Sunday, December 30, 2012

Haydn's wishing rock


This is a picture of both sides of my favourite pebble. It looks similar in size to your 'Wishing Rock'. If you had found this, would it have been called a 'Wishing Rock'?. Presumably this was a treasured description within your family John or do you have knowledge of others referring to such a stone in the same way?.

I can't remember when I actually found mine but it was a favourite and it came from the Lidden beach. We moved to Weston super Mare in 1975 and when a concrete path was set to run up to my shed, this stone along with others was laid in a shallow bed of concrete alongside the path.  

In 2005 we had some fresh landscaping done which included covering old paths with slabs. 
Some of the pebbles were removed but strangely enough, my favourite pebble was the only one I kept.

Tony Casey: 1965 The Torrey Canyon disaster


I think it was about midday on Saturday March 18th 1965 when the news that the vessel had gone aground on the Seven Stones Reef was first broadcast on the television - and it wasn't long before the implications were realised as a large oil slick began to spread across the sea. A week later the slick 250 square miles in area and was sweeping in towards the Cornish coast. 

When I visited Penzance harbour, the dockside was piled high with drums of detergent waiting to be loaded on to local fishing boats adapted to disperse the oil. It must have been only a day or so after this that I witnessed the most memorable event of the whole affair - I remember walking to the bottom of St Dominic Street where there is a view of part of Mount's Bay. 

There, stretched across the bay, was a line of fishing boats desperately trying to hold back an advancing front of oil closing in on the shore. 

On the afternoon of Tuesday the 28th we heard a number of jet aircraft passing overhead and we knew that they must be on their way to bomb the crippled ship and to reduce the risk of further oil spillage. It wasn't long before there was a pall of dark smoke stretching from the wreck to Penzance and beyond in the westerly winds.
Attached photograph of fishing boats being loaded with detergent to disperse the oil from the Torrey Canyon


Saturday, December 29, 2012

Haydn Trezise: Searching for a photo of Miss Harvey


I've only managed to find a photograph of the sister to Miss Harvey of Trewarveneth Street Infants School. She is the lovely lady at the centre of the panel on the left side. Can you see the resemblance?. Unfortunately the rolled photograph was put beneath a cushion and subsequently sat upon, hence all the crease marks when a rolled item is flattened. 

My wife Anne is on the extreme right, first standing row behind the seated girls and teachers. The gorgeous one with long dark hair.

Tony Casey: March 7th, 1962: The Great Ash Wednesday storm



This is an extract from our family history which I wrote (in the 1980s) describing the events of March 7th 1962 - The Great Ash Wednesday Storm:
During my seven years at the Humphry Davy Grammar School two major disasters occurred which affected West Cornwall - the Great Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962 and the wreck of the Torrey Canyon in 1965. Trouble was expected on March 7th 1962 when high winds were predicted to coincide with a phenomenally high tide. Being an inquisitive 13 year old, I persuaded my father to take me down to the harbour and the promenade to see what was happening. We approached the harbour from the direction of the railway station, along the Wharf Road, but were forced to turn back when we saw that the tide had risen so high that it was flooding over on to the road ...

 Determined not to be beaten, we retraced our steps along the quay. From what I can remember we must have gone up Jennings Street and made our way to Morrab Road. Here, once again, our way was barred - this time by the police and fire brigade.

Over twenty years later, I can still picture the scene - fire engines standing by the roadside, the waves breaking over the prom and the spray beating against our faces as far back as we were standing. I also remember the walk home equally well - the howling wind, swaying television aerials (the large, old-fashioned type shaped like a letter H) and the occasional crash as a slate slid from a roof and shattered on the ground. 

The resulting devastation along the seafront is best described by quoting a school essay that I wrote shortly after the event and following a visit to the promenade the next afternoon:-

"I was astounded at the devastation - massive holes torn in the sea wall, threatening cracks along the road, paving stones torn up and thrown into gardens, the Bolitho Gardens, opposite the bus depot, practically razed to the ground. The sea road at Newlyn had completely disappeared, there was a gigantic breach in the wall of the bathing pool and, worst of all, was the pathetic state of the houses along the seafront. hardly anything along the seafront had escaped the sea's onslaught".


Friday, December 28, 2012

On being caned.........


A picture of the staff at PGS, 1952
On Being Caned



Actually, this is me, 1953
Even though one tries to remember the good things about one’s school days, there’s one abiding memory I have, literally a hurtful one that I want to describe: the painful, humiliating, angry memory of being caned.

The system of punishment in place in my grammar school in the 1950s was quite simple: if you were a dead good lad and did everything you should do, you collected Merit Marks. So, for example, if your homework was spot on and you received, say, 10 out of 10, you were awarded a Merit Mark. It was recorded in your Journal and signed and dated by the teacher.

If you were naughty and did something that irritated the teacher, you were given a Conduct Mark.

If, and when, you collected 10 Conduct Marks, you had to go to the Headmaster after school on a Tuesday, and explain yourself. He would then decide whether to cane you or not.

If you were really a pain in the class, boing noisy and upsetting the teacher, he had the power to give you THREE Conduct Marks. That meant you immediately went to the Headmaster’s Study and, without any discussion, you were caned.

I wasn’t a difficult pupil. Well, I don't think I was. I was just a working class kid with a kid’s sense of right and wrong, and a kid’s sense of humor – one that, I’m sure, though, wasn’t always appreciated by teachers.

I ‘d heard from others that being caned, hurt. Hurt really bad. Some kids had blue welts on their hands after being whacked. Sure as hell, I did not want to be caned by the Headmaster. 

But, as luck would have it, in my third year at grammar school, about half-way through December, I had collected nine Conduct Marks. So I knew I had to be extra careful and not get my 10th.

Well, the day came when I wasn’t careful enough, when I couldn’t keep my trap shut, when my wishing rock didn’t get me out of trouble.  One Tuesday, I irritated the placid Mr. Hogg, my form teacher.
“Paull,” he said sternly, “Bring me your journal. That’s enough. There’s one conduct mark for you.”

My heart sank. I knew what that meant. I pleaded with him. “Sir, it weren’t me, Sir, ‘Onest.”
But it was, indeed, me. I told a lie. I told a lie because I was scared. When Mr. Hogg opened my Journal, he saw that I had nine Conduct Marks. His bottom lip dropped. He frowned. He knew that he was sending me to be caned. I squeezed my hands, and said again I was sorry.

But, and I now, of course, understand why, Mr. Hogg, biting his lip, went ahead and signed in my 10th Conduct Mark, adding the comment, “Paull talks too much when he should be reading.”
He looked at me and said, "Could have said you lied to me, you know."

I went back to my seat, already fearful of what lay ahead.

As always, I went home for midday dinner. I hardly touched my plate full of fried chips. told my mum I would be late home after school. “Goin’ to go to the after-school chess club, so I won’t be home right on the button, Mum. That ok?” It wasn't a lie because I knew I would need to go to the chess club after being whacked. That's where everyone went for a quiet sob.
She smiled. “Of course. Glad you’re learning about chess. Your dad can play, you know. Learn and you can play with him.”

The afternoon flew by. It went by at a million miles an hour.  Just after 4 o’clock, I lined up with several other boys outside the Headmaster’s secretary’s office.


When it was my turn, I went inside the Headmaster’s study. Without looking at me, he took my Journal, quickly read the comments made by the teachers, signed it, handed it to me, and said firmly, “Wait outside with the rest.”

There was no reprieve for me. I joined the queue of lads. Everyone stared at the floor, not saying a word. I could feel the cloud of embarassment, shame and fear that hung over the group.

Eventually, the Headmaster came out, carrying a long, thin wooden yellow cane.
He beckoned to the first boy. “Come here. HERE!" The boy moved towards the Headmaster
"Hold out your hand. Higher, boy, higher!”
He raised the cane as high as he could, looked the boy in the eye, and smacked the cane against the boy’s fleshy hand. He let out a sharp sound.
The Headmaster glared at the boy.
“Don’t cry, boy. Don't cry."
"Now, the other hand." Quick!"
The Headmaster raised the cane and whacked the boy's left hand. Tears came gushing down his cheeks.
"And, what do you say?”
“Thank you, Sir,” wailed the boy, squeezing his hands between his knees.
“Good. Now be off with you….and don’t let me see you here again.” said the Headmaster.
“Next.”

Too soon, it was my turn. The Headmaster glared at me.
Come here, Paull. Step forward.” “Hold out your hand…..you’re RIGHT hand!”
I held out my right hand and stretched and parted my fingers.
“You, Paull, should know better. Hear you want to be a teacher. Lord help us! Two for you.”
The cane bit into my hand, shooting a flashing hot pain up to my elbow. I immediately squeezed my hand shut, winced, and fought back the tears.
Now the other one. Hold it out. HIGHER!” said the Headmaster
The left hand hurt more than the right. I cried. I couldn’t control the flood of tears that ran down onto my lips.

Rubbing my hands together to ease the burning sensation, I looked at the floor thanked the Headmaster for hurting me so much. “Don’t let me see you here again, Paull,” he grunted.

Rubbing my hands and squeezing my fingers,  I went and joined the chess club.  I sat next to a couple of my friends who were scrutinizing the chessboard. Dudley looked up at me. “You cryin'? You ok?"
" Did it hurt?”
Yes,” I said, “it bloody did." Look.’” I showed him the dull blue welts on the palms of my hands.
"Bloody 'ell," said Dudley. "Look at that!"

There was no way that I could concentrate on how to understand and play the very complicated game of chess.

Dad was home from work. I put my hands in my pockets. He asked me if I'd had a good day at school.
"Yes, Dad, dead good day. Gotta go upstairs and do my homework. Down soon for tea."
I went up stairs, opened my satchell, and took out my English homework.
My hands were hurting so much I couldn't keep hold of the pen.

I wonder to this day why the Headmaster didn’t give me chance to tell him how sorry I was for being a naughty boy.

JP


Hey
Never had you down as one to get the cane JP!!!
I got the slipper, well PE plimsoll actually, for getting caught helping to chuck a kid in my class out of a mobile classroom window and into a snow drift outside. The teacher wacked me so hard on the backside my feet actually left the ground. Happy days!

Barrie

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Going to the pictures......The Gaiety, a long time ago.


From Tony Casey


Your mention of the Gaiety reminded me of my uncle, Richard Rowe from Newlyn. Several years ago, when I was compiling my family history, I collected some of his early memories from the 1930s. This is what I wrote:
"... it was very rare for most Newlyn people to come into Penzance except for special occasions such as Christmas Eve when the wagonettes into the town would be crowded. Newlyn youngsters used to be responsible for a lot of good natured practical jokes such as running off with a cart belonging to a local character called "Henry Sweetlips" and hiding it in nearby streets. Sometimes, after spending an evening in Penzance, he and his friends would call at Freddy Badcock's fish and chip shop in South Place Folly. Further along at Wherrytown there was Sarah's fish and chip shop - and if the boys had anything left by the time they got there, they would slip in merely for some more salt and vinegar. Her ability to chase the Newlyn boys was very limited because of her size - allegedly she had to have doors widened to enable her to get through. Another fish and chip shop was harold Jewell's at the bottom of the hill in Newlyn. This was very popular after spending Saturday afternoon at the Gaiety Cinema (now The Meadery) where the admission charge was a penny halfpenny. he also remembered a local "daredevil" rider called Trenear who was known by the nicknmae "Cocknose". he used to ride a bicycle along the top of the harbour wall and also a motorcycle and sidecar along the harbour with the sidecar hanging over the edge."
Tony 

WHEN YOU FIND YOUR WISHING ROCK


BACKGROUND:

The Paull family, Arthur Charles and Hazel Monica, their three sons, Jimmie, John and Charles, lived with Grandma Paull, and Joseph the black and white tabby cat in 16, Treveneth Crescent, in a newly built-small low-income housing area in the county of Cornwall, in south-western England. The house overlooked the busy fishing village of Newlyn, Lariggan Beach, which was just beyond Newlyn’s picturesque harbor, and, in the far distance, St. Michael’s Mount, rising out of the beautiful Mount’s Bay.

The big white stork brought me to the back garden in July, 1942, the middle of the Second World War, when the cities of London, Coventry and the naval base in nearby Plymouth were experiencing nightly bombing raids by the Nazi Luftwaffe. It was a time of fear, blackouts, oil lamps, flickering candles, and food rationing. It was the time before television, computers, smart phones, Ipods, and video games.
To supplement the family’s food needs,
Dad, a bus driver for the Western National Bus Company, did what all our neighbors did – grew potatoes, sprouts, carrots and sweet peas, in his small back garden.

My dad was a born-and-bred Newlyn lad.
When he wasn’t driving the big green double-decker buses from village to village, he’d set snare traps for rabbits in the nearby Bejoywan Woods and the hedgerows around the manor house lived in by the famous painter, Stanhope Forbes. Weather permitting, he’d go to Lariggan Beach and dig in the sand for the brown and red sand lugs, then set and bait a long spiller - a fishing line holding perhaps 20 or more hooks, tied to tins that were buried in the sand - hoping to catch flounder or bass.

Dad also kept a few chickens in a nearby farmer’s field, selling the eggs to neighbors in our street.

To celebrate the birth of his sons, first for Jimmie in 1938, then, me, in 1942, and finally, Charles, in 1947, dad planted three gooseberry bushes near the back garden fence behind the few rows of vegetables.

When we were in the garden, picking sweet peas, eating goosegogs [1] when they were in season or, more likely, looking for worms and other small creatures, dad would always say, with a smile and a twinkle in his eye, to my brothers, Jimmie and Charles, and me,

That’s where the big white stork left the three of you, just there, right under those three gooseberry bushes!”

I had no idea what a stork looked like, but, as it had carried me, I sensed it was much bigger than the herring gulls that perched on our roof.

I remember the day Charles was due to be born, I wanted so badly to see the stork and waited patiently in the garden, next to the two gooseberry bushes, with next-door neighbor, Johnny Hoskins, hoping to see the big white stork swoop down to the garden with mum’s new baby.  When it was time for bed, 10 year-old Jimmie wasn’t surprised when I told him the stork didn’t arrive with our new baby.

“See,” he said, as we got into bed, “ told you. Ain’t true.”
“Just a story.”

The next morning, over breakfast, a very tired looking dad told us that the big white stork had indeed brought baby Charles during the night and left him first, under the new gooseberry bush he’d planted, then Aunty Stella, the neighborhood midwife, brought him upstairs to our mum’s bed.

So it was true! I was so thrilled that, yes, we were left under the gooseberry bushes by the big white stork. Dad said so, didn’t he?
In the daytime, I played with neighborhood kids outside in the street, down the Bowjey, or, when the weather was nice, we’d kick a ball around in one of the nearby farm fields.

After clearing away the teatime dishes, mum, a Lancashire girl, usually sat in the kitchen with my Grandma, close to baby Charles lying comfortably in an old wooden drawer. Sometimes she listened to the latest news about the war on the crackly yellow Ferguson wireless as she worked on her weaving, making fishing nets to sell to the fishermen.

My brother Jimmie and I sat on the small carpet and he read aloud The Beano and Dandy comics before we played with my long-gone Granddad’s clay marbles. Sometimes, we played a game of cards, tiddlywinks, ludo, or snakes and ladders. 

If dad wasn’t on the late night shift, he always sat on the soft green chair under to the front room gas lamp, with Joseph stretched out on his knees, reading the boxing and rugby reports in The Cornishman newspaper sports pages.

He’d set aside Sunday afternoons, when he wasn’t driving his bus, to take the family on walks to the beach or to the nearby lanes around the painter Stanhope Forbes’ manor house.

It was dad’s chance to show off what he knew about the hawks, owls, ducks, rabbits, badgers and foxes that lived in the old granite hedgerows around the local farms, and the jelly-fish, sharks, seals and dolphins that swam in the warm currents of Mounts Bay.
.
Lariggan Beach was the best place to go, though. I loved going there most of all because you never knew what you might find lying on the pebbly sand - especially after a stormy night!
After the Sunday midday meat and potato pasty dinner, washed down with a cup of hot, steaming tea, if the sun was shining, mum would pick up her old, scratched black leather bag. She’d fill a big Farley’s Rusks tin with something to eat, perhaps a handful of small crab apples or small cheese sandwiches with the thick crusts cut off, and drop in two empty ‘OXO’ tins and two of dad’s used ‘OLD HOLBORN’ tobacco tins. We knew it was time to put on our thick socks and rubber wellies.
Then, with Mum pushing Charles’ pram, we’d make our way down the winding lanes, across the harbor, to the pebbly beach.

If the tide was out, we looked to see what had been washed up on the beach, then we’d hunt small green and red crabs or brown bull cods in the rock pools. If we were lucky, we’d find a stranded jellyfish that we could return to the sea. Then we’d collect beautiful black and grey and white pebbles that had been smoothed by the constant rolling motion of the sea.
Pebble collecting was, for me, the most fun. I’d search for heart-shaped pebbles, or, even better, black pebbles with a vein of white quartz running through the middle.

These pebbles with the line of quartz were special. Mum and dad called them wishing rocks.

Finding a wishing rock that rested comfortably in the palm of your hand made you feel good. You’d pick it up, slowly wrap your fingers around it and squeeze really tight. When your fingers warmed the pebble, you closed your eyes and thought about someone you wanted to send a special wish to. Then, slowly, you uncurled your fingers, knowing that somebody, somewhere, suddenly felt a warm shiver down the spine, just as that lucky person got your wish! I always sent my very best wishes to my mum and my dad.

When the wish had been sent, you put your wishing rock into what Mum called your treasure tin, a small red OXO meat-cube tin. Mum and dad put theirs into the bigger, yellow OLD HOLBORN tobacco tins she’d carried in her bag.

When we filled our tins with our best finds of the day, ate our snack, we made our way home. If we were really lucky, we’d first visit the corner shop at the bottom of Old Paul Hill, and Dad would buy everyone a thruppeny crispy cone filled with Daniel’s delicious homemade ice cream.

When we got back home to 16, Treveneth Crescent, we took off our wellies, sat on the carpet in the front room, and emptied our treasure tins on to a sheet of  The Cornishman’ newspaper. Mum boiled the kettle on the gas stove, made a pot of tea, and cut up a couple of scones and a fresh saffron cake.
As we drank tea and munched slices of currant-filled saffron cake, sweetened with thick, yellow margarine, dad, with Joseph the cat curled up on his knees, chose what he thought was the best wishing rock, held it in his hand, looked at us all, and would always ask the same question:

Who found this one?” “Was it you, Jimmie? You, Hazel?”
“ You, Johnny? Is it yours?” “OK, then you, Johnny, you can make a wish for us all!”
“Then, you make a wish, Jimmie, alright?”
“OH, then me and mum, ok?”
“First, though, we’ll all make a wish for baby Charles.”

After Jimmie and I closed our eyes and made our wishes, Dad put five of our best, most beautiful wishing rocks in the old chipped green-glass jar on the small wooden table near the window in the front room. Most of the rest were put into mum’s bag to return to the beach another day, so, as Mum would say, someone else could find and enjoy them. Then, lighting his hand-rolled cigarette, Dad would take his first deep puff, slowly blow out a circle of white and blue smoke, and then say:

“Ready, now? For a story?”

Collecting wishing rocks was great but this was always the best moment of the day.
We were always ready for one of his stories because he told the best tales about badgers, foxes, stoats, weasels, rabbits, sharks and whales. When you listened to his soft voice, it was as if you could see everything as he had seen it.
 “Yes, Dad. We’re ready.”
“’Onest, we are! Tell us the one about the day you and mum collected wishing rocks. You know, when you found the dead seal! You know, the crabs and stuff that were chompin’ on it!”
“NO, tell us about the man who had his thumb bit off by a conger eel!”
“Then tell us about the weasel.”
“Tell us both stories!”

“OK” he said, shifting Joseph from one knee to another, “here’s the one about the conger eel, THEN, the one about the weasel surrounded by a circle of...............well, first I’ll show you what I found today...”
Leaning back in his chair, dad stubbed out his cigarette, closed his eyes, opened his tobacco tin very slowly, cleared his throat, and, showed us what he’d found on the beach.
Dad’s best find always surprised me. It was always something different and was always something that prompted him to tell a story.

When Dad finished, he’d put his treasure  inside his Old Holborn tin and rest it on the side of his chair. Then, with the quietest voice, told us how, when he was out in the woods very early, one bitterly cold morning, he’d seen a family of stoats surround a wounded weasel, waiting to pounce, kill and eat it. 
“I waved my arms,” he said,  “I shouted really loudly, and the stoats ran off.”
“I saved the injured weasel’s life.”
“When the stoats had gone, the little weasel stood up, shook its head, and hobbled off to the bushes.”

 Transfixed, I sat at his feet and stared up at him, sucking in every word.
As his story unfolded, I’d close my eyes, like my dad closed his, really tight. It helped me see the stoats and the weasel and hear the wild sounds that his words drew in my imagination.

When I went to bed, under which was my growing collection of pebbles and shells in an old cardboard box, my head was filled with bright images of wishing rocks, animals, birds and fish - and filled with hope .

I hoped that the was weasel ok.
Did it get home safely?

I hoped so.




[1] Slang for gooseberries
Finding your own wishing rock makes you feel good.

You pick it up and rest it comfortably in the palm of your hand.

Then, you slowly wrap your fingers around it and squeeze really tight.

When your fingers warm the pebble, close your eyes.

Squeeze your wishing rock as tight as you can - then send a wish to someone very special in your life.

Relax, open your fingers and let your wish go.

Someone, somewhere, then feels a warm shiver down the spine, just as that lucky person gets your wish.

When the wish had been sent, put your wishing rock into a wishing rock tin and keep it safe.

Found on my 5th birthday, my wishing rock and my amber
Forever.   :)