gulliver’s Travels….
Johnathan Swift – portrait by Charles Jervas – Public domain
Swift’s English father had settled in Ireland and married the daughter of an English clergyman…. Then in 1667 he died leaving his pregnant wife and young daughter to be cared for by his in-laws…. Swift was born and the fatherless family was supported by his mother’s brothers – who treated him well and at the age of six he was sent to Kilkenny, the best school in Ireland…. Then he went to Trinity College in Dublin, graduating in February 1686 with a Bachelor of Arts degree….
Swift’s birthplace – 1865 illustration by T.Morton – Houghton Library – Public domain
Returning to England to escape the unrest in Ireland Swift joined the household of his mother’s distant relative Sir William Temple, of Moor Park, near to Farnham in Surrey…. He remained here until Temple’s death in 1699 and it was where his writing career began…. He did return to Ireland a couple of times during this period – and on one such occasion took orders at the Anglican Church, ordaining as a priest in January 1695….. He was to become Vicar of Kilroy, near to Belfast….
After Temple’s death he returned to Dublin for a longer period…. By now he was becoming recognised in London, for his satirical wit as a writer…. His popularity grew, especially for his religious and political essays, such as A Tale of Tub…. Swift became a writer of political pamphlets, first for the Whigs and then the Tories…. But when King George I came to the Throne in 1714 the Tories were ruined…. Swift’s career in England was over….he retreated to Ireland and turned to poetry….
However, his greatest work, Gulliver’s Travels, was yet to come, being published in 1726…. It was originally entitled Travels Into Several Remote Nations of the World and was written under the pseudonym of ‘Lemuel Gulliver, First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of Several Ships’…. The prose satire was an immediate success – and was to go on to become one of our classics of English literature…. It is often thought of as being a children’s book but is actually a sophisticated satire of human nature and was based on Swift’s own life experiences….
First edition of Gulliver’s Travels – Public domain
Swift died on the 19th of October 1745 – and was buried in St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin – where he had served as Dean from 1713-1745….
Swift at the Deanery, St. Patrick’s – illustration from 1905 Temple Scott edition of ‘Works’ – Public domain