Monday 29 August 2011

Beneath Our Feet

One of Wimborne’s great attractions and strengths is the unique fact that we can boast an unusual number of significant open spaces right in the heart of our town - the Minster Green, the historic Corn Market, and of course the area we all know and refer to simply as The Square. It is these open spaces that shoppers and tourists find so attractive and often so different from other shopping centres.

 Here in Wimborne the visitor is offered a charm and openness from which to view the sky above, the abundant flowers and well tended green spaces between, and the pleasant period architecture of which we have in spades. It works so well.

The Corn Market exists for obvious reasons - space was needed to barter and sell goods until 1876 when the towns markets and fairs were abolished and the weekly corn market became relegated to the Corn Exchange - known by locals for many years as the Oddfellows Hall. And of course the Minster Green, or to give it its original name, the churchyard, once served a very different purpose than the leisure area that many enjoy today.

It is not that long ago that the area was cleared to the grassy space that we see now. But it wasn’t for the first time. The churchyard had been levelled before in the late 1800s. Thomas Hardy and his wife Emma were living in Lanherne, number 16, Avenue Road, at the time, and it was in response to the levelling work and the redistribution of the tombstones, that he wrote one of his few humorous poems, The Levelled Churchyard.

Where we are huddled none can trace,
And if our names remain,
They have some path or porch or place
Where we have never lain!

Here’s not a modest maiden elf
But dreads the final trumpet,
Lest half of her should rise herself,
And half some sturdy strumpet!

These two verses of the poem show a humorous side of Hardy not normally found in his work. It suggests to me that he was suited to Wimborne life.

But how many visitors, and who knows maybe a few locals, are aware that the tarmac covered square, now the home of taxis, parked cars and buses was not created purely by chance, nor was it drawn up by town planners, but that it was once a sacred and wooded place? Indeed a place that perhaps should be known as St Peters Square, as here once stood the ancient, St Peters, Wimborne's second church.

Records of the building are scarce, but it is known that the church was fenced or walled around in 1414 and once stood in an acre of ground. That this area was wooded is contained in a testimony of Churchwardens being paid for timber from the elms in the churchyard. And that gets the imagination racing. The elm is a giant and these trees may well have towered high above the surrounding buildings right in the heart of our town.

The Reformation took its toll on church buildings the length and breadth of the country and Wimborne’s St Peters was no exception. By the 1580’s our second church was in a sad state of repair. However, the grounds were put to grisly use in 1638 when the plague finally reached Wimborne.

Despair would have been rife, no family would have been spared the tragedy and by the time the epidemic passed some 400 people had died and been interred in common graves. These lie beneath the square we see today, once the site of the derelict St Peters Churchyard.

After the plague, dilapidation of the church continued until the building was vested by Thomas Hanham in the name of the Corporation for the building of a Town Hall. This was constructed, apparently abutting the church, with a shop on the ground floor and a tenement on the western flank. But maybe the good folk of Wimborne had little need or perhaps respect for the hall, as these new buildings and the church eventually fell down leaving the area in a state of decay for many years. In fact we had to wait until the 1800’s before the centre was finally cleared and turned into the open area that we call The Square today.

It’s true to say that our town centre spaces are open and pleasant, but they are not empty, they are crammed full of history, stretching back through the mists of time.

 





Monday 30 May 2011

Above the Blue Ceiling


The Minster inspires me. Its massive. It dominates Wimborne. Yet its a warm and friendly place. It's not the architecture that makes it beautiful, it doesn't point to heaven like Salisbury Cathedral. Wimborne Minsters glory is in the texture of the fabric and the ancient craft of the masons.
The East Tower features in my next novel, and in particular the blue ceiling. I got pretty close to it the other day. That was great. But there's a whole lot more up there that few have seen. I've attached a few pics.

Friday 22 April 2011

A little story told me by my old friend John

SPECIAL GUESTS IN THE BEEHIVE YARD 
In the balmy summer of 1946, just one year after VE day, Wimborne played
host to one of the greatest double acts ever to appear on the British stage and
screen.
The duo, namely Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise, had arrived to cut
their teeth on Wimborne’s audiences. But they had not come to play the local
theatre, their place of entertainment was somewhat more bizarre.
Eric and Ernie, were amongst the cast of circus and vaudeville acts
travelling with LORD JOHN SANGERS “NEW PRODUCTION” CIRCUS AND
VARIETY show.
John Maton, a well respected local farmer, and one of the mainstays of
Wimborne’s Tivoli Theatre, remembers the occasion well. Although still only
19 years old, John was already a great enthusiast for live theatre. Evenings and
weekends would frequently find him bussing down to Bournemouth to one of
the resort’s theatres to take in one of the pre or post London shows. But this
week his entertainment, which he had found advertised on posters dotted
around his home in Colehill, was for once just a cycle ride down Rowlands hill.
The place of performance was in a yard behind a Public House, known as
The Beehive. This long low thatched Inn – now sadly gone - was situated at
the junction of East and West Boroughs by the ancient Walford Bridge on the
road out of town to Cranborne.
Enterprising landlords throughout the years had rented the space in the
past to other travelling shows, and so to the people of Wimborne the arrival of
the big tent was an exciting event, but back then, not unheard of.
Lord John Sanger’s immense white big-top had been hauled up,
presumably, as happens in the circus business, by the entire troupe lending a
hand, where it altered the skyline of Walford and towered over the roof of the
long low Inn. Around it, filling the rest of the yard, were lorries, caravans in
which the cast and crew lived, penned off runs for the circus beasts, and a pet’s
corner for Wimborne’s children.
John recalls that on arrival for the start of the evening show, he was able
to park his bike safely in the environs of the Beehive yard. This meant that he
could dispense with the need to part with 3d to secure his machines safety at
Carters bike-shed in Westborough. His ticket, bought for 6d, gave him a good
view from one of the tiered wooden benches circumnavigating the big top.
Moths danced in the spot lights and the show began with a cast line-up of
‘We Introduce Ourselves - Sangers Calling You’, then, went straight on to one
of the circus acts with ‘Peter Pan - The Children’s Pet’ before Ernie and Eric
took their places in the sawdust.
Of course – once they got on the telly - we all knew their names in a
different order, but at this stage in their career Ernie’s name came first. John
recalls the two comics played twice in the first half, at number four on the bill
with a sketch entitled ‘Tapping In Tempo; The Pearl Moss Girls; Ernie Wise
And Eric Morecambe Select Their Own Jobs’, then later with ‘Ernie Wise, Eric
Morecambe And Eddie Ross, Try Their Hand At Multiplication’.
After the interval however, Ernie Wise, always an accomplished
comedian and never just ‘the straight man’, came on twice; unbelievably Eric
didn’t make it onto the bill. Presumably, John Maton muses, Eric would have
been left in the caravan with his mum who reputedly used to accompany the
pair everywhere as a chaperon when they were on tour. John can’t confirm theth act – golly they
thought but it conjures a picture of the well loved entertainer - and it makes a
nice story.
However, without Eric at his side, Mr Wise came back on with a sketch,
titled ‘Ernie Wise Deceives’, then, finished the show as the 18
got their monies worth - bizarrely billed as ‘Ernie Wise The Star of the Forces -
ENGLANDS MICKY ROONY’.
John – always ready with a smile - considers his Wimborne evening
couldn’t really have been improved. 6d for the show, a drink at the bar during
the interval, a bike-ride through the warm summer night home, and change
rattling in his pocket from a shilling piece.
A few days later the tent was dropped and folded, animals loaded,
caravans hitched and the circus left town. Eric and Ernie went too – it’s nice to
know that our Wimborne audience had played its part in their apprenticeship.

Wednesday 13 April 2011

Clock

A fascinating find. But unfortunately I can't publish.

Friday 8 April 2011

I guess I'm still in search of Mr Gulliver.

It's been a few years now since I wrote the Gulliver book, and the research was great fun. But even now I meet people who have yet more unrecorded information which I just have to follow up on. The latest comes from a talk I gave recently, where I learned about a clock that promises to be an amazing find. From the description, the date and the makers address its provenance fits like a glove. I'm viewing the piece tomorrow, my camera batteries are charging, and I've got to say I'm excited.

Tuesday 29 March 2011

In search of ISAAC GULLIVER legendary Dorset smuggler

 
WIMBORNE MINSTER has a fantastic independent bookshop that trades under the name of GULLIVERS.

It was this treasure of a shop and the mystery of its name that led me to research this book. I soon found that Smugglers wrote little down - well I guess they wouldn't would they - and I had eighteen months of travel and research throughout libraries, museums, private archives, churchyards and near forotten memories, ahead of me. It was a journey into the past, which blew some legends, put flesh on the bones of others and uncovered the remarkable life of one of Wimborne's most mysterious residents. 

I found that whereas there may be some truth in the legend of Robin Hood, that here in Dorset was a man who brought bread to the mouths of the starving peasants. His trade was not legal but it kept communities alive. And the letters uncovered by The Revenue show a grudging admiration for a man they describe as 'a most notorious smuggler' in one breath and 'A man of great speculative genius.' in another.

From the latter half of the eighteenth century, until the year of his death in 1822, Isaac Gulliver rose to become the most notorious and successful smuggler on the south coast of England. A figure of legend and mystery and a hero of romance, Gulliver and his army of moonrakers harried the Kings preventative officers along the coast of Hampshire and Dorset, from Christchurch in the east to Lyme Regis in the west.

The smuggling of goods from across the channel was at its peak in this period, and Dorsets coastline, with its wooded creeks around the Bournemouth area and wide sweeps of deserted shingle and sand further west, made it ideal for clandestine moonlit landings. Behind the beachheads, running for many miles inland, the broad wild sweep of Dorset heath-land - some of which is still visible today - was the smugglers route to the towns, hamlets, farms and coach houses within.

Stories tell of entire communities supplementing their meagre farm wages with earnings from the illegal contraband trade. Cheating the taxman was seen as fair game, after all most of the monies collected
went purely to finance a succession of foreign wars, and the Dorset agricultural worker - kept poor by wealthy landowners - had their own war to fight. For the peasant it was a constant struggle against disease and malnutrition.

It was during Gullivers time that the Dorset labourer became enclosed in poverty when, in 1770, the rural landscape of the English countryside began to change forever. From this date, and into the next decade, the landowners - greedy for even greater wealth - proceeded to annex vast acreages of land. After these land enclosures the peasants no longer had the commons on which to graze their sheep or single cow for milking, even their plots to grow vegetables had been taken from them. As a result the peasants basic diet became one of potatoes and bread, leaving them with a mean and undernourished existence.

Smugglers such as Gulliver were revered in such society, their trade in cut price black market goods, payment for handling, and employment in their gangs, made the difference to many lives, and in so doing bought them fame and, above all, great loyalty. ISBN 9780956071507

Monday 28 March 2011

TOO FEW TOO FAR

A few years ago it was my good fortune to meet George Thomsen - he's a former Royal Marine and a larger than life Northumbrian. We became friends and I learned with growing fascination that George had been more than a little involved in the 1982 South Atlantic War. He began to tell me of his experiences both before and during the bitter conflict and soon my interest became riveted by his fascinating and untold story.

What I was hearing about was not an account of the struggle which took place on the Falkland Islands, but of a remote and desperate battle, played out against the backdrop of the rusty, derelict town of Grytvicken on the frozen shores of South Georgia.

It is a story that begins with George's arrival on the Falkland Islands nearly twelve months before the start of hostilities, and ends eight hundred miles south-west in an extraordinary contest between 22 lightly armed British Royal Marines against the might of an air and water-borne Argentine invasion force.

The battle that ensued was fought with such grit and ingenuity that it resulted in the invaders getting far more than a bloody nose, and resulted in an action unique in British military history.
TOO FEW TOO FAR is George Thomsen's true story.  ISBN 9781848687554

'A wonderfully exciting book, elegantly written by Angel, whose taught, descriptive prose does justice to a tale of bravery' Bournemouth Echo

'Revealed: the untold story of 22 brave Marines in the run up to the Falklands War' The Daily Mail

'No Surrender: How 22 Royal Marines saw off Argentine invaders' The Daily Telegraph

Printed twice in hardback: out now in paperback: one of Amazon's Best Selling History Books, and available in good bookshops.