Friday 27 May 2022

THE AVRO LANCASTER

 

The Avro Lancaster

Was a four-engine British

Second World War heavy bomber

An iconic plane of the RAF

It first saw active service

With Bomber Command in 1942

Where it soon overshadowed

Its close contemporaries

The Handley Page Halifax

And the Short Stirling

It was affectionately known

As The "Lanc"

Perhaps best remembered

For Operation Chastise

Or the dam busters raid

Where it delivered

Barnes Wallis’s "Bouncing bomb"

With devastating effect

It was on to carry

The earthquake boms

Tallboy and Grand Slam

Used on V2 installations

RED ARROWS

 

Red Arrows way up high

In tight formation fly

Weaving patterns across the sky

So, pleasing to the eye

GLIENICKE BRIDGE

 

On a grey misty morning

Under cold war skies

Spanning the Havel River

Stood the Bridge of Spies

Where in the murky light

At the hour of the Lark

The faceless ones

Exchange agents in the dark

THE DE HAVILLAND MOSQUITO

 

The de Havilland DH.98 Mosquito

Was a British multi-role combat aircraft

"The Wooden Wonder"

Known more affectionately

As the "Mossie" to its crews

Was the most versatile

British aircraft

Of the Second World War

THE RAF SEEK OUT THERE TARGETS

 

The RAF seek out there targets

On recognisance missions

Brave young men

Flying beyond enemy lines

Armed with nothing more than cameras

They make pass after pass

Taking shot after shot

Before returning home

With their precious load

When the photo interpreters

Of Medmenham

Enhance the images

With their stereoscope’s

To create a 3D picture

For detailed analysis

By the boffins

Who identify a target

For more brave young men

To bomb the sites

Of the vengeance weapons

THE HAWKER TYPHOON

 

The Hawker Typhoon

Single-seat fighter-bomber

Known affectionately as the Tiffy

Began life a medium

And high-altitude interceptor

But with its Typhoon speed

It found its niche as

A low-altitude interceptor

But when ground attack rockets

Were added to its armoury.

The Typhoon earned a reputation

As the RAF’s

Most successful ground-attack aircraft.

BLUE DANUBE

 

It was called Blue Danube, which

Doesn’t sound menacing at all

So innocuous for the first operational

Weapon in Britain’s nuclear arsenal

THE HAWKER SEA HURRICANE

 

The Sea Hurricanes

Were carrier based

Catapult-launched

Convoy escorts,

Known as "Hurricats"

RED BEARD

 

It was called Red Beard, which

Doesn’t sound menacing at all

So innocuous for the first tactical

Weapon in Britain’s nuclear arsenal

 

THE HAWKER HURRICANE

 

The Hawker Hurricane

Always overshadowed by the Spitfire

Whether as an interceptor-fighter

Or a fighter-bomber

Yet during the Battle of Britain

It shouldered a greater proportion

Of the burden against the Luftwaffe.

THE RED ARMY

 

The Red Army

Rose from the ashes

Like a phoenix

Rising up from

The brink of defeat

To repel the invader

Pushing the Nazi scourge

Back to Hitler’s backyard

To end one war

And begin another

Colder one

THE SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE

 

Brainchild of R. J. Mitchell

The Spitfire was designed

As a short-range,

High-performance

Interceptor aircraft

The Supermarine Spitfire

Was the perfect flying machine

With its elliptical wings

And Rolls-Royce Merlin engine

It was fast and manoeuvrable

Which helped it dominate the skies

During the Battle of Britain


RED COATS

 

The bayonets gleaming

In the sun

The piper’s pipe

The drummers drum

Red Coats forming

Up the square

The sound of battle

Everywhere

Though far outnumbered

In the field

They do not waver

They do not yield

The men

From borough and shire

The thin red line

Of the empire 

HMS IOLAIRE

 

On New Year’s Eve 1918

The Iolaire carried sailors

Veterans of the Great War

Back home to the island of Lewis

But as they approached Stornoway

As the New Year dawned

She struck "The Beasts of Holm"

And sank in the darkness

205 souls perished in the depths

They survived the horrors of war

Only to drown in the waters of home

SO SILENT WENT THE GUNS OF HELL

 

So silent went the guns of hell

No longer dispensing shot and shell

So, we emerge from where we dwell

In answer to the armistice bell

THE FLOWERED FIELDS OF FLANDERS

 

The flowered fields of Flanders

Where met many a gallant enlistee

War visited its hell upon the earth

Turning them to a muddy bloody sea

PAST THE CENOTAPH THEY MARCH

 

Past the cenotaph they march

After Big Bens doleful chime

The proud veterans on parade

Years beyond their prime

But even with walking sticks

They still keep perfect time

 

CALLING ALL YOU ANGELS

 

Calling all you Angels

Amidst the heavenly host

Come in the name of God,

Father, Son, and Holy Ghost

Answer the clarion call

Of the sombre Last Post

And take the fallen hero

Amidst the heavenly host

 

IN TIMES OF PERIL

 

In times of peril

And personal plight

Backs against the wall

Stay strong and fight

But keep your integrity

Do things right

With merciful compassion

Fight the good fight

And in the end

Adversity will take flight

And victory be attained

By right over might

NO MANS LAND

 

No man’s land,

A desolate place

An unforgiving place

Where stout hearts

Chill and falter

To glimpse at hell

 

Doom awaits us there

On that alien field

Where death falls like rain

In shrapnel shards

And bullets speak

Of whispered demise

 

No man’s land,

A desolate place

Where men drown

In mud, blood, and tears

Blood shed for country

Tears shed for kin

HMHS GLENART CASTLE

 

The Glenart Castle

Was steaming home

On a cold February night

In 1918

The hospital ship

Headed for safe haven

Her lights green

Clearly visible

Against the dark horizon

Red lamps lit her side rail

Her masthead light burned bright

Fishermen could see her

Red Cross light

Then a torpedo struct her

In the number the hold

In eight minutes

She was gone

With a 162 souls

THE RED DUSTER

 

The British merchantmen

Fly the “Red Duster”

And you will always see

The red ensign flutter

 

THE RED ENSIGN

 

The unsung heroes sail

Under The Red Ensign

The tell-tale flag flown

By British merchantmen

ARE YOU WEARING A POPPY?

 

Are you wearing a poppy?

Wear it proudly on your lapel

Wear it with pride and respect

So, everyone will be able to tell

That you recognise the sacrifice

Of those who fought and fell

 

KUBLAI KHAN’S MONGOL HORDE

 

Kublai Khan’s Mongol horde

Set Sail In 1274

To conquer Japan

And add it to his empire

But the great deity Raijin

Conjured up a typhoon

And his Divine wind

Destroyed the Khan’s fleet

And saved the Japanese

But in 1281

They sailed again

The largest fleet every assembled

Four thousand ships

Carrying 140000 men

But when they were off the shore

Once again Raijin

Brought the Kamikaze

And scattered the fleet

To the four winds

And thwarted Kublai Khan

And he never tried again

DON’T HATE THE HUN ACROSS THE FIELD

 

Don’t hate the Hun across the field

He’s not so very different to you

He doesn’t want to fight in foreign wars

 

He wants to be in the loving embrace

Of the sweet woman he loves

As you want to be in the arms of yours 

MY SOUL WAS FORGED IN HEAVEN

 

My soul was forged in heaven

And my heart was filled with love

My faith is as strong as iron

I am akin to the angels above

Until my soul returns to heaven

And I bask in eternal love

WANDERING WARRIOR

Wandering warrior

Migrating hero of the good

Fights for God and king

  

BOMBER COMMAND

 

At last, they are remembered

In marble and bronze

In Green Park they stand

The forgotten band of brothers

Silent yet speaking aloud

Of honours unsung

These brave men

Held in contempt

By the very politicians

Who sent them to their death’s

Shunned by Churchill

In the cold light of peace

These forgotten heroes

Of an unpopular campaign

These warriors on the wing

They didn’t question

They didn’t ask why us

They went where they were sent

And half never returned

ALONG AN A WAR-TORN ROAD

 

Weary leaden footsteps

Tramp the war-torn road

Ragged with fatigue

The endless serried ranks

Of weary ragged lads

Stout of heart

March, not in retreat

But ever onward to the foe

IN LESS THAN A GENERATION

 

At the start of World War II

Americans crossed into Canada

To join the war

Because they thought it right

 

Twenty years later

Americans crossed into Canada

To avoid the war

Because they didn’t want to fight

Sunday 15 May 2022

Uncanny Love Tales – (050) The Downshire Star 2000

 

In September 1939 best friends Lilian Baggott and Amelia Bryan met cousins and best friends, Steve Matthews and

Bill Prendergast in a second-class carriage on the Downshire Star heading out of Glasgow in the late afternoon sunshine, bound for Downshire, and romance blossomed.

The girls were returning home to be with their families while the boys had been ordered to return to the Downshire Light Infantry barracks in Nettlefield.

 

The Downshire Star was a 4-6-2 standard gauge three-cylinder steam locomotive built at the Northchapel Works in 1933 which had all the romance of the Flying Scotsman and the grace and style of the Mallard.

It was a stunning sight liveried in the black and gold of the DCRN, Downshire County Railway Network, pulling the Prix Deluxe first-class coaches, dining carriage, and sleeper cars, as well as second and third class wagons, and it ran from Abbeyvale to all points North via Abbottsford, Finchbottom and Nettlefield, and was in service for 30 years, from 1933 until 1963. 

After it was taken out of service it was stored at the Northchapel Works and remained there for twenty-five years, until it and several other engines and assorted rolling stock were acquired by the Downshire Railway Preservation Society, with the financial support and patronage of Baron St George of Mornington, who was a man with a strong sense of history and his stewardship of the Mornington Estate wasn’t restricted just to the land and properties within the Estate, they also ensured the protection of historically significant buildings and landmarks under threat from modernizers.

Although the Downshire Star didn’t really fall within the Estates normal parameters his Lordship made an unprecedented exception.

The acquisition was made in 1988 and the restoration of the Star was completed in 1994. 

The maiden journey for fare paying customers was on Whitsun Bank Holiday in 1995 and ran from Sharping St Mary to Sharpinghead and then onto Sharpington.

It wasn’t until five years later when the Sharpington spur line was completed, and they were able to join the main Finchbottom line and the Downshire Star could do its first County wide tour.

 

In September 1939, in a second-class carriage of the Downshire Star Amelia Bryan and Steve Matthews met and fell in love.

The following year along with best friends Lilian Baggott and Bill Prendergast they had a double wedding at the Downshire Light Infantry Chapel in Nettlefield on the 20th of July and they rode on the Downshire Star again, when they travelled to Abbottsford to spend their wedding night at the Regents Hotel.

At the end of the austere fifties in June of 1960 Steve surprised Amelia for their 20th Wedding Anniversary, with a first-class trip to Scotland on the Star, which was a very opulent way to travel, but then after years of austerity a little opulence was just what the doctor ordered.

That was their first holiday since they’d been married, and the first holiday either of them had had since before the war.

Although they had many holidays after that, none of them could quite compare to the romance of the Downshire Star.

 

Steve and Amelia had never been blessed with children so had to be content with being doting godparents, but they had a very fulfilling life.

The Nursery business they had started with Sir Fabian Cook in 1958 had grown into the Dulcet Garden Centre, which was the biggest in the county.

 

In 1990 to celebrate their 50th Wedding Anniversary Steve organized a vintage 1920 Bentley, the year she was born, in British racing green, her favourite colour, which took them to St Mary’s church where all their friends and family were waiting for them to renew their vows.

During the reception afterwards, one of their friends was talking about his work with the Downshire Railway Preservation Society and how he was involved in fund raising for the work on the recently acquired Downshire Star, suffice is to say he received a very large cheque the next day.

 

By the end of the 20th century, they were long retired and their only participation with the business was the board meetings, and Amelia’s attendance at those had dwindled away to nothing, much in keeping with her health.

She was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer just after the millennium, which had already invaded the lymphatic system.

There was no treatment she thought worth considering, she would not add insult onto injury by enduring chemo or radiotherapy, she was resigned to her fate.

Amelia was content, she had lived a very good life, a very happy life, and had enjoyed a long and happy marriage, to the love of her life.

She would certainly not see another Christmas and was not expected to survive until Easter, but she had different ideas as she didn’t plan to go until she had celebrated her sixtieth wedding anniversary, and by sheer force of will, she would achieve her goal.

 

One morning in early July Amelia was having a good day and was sitting in the conservatory drinking the coffee Steve had made for her, and when he sat beside her, she said   

“I’d love to ride on the Star just one more time”

She had read in the local paper that the Star was going to be Sharpington the day after next as part of the county wide tour, it was never going to be closer to them.

“Do you think you’re up to it?” he asked and stroked her hand    

“I’m fine, stop fussing” she said and gave his hand a squeeze then she smiled and added

“It would just be nice to do it one more time before I’m shunted into the eternal siding”

“Very clever analogy” he said “I’ll see what I can do”

“Thank you darling” Amelia said

“Dr Yorke will have to sign off on it though” he cautioned her

“If he doesn’t, tell him what we caught his father doing in the hot house with a nurse” she suggested 

“Or that we witnessed his conception”

 

Two days later in Sharpington, Amelia was being pushed towards the platform in a wheelchair, by Nurse Melissa Ness, Steve was alongside on her right and Dr Harry Yorke on the left, it was his only condition on agreeing to Amelia’s request.

When they emerged onto the platform and saw the Downshire Star gleaming in the sun light Amelia gasped

“She’s still as beautiful as she ever was”

“Why do you always say “she”?” Steve asked

“Because only a Lady can look that elegant and graceful” she replied

 

It was a bit more of an effort to get aboard, than on previous occasions, but she was soon settled in the seat by the window with Steve beside her and Dr Yorke and Nurse Ness opposite.

As the train left the station, Amelia sighed, as she held Steve’s hand and said

“I feel as if I’m nineteen again”

 

As the graceful lady steamed along the track, Amelia regaled the Doctor and Nurse with the tales of their previous journeys on the Star which kept them entertained well beyond Purplemere, but by the time they neared Finchbottom, she looked visibly drained, so Dr Yorke said

“I think you’ve had enough excitement for one day” 

And the fact that she offered no resistance they all knew that she was a spent force, so they disembarked at Finchbottom and had a chauffeured car drive them back to the Dulcets.

 

Amelia slept most of the next two days and although her strength rallied, she never reached the levels of the Downshire Star trip.

She at least managed to maintain an even keel up until their 60th Wedding Anniversary, but she only had enough energy to celebrate the day with Steve.

However, the day after, having reached the goal she set herself, her sheer will could no longer sustain her and she crashed, and two days later she passed away.  

 

The funeral was held on a glorious August day, and such was Amelia’s standing in the community and her popularity, it seemed everyone wanted to pay their respects, however seating in St Mary’s church was quite inadequate for the numbers wanting to attend.

It was packed to the gunwales, and it seemed like the whole village had turned out to say goodbye,

The village green and every available inch of verge and lane held the throng of mourners to see her off, and Steve was very moved.

 

After her death everyone expected Steve to die of a broken heart, and that’s precisely what would have happened had Amelia not told him in no uncertain terms that he was to carry on without her.

Uncanny Love Tales – (049) The Downshire Star 1960

 

The Downshire Star was a 4-6-2 standard gauge three-cylinder steam locomotive built at the Northchapel Works in 1933 which had all the romance of the Flying Scotsman and the grace and style of the Mallard.

It was a stunning sight liveried in the black and gold of the DCRN, Downshire County Railway Network, pulling the Prix Deluxe first-class coaches, dining carriage, and sleeper cars, as well as second and third class wagons, and it ran from Abbeyvale to all points North via Abbottsford, Finchbottom and Nettlefield

In September 1939 best friends Lilian Baggott and Amelia Bryan met cousins and best friends, Steve Matthews and

Bill Prendergast in a second-class carriage on the Downshire Star heading out of Glasgow in the late afternoon sunshine, bound for Downshire, and romance blossomed.

The girls were returning home to be with their families while the boys had been ordered to return to the Downshire Light Infantry barracks in Nettlefield.

They said their goodbyes on the platform of Nettlefield Station and the girls reboarded the train.

It was to be the last time they would see the boys for the best part of 10 months, as they left Downshire the following day as part of the BEF, British Expeditionary Force, which was in France two days later.

 

With the boys at war the girls joined the WLA (Women's Land Army) and were sent to the Dulcets where they were, along with two other girls, assigned to Trotwood’s Farm just outside of Dulcet St Mary, and were fortunate to be working for Henry Trotwood, was a kind and gentle man, because many farmers were not.

 

After being evacuated from Dunkirk Steve and Bill ended up at St Lucy’s Hospital in Sharpington which was only a 15-mile bus journey from Dulcet St Mary.

When they were passed fit for discharge Amelia made a very bold decision, of proposing to Steve, given that she was the quiet one of the two and generally relied on Lil for the boldness, it was very bold indeed and Lilian followed suit.

The double wedding took place at the Downshire Light Infantry Chapel in Nettlefield on the 20th of July 1940 and they travelled on the Downshire Star to Abbottsford and spent their wedding night at the Regents Hotel.

One week later the regiment left Downshire again and on the 5th of February 1941 at Beda Fomm in Libya the Bren gun Carrier that Steve and Bill were travelling in took a direct hit from a German 88mm shell, Bill Prendergast was killed outright but Steve was hit in the chest with shrapnel and injured just enough to mean his war was over.

 

It was late May by the time Steve got to St Lucy’s in Sharpington and 

Lilian worked hard to pick up the slack on the days Amelia was at the hospital, but Amelia made up for lost time after Steve was discharged in August because Henry Trotwood made it possible for Amelia to look after him on the farm.

As his health improved, he still wasn’t strong enough for farm work but was able to take some light exercise by walking around the farm, lengthening them week on week.

It was on one such walk in September when he met one of Henry Trotwood’s neighbours, Sir Fabian Cook, the eccentric Squire from St Mary’s Hall, who was wandering the woods that bordered Henry’s long acre field.

 

From that first meeting, despite a thirty-year different in their ages, the two men struck up a friendship, and through that friendship Steve developed his interest in plant propagation, which was Sir Fabians passion, which he indulged in his Victorian Conservatory and hot houses. 

Steve took to it so well that by 1942, with his health and strength returned he was working for him and after the war, he and Amelia worked at the Hall together and lived in the gate Lodge. 

Lilian on the other hand stayed on at Trotwood’s Farm and, although she never stopped loving Bill, in 1946, she married Henry’s son Frank who had returned from the war unscathed, and they had two children.

 

Steve and Amelia were not blessed with children so had to be content with being doting godparents.

Up at St Mary’s Hall, while Fabian did the fun stuff, continuing with his “hobbies” of cross pollinating and breeding new varieties of plants, Steve and Amelia had started to grow plants commercially and by 1950 were supplying most of the councils in Southeast Downshire with plants for Schools, Parks, and the grounds of public buildings, as well as selling to farms and small holdings. 

Five years later in addition to the trees, shrubs, and plants they were selling plants pots, compost, peat, and statuary.

With each passing year a bigger and bigger share of their business was direct to the general public and things were going from strength to strength.

However, despite everything in the garden being lovely, bad news was just around the corner.

It firstly came from Trotwood’s farm when Frank Trotwood,  having fought in France, North Africa, Sicily, Italy, and Germany, without so much as a scratch, had died from complications following appendicitis in 1958 at the age of 41,

The irony was lost on his widow Lilian of course, who at the age of 39 had twice been widowed and was now left to run the farm and raise the two children on her own albeit with the help of her father-in-law Henry.

An uncertain future lay ahead for her, but the one thing she knew with perfect clarity was that she would not marry again, or even give her heart to any man again.

 

Quickly on the heels of Franks death was something much closer to home when Fabian had a bout of pneumonia and nearly died himself.

 

After a short spell in hospital, he returned to St Mary’s Hall but was confined to his bed for several months, and to ensure he did as he was told, they employed a live in Nurse in the shape of Natasha Webb to literally nurse him back to health.

 

His recouperation took a full year and his brush with death and the subsequent confinement put his life in sharp focus and prompted him to put his affairs properly in order so consulted at length, when Nurse Webb would permit it, with his Solicitor Neil Yorke.

His principal concern was the disposition of St Mary’s Hall and the land after his death, he had no family of his own, he’d lost both of his brothers in the Great War and the love of his life Cynthia in the Spanish Flu Epidemic in 1920 so he needed to make arrangements so that all that he possessed would go to the people he wanted to benefit, and not to the exchequer in death duties or capital gains tax, so with Neil’s help he set up the Dulcets Nursery as a bona fide business, with Fabian holding a 51% stake, Steve and Amelia having 40% between them, and the other 9% divided equally between his loyal staff and the Trotwood’s, who he had a soft spot for, and on his death his 51% would be divided equally between the remaining stakeholders.

 

After two years and with the austere fifties coming to an end the business had gone from strength to strength and in June of 1960 Steve announced he was taking Amelia away for a short holiday the following month to celebrate their 20th Wedding Anniversary, they hadn’t been on holiday since they were married, the last holiday either of them had was before the war.

 

After putting his suitcase in the taxi, he walked back into the lodge and once inside the front door he met Amelia coming the other way with two cases.

“Have you got enough luggage?” he asked, “We’re coming back in a week”

“Yes, but back from where?” she asked, “All you said was pack an assortment of clothes”

“Well let’s get going then,” Steve said and took her cases out to the taxi

“But where are we going?” she pleaded

“Abbottsford” he replied curtly

“Where in Abbottsford?” she asked impatiently, and he replied

“Abbottsford is all you need to know for now”

“You’re very annoying,” she said sulkily

 

The taxi drove them to Dulcet St Mary station where they caught the Abbottsford train and when they disembarked the porter led them to the taxi rank.

Taking their turn, he opened the door for Amelia and quietly instructed the cabbie.

“The Regent’s please” he whispered

“No problem guv” he replied

“What was that? Where are we going?” she asked cursing herself for missing what was said.

 

When the taxi pulled up outside the Regent’s Hotel the concierge opened the door and Amelia got out, open-mouthed.

He followed her and turned to settle the fare with the cabbie and then taking her arm they headed into the lobby.

“Are we really staying here?” she whispered in disbelief.

Her eyes were like saucers as she took in her surroundings.

They had stayed at the Regent’s Hotel on their wedding night but back in 1940 they occupied a much more humble room to the suite he had booked for them, so once in their suite they christened the rather lavish accommodations in the style befitting the location, in proper wedding night style, before celebrating their anniversary in equally grand style in the equally lavish restaurant.

 

The next morning, they had a sumptuous unhurried breakfast before he drained his coffee cup and said

“Come on”

“What?” she gasped

“Come on we need to pack” he instructed

“Why?” aren’t we staying here?” she asked crestfallen

“We have a train to catch,” Steve said heading towards the door

“But…” she stuttered and trotted after him, quizzing him all the way

“I thought this was my treat”

“This was just part one” Steve informed her and kissed her

 

An hour later they were sitting in the back of another taxi, this time he didn’t whisper

“Abbottsford Station please”

“Where are we going?” she said petulantly and then stamped her feet, so Steve laughed

“I hate you,” she said

 

Once at the station they made their way towards platform 6.

Halfway along the concourse Amelia stopped in her tracks.

“I refuse to take another step until you tell me where we are going” she said

“Scotland” he answered “on the Downshire Star”

“Scotland?” she responded quietly “On the Downshire Star”

“Yes” he said, and she threw her arms around him and kissed him

“Can we go now?” he asked

“Yes” she said and straightened her hat but after another twenty yards she stopped again

“Oh God the porter is putting out bags in the wrong carriage” she cried, “Quick stop him, that’s first class”

“I know” he said calmly “But it’s not the wrong carriage”

“Do you mean we’re travelling First Class?” she said in amazement, when they met on board the Star in 1939, they were in second.

“I love you” he said, “I’m so glad you asked me to marry you 20 years ago”

“I love you too” Amelia replied and then they kissed again

Uncanny Love Tales – (048) The Downshire Star 1940

 

The Downshire Star was a 4-6-2 standard gauge three-cylinder steam locomotive built at the Northchapel Works in 1933 which had all the romance of the Flying Scotsman and the grace and style of the Mallard.

It was a stunning sight liveried in the black and gold of the DCRN, Downshire County Railway Network, pulling the Prix Deluxe first-class coaches, dining carriage, and sleeper cars, as well as second and third class wagons, and it ran from Abbeyvale to all points North via Abbottsford, Finchbottom and Nettlefield

In September 1939 best friends Lilian Baggott and Amelia Bryan met cousins and best friends, Steve Matthews and

Bill Prendergast in a second-class carriage on the Downshire Star heading out of Glasgow in the late afternoon sunshine, bound for Downshire, and romance blossomed.

The girls were returning home to be with their families while the boys had been ordered to return to the Downshire Light Infantry barracks in Nettlefield.

They said their goodbyes on the platform of Nettlefield Station and the girls reboarded the train.

It was to be the last time they would see the boys for the best part of 10 months.

Steve and Bill re-joined their regiment within an hour of saying goodbye and left Downshire the following day as part of the BEF, British Expeditionary Force, which was in France two days later.

 

Amelia and Lilian didn’t know for sure where the boys were, but all the gossip they were hearing led them to believe they were in France or Belgium, so they waited anxiously for news.

Most of the BEF spent what was known as the “Phoney War” digging field defences on the Belgium/France border until the 10th of May 1940 when the Battle of France began with a massive German offensive which rocked them back on their heels.

 

While the boys waited out the “Phoney Way” in fields of Northern France, Lilian and Amelia were toiling in the fields of Downshire.

Before war broke out Amelia was a librarian and Lilian worked as a clerk at the Tax office, but when the BEF left for France, they joined the WLA (Women's Land Army) and were sent to the Dulcets where they were, along with two other girls, assigned to Trotwood’s Farm just outside of Dulcet St Mary, and were fortunate to be working for Henry Trotwood, who was a kind and gentle man, because many farmers were not.

 

The “Lightning War” of the blitzkrieg bursting through the Ardennes Forest overwhelmed the front line of the BEF and sent the British and French lines into disarray and fought running skirmishes as they were forced to withdraw.

Eventually they were forced back to the beaches of Dunkirk from where Steve and Bill were evacuated on 2nd June after four days of hell, with both of them suffering from shrapnel wounds.

Because of the sheer numbers of casualties, the Military hospitals were swamped so a large number ended up in Civilian Hospitals.

The good news for Steve and Bill was that they were sent to St Lucy's Hospital in Sharpington which was only 15 miles from Trotwood’s Farm, the bad news on the other hand was that the girls didn’t find out until they had been there for over a week.

The moment they found out they got the midday bus from Dulcet St Mary, and the hour they spent on the bus was the longest of their lives. 

 

The reunion was very special and over the next two weeks they made the journey as often as they could, which wasn’t often enough in all of their opinions.

The time came however when they were both well enough to be discharged, and Amelia dreaded the moment they would have to part again.

“I’m going to ask him to marry me” Amelia said on the bus to Sharpington

“You’re going to do what?” Lilian snapped

“I’m going to ask him to marry me” she repeated

Now this was a very bold statement given that she was the quiet one of the two and generally relied on Lil for the boldness.

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, as soon as their leave is up, they’ll re-join their regiment and be sent off God knows where” Amelia stated “And I’m not letting him go until we’ve…. You know”

“What?” Lilian asked with puzzlement

“You know, what you do on your wedding night” Amelia whispered

“Oh that” Lil said now that the penny had dropped “Good point”

 

When they reached the Hospital there were a group of patients sitting on the terrace and as soon as the girls arrived, they separated Steve and Bill from the bunch and they both proposed.

The boys having accepted the rather unorthodox proposals there were still obstacles to be overcome, Steve and Bill had to get permission from their CO to marry, and Amelia needed her parents’ approval as she was only twenty years old, and a special licence needed to be applied for. 

Nothing however was going to prevent Amelia from getting her prize, so the double wedding took place at the Downshire Light Infantry Chapel in Nettlefield on the 20th of July 1940 and they travelled on the Downshire Star to Abbottsford and spent their wedding night at the Regents Hotel.

One week later the regiment left Downshire again.

 

The girls returned to Trotwood’s farm and settled back into the routine by day and profuse letter writing by night as the worked through harvest time and into the winter, Christmas came and went and then in February came the news they had been dreading. 

On the 5th of February at Beda Fomm in Libya the Bren gun Carrier that Steve and Bill were travelling in took a direct hit from a German 88mm shell, Bill Prendergast was killed outright but Steve was hit in the chest with shrapnel and injured just enough to mean his war was over.

 

It was an anxious time for Amelia, with Steve being hospitalized so far away, but she couldn’t show it as she had to be strong for Lilian who was heartbroken, and quite often inconsolable.

But the two of them threw themselves into their work, and at the end of the day Lilian would cry herself to sleep and Amelia would write another letter.

 

It was late May by the time Steve got back to Downshire and had requested he be convalesced at St Lucy’s in Sharpington so Amelia could visit him.

When word first reached her that he was only a bus ride away she was floating on air, and the first person she wanted to share the news with was Lilian, but she didn’t want to hurt her, it would feel as if she were taunting her with her good fortune.

However, Lilian was not a fool, and she could tell by her best friend’s body language that she was hiding good news, so she followed her into the stables.

“You don’t need to spare my feelings” she said startling her friend

“What?”

“Don’t feel guilty for being happy” she explained, and they embraced

“I’m glad for you”

For ten minutes the two stood in embrace and gently sobbed in the stable.

Uncanny Love Tales – (047) The Downshire Star 1939

The Downshire Star was a 4-6-2 standard gauge three-cylinder steam locomotive built at the Northchapel Works in 1933 which had all the romance of the Flying Scotsman and the grace and style of the Mallard.

It was a stunning sight liveried in the black and gold of the DCRN, Downshire County Railway Network, pulling the Prix Deluxe first-class coaches, dining carriage, and sleeper cars, as well as second and third class wagons, and it ran from Abbeyvale to all points North via Abbottsford, Finchbottom and Nettlefield

 

Best friends Lilian Baggott and Amelia Bryan had been holidaying on the Isle of Skye when they heard Neville Chamberlain on the BBC announcing Britain was at war with Germany and immediately made plans to travel home to Downshire to be with their families.

Two days later they were in a second-class carriage aboard the Downshire Star heading out of Glasgow in the late afternoon sunshine, their budget didn’t run to first class and a berth in the sleeper was out of the question for the same reason.

It was to be a much longer journey home than the one they took at the beginning of their holiday, as it was to be, by necessity a stopping service, as so many troops had to return to their various military bases.

It was still the quickest way for them to get back to their destination of Abbottsford and they both enjoyed the train.

As most of the passengers were aboard for the same reason there was a tremendous atmosphere on the train, patriotism, stoicism, defiance, even pride.

 

To anyone who didn’t know them they would have sworn they were identical twins, but they would have been wrong, they weren’t even the same age.

Lilian was the older of the two, by two months and was five foot two with bobbed flame red hair and a pale complexion, green eyes and had cutely freckled cheeks.

Amelia was two inches taller than her friend and had fewer freckles, but more hair, she was also the quiet one of the two and relied on Lil’s boldness to help her in social situations.

Also aboard were cousins and best friends, Steve Matthews and

Bill Prendergast, who were also heading south from Scotland, they had also been on holiday, but in their case, they had been ordered to return to the Downshire Light Infantry barracks in Nettlefield.

Despite the fact the four of them were all from Abbottsford and had all been on the Isle of Skye for the previous two and a half weeks, and at the same hotel, they had never crossed paths.

But when they did meet up, aboard the train, they hit it off immediately and the guys were instantly attracted to the girls, not a love at first sight kind of thing, but close, and that was before they’d even heard the girls speak in their posh Carrington Chase educated voices.

Carrington Chase being Downshire’s version of Roedean, although those in Downshire thought it was the other way around, and they were voice’s that made Queen Elizabeth sound common.

 

The girls were stunningly beautiful and even wearing their travelling outfits they were still drop-dead gorgeous girls, and as the journey progressed, they were not short of admirers, and under normal circumstances they would have flirted along with them, the good-looking ones at least, but they were both very taken with the returning soldiers, and they made that perfectly clear to any interlopers.    

They were seated either side of a compartment, with the girls on one side and the lads on the other, with two elderly couples occupying the remaining seats.

Primarily the four just chatted, mainly about the declaration of war, but also the Isle of Skye, and amazed each other with the number of places they all frequented and the amount of acquaintances they had made among their fellow travellers that they had in common.

The atmosphere in the compartment was unlike anything they had known before, but as the summer afternoon sunshine gave way to dusk and then inevitably to darkness, so despite the good company and the pleasant conversation, with the rhythmic clickety clack of the wheels on the track they obviously fell asleep.

When the girls awoke the next morning, it was to the appetizing aroma of cooked bacon.

Steve and Bill had woken early and left the girls sleeping while they disembarked when the train stopped at Doncaster and followed their noses to the cooking bacon.

The girls thought it was a great start to the day, in Lily’s opinion any day that began with a bacon sandwich was a great day.

After breakfast the four of them settled down into the same pattern as the night before.

 

As the Downshire Star crossed the county border into Downshire Lilian glanced sideways where Amelia and Steve were sat facing each other across divide, each resting their elbows on their knees.  

But she had tired of the conversation even if Amelia hadn’t, so when she slipped quietly away from the table and took Bill with her and when she looked back the other two hadn’t even noticed that they had gone.

The moment they left the compartment Lilian pushed him into the nearest corner and kissed him and his response was instantaneous.

But the kiss was short and sweet as there appeared to be a constant flow of people between the carriages and the buffet.

Bill tried to resume but Lilian evaded his lips,

“No not here” she said and walked away “Come on”

And then she ran giggling down the corridor, and he ran after her until she stopped abruptly at the end of the car, where she stood fingering her hair and chewing her lip while she waited for him and then he kissed her.

 

Amelia suddenly became aware that Lilian and Bill had gone

“They’re not here” she said, “Where did they go?”

“When did they go?” he asked, and they both laughed

They were really enjoying each other’s company and the conversation but the more they talked the more she wanted to kiss him, but she couldn’t.

If Lilian was in her situation and wanted to kiss him, he would already have been kissed, but she wasn’t bold like her friend, she was the shy one so she couldn’t take the kiss she wanted.

Unfortunately, Steve was no better, he normally relied on alcohol for his bravery, but he was sober, so they both carried on and made the best of the situation, and just kept enjoying each other.

Which they did for the next five minutes or so until the train came to a jerky disorderly halt, and they found themselves nose to nose.

 

“Nice” Lilian said and kissed him again

“Very nice” Bill said

“I agree, but we’d better get back” she said

“Ok” he agreed reluctantly

“Do you think they’re wondering where we are?” he asked

“Hardly, they probably haven’t even noticed we’ve gone” she said, “And if they have Amelia will just say “oh there you are” and carry on with the conversation”

They were laughing when they entered the compartment but stopped abruptly when they discovered Amelia and Steve were still sat facing each other across divide, each resting their elbows on their knees, but were now leant forward engaged in a very tender kiss.

Lilian and Bill looked at each other, smiled, nodded, and retraced their steps and resumed their own kiss. 

Sunday 8 May 2022

GOD AND THE SOLDIERS

 

We look to God and the soldiers

Mostly during times of war

But when peace again descends

They are both forgotten like before

WHY IS IT THAT THE NATIONS FLAG?

 

Why is it that the nations flag?

Appears to mean much more

To the soldiers who fight for it

Than the people they’re fighting for

WHY IS IT THAT THE FLAG?

 

Why is it that the flag?

Means more to those who fight for it

Than it does to the people

Who sent them to fight for it

IT’S THE SIMPLE SOLDIER

 

It’s the simple soldier

Who serves the flag

It’s the simple soldier

Who salutes the flag

It’s the simple soldier

Who fights beneath that flag

It’s the simple soldier

Who dies beneath that flag

And it’s the simple soldier

Carried shoulder high

In a coffin draped by the flag

IT WAS THE LOWLY SOLDIER

 

It was the lowly soldier

Not the journalist

Who won their right

To freedom of the press

 

It was the lowly soldier,

Not the lofty poet,

Who won for them

Freedom of speech

 

It was the lowly soldier

Not the politicians

Who secure for all of us

The peace

Thursday 5 May 2022

DAWN PATROL

 

You would find them

Up where the air was thin

And the cold burnt

The wood and canvas kites

Prowled the skies

Searching the clouds below

For the enemy silhouettes

And when sighted below

To attack from the sun

And deliver their chattering death

Wednesday 4 May 2022

REMEMBER THEM WITH COMPASSION

 

Remember them with compassion

And not with jaundiced eye

Remember them with gratitude

For they went to war to die

Remember them with pride

Their honour we must not deny

Remember it’s because of them

We stand beneath a free blue sky

ON REMEMBRANCE DAY

 

On Remembrance Day,

We honour the sacrificial dead

Those dedicated souls who.

Offered their lives in war

And were accepted

They were the loved ones,

Of their generation

They are the pride of ours

Tuesday 3 May 2022

IN THE GATHERING OF HOPEFUL HEARTS

 

In the gathering of hopeful hearts

The flame of peace does thrive

A flame whose embers glowed

When my granddad was still alive

The lads and pals in distant lands

To a man did purposely strive

They kept that tiny ember tended

To ensure that it would survive

And many a lad remained forever

To keep the flame of peace alive

THE AIRSPEED HORSA

  The Airspeed AS.51 Horsa Was a British World War II Troop-carrying glider Used for air assault by British And allied armed forces ...