I was asked to talk about my Pocket Museums, how I use them to tell science stories, and how I became an EveryDay Hero on Channel 7.
Think it'll be ok - I'm quite looking forward to it.
I'll start by sharing some cottonwood stars, telling everyone my Wounded Knee story, and then shift into pocket museums.
I'm taking several with me to show.
Wonder how it will go?
This is the story I told:
Make a POCKET MUSEUM –
and save it…
FOREVER!
I did………J
How
it started for me…..
Me, Grandma Paull,
Mum, Dad, and my two brothers, Jimmie and Charles, lived near the sea. Our
small council house in Gwavas Estate overlooked Newlyn harbour, Lariggan Beach,
and the beautiful Mounts Bay.
Family walks, either to the country lanes or
down the steep hill to the nearby seaside, in the spring, summer, and autumn,
were the highlight of my childhood. Sometimes, after the Sunday meat and potato
pasty dinner, washed down with a cup of hot, steaming tea, Mum would put a
snack in her big bag and the family would put on its wellies and head for
Lariggan Beach.
If the tide was out, we’d first
look to see what had been washed up on the beach, then stare into the rock
pools, hoping to see a tiny red and blue crab scuttling under the dark brown
weed. Then, we’d collect some smooth pebbles.
We’d look for those shaped like a heart, or,
even better, those with a vein of milky-white quartz running through them.
They were special.
Mum said they were special because
they were wishing rocks.
Finding a wishing rock made me feel
good. I’d pick it up, hold it in my
hand, and slowly wrap my fingers around it.
When the pebble felt warm, I closed my eyes and
thought about someone very dear to me…………and then send that person a very
special wish.
Then, slowly, with a smile, I
uncurled my fingers, knowing that a special person, somewhere, suddenly felt a
warm shiver down the spine, just as he or she got my loving thoughts.
Of course, I always sent my very
best wishes to my mum and to my dad. J
As we walked around the beach, we
gave Mum the best wishing rocks we found and she put them in a tin in her big
bag.
Later,
when we were home tucking into bread and treacle sandwiches, Mum put the very,
very best wishing rocks in a old, cracked green glass jar that stood on the
mantle piece. The others were taken back to the beach the next time we
went for an afternoon walk.
I kept the first wishing rock I
ever found in a small oxo tin. Each day I took it out, rubbed it, squeezed it,
and sent really big wishes.
The years went by and opportunities
and challenges came my way, I have wished and wished and wished – always
clutching my favorite wishing rock from lariggan Beach.
When I look back over my life, I
know that sometimes the wishing rock really works…………….
On the day of my fifth birthday, Monday, July 14, a week before we
broke up for the summer holiday, I was really surprised when my Dad, not my Grandma,
met me at the end of the school day. Dad had never picked me up from school
before.
He was in his driver’s uniform so I knew he’d come straight from
work. My stomach turned over – was something wrong?
Was Grandma ill?
Standing by the iron fence, Dad smiled when he saw some of the
kids rush out of the school yard, up to the street corner, and turn and slide
down back towards school, skidding on the cobble road, sending up a stream of
yellow sparks from their hob-nailed boots. He took my hand and we walked
together in the afternoon sun towards the harbor.
Dad said we were going hunting for pebbles on Lariggan Beach.
Just my Dad and me. Pebbling. On Lariggan Beach. After school. On
my birthday. Could it get any better than that? I felt so special, and knew in
my bones that something magical was about to happen. It was, after all, my 5th
birthday treat.
And what a memorable lifetime treat it turned out to be.
We walked hand in hand on the cobbled street to The Fradgan, past
Uncle Steve and Aunty Flo Green’s white cottage, past the tall icehouse
towering over the small inner harbor, and crossed over to the open fish market.
We reached the small stone bridge by the Fisherman’s Institute at the end of
Newlyn pier, where the Coombe River runs into the sea. We leaned over and saw
the swans and the seagulls dipping their heads into the refreshing, bubbling
blend of fresh and salt water. Grabbing Dad’s hand again, we walked around the
corner by the Austin and Morris Garage onto the seafront, then down the six
smooth, worn, granite steps, onto the beach.
The sky was bright blue, and the sun a shimmering yellow. St.
Michael’s Mount, way off in the distance, looked very majestic, its fairy-tale
castle catching the late afternoon sun setting behind the Mousehole granite
cliffs. The tide was out and the smooth, black and grey and white pebbles were
wet and shiny. As the greeny-blue water lapped back and forth, herring gulls
squawked and squabbled as they looked for food scraps. As we stepped over the
pebbles, avoiding the slimy brown and yellow strips of seaweed. Dad reached in
his pocket and brought out two of his OLD HOLBORN tobacco tins.
“Here,” he said, giving me one, “take
this treasure tin and fill it. Just wishing rocks, mind you.” With a broad
smile and a knowing twinkle in his eye, he said, “Bet I fill mine first.” [1]
The competition was on. We walked along the seashore, stepping
over the brown sticky seaweed, and we looked and we touched and we talked and
we collected. The beach pebbles were so endearing, small, round, smooth, and
warmed by the afternoon sun.
Soon my tin was full of wishing rocks and heart-shaped
pebbles that I wanted to take home to show Mum and my brother. I so wanted to
tell them I filled my tin before Dad filled his.
Just as we were leaving, I spotted something different. There,
lying with all the other pebbles was a bright yellow object. It didn’t look
like any of the other pebbles. It was so different, more like a small slice of
pineapple.
Whatever was it? It stared up at me, wanting, I felt, badly to be
picked up, wanting to be touched and admired. By me! And that’s what I did. I
bent over, touched it, picked it up, and held it in the palm of my hand. It was
lighter than a pebble. It was a magical moment. Wide-eyed, I showed my Dad.
Because I knew he knew everything, I asked:
“What’s this, Dad?” He
looked down at it, smiled, and then, half-closing his eyes, frowned. Dad had no
idea what I’d found. “Dunno. Never seen that before. Good, though, in’t it?”
I thought that was really funny, because I knew he had seen
everything there was to see. I couldn’t believe that Dad had never ever seen
anything like the yellow stone before – and he’d been to the beach over a
thousand times in his life. But Dad did know it was different, and, therefore,
very, very special. “Take it home, “ he said, “and show your ma. She’ll know.”
I stared at my orangey-yellow, rock-like, magical find. It
looked soft. Not wanting to scratch it, I wrapped it up in my white hanky and
put it in the other pocket – it didn’t seem right to put such a special rock in
the OLD HOLBORN tin with the other pebbles I’d found.
Dad took my hand and we made our way back up Chywoone Hill. As I
walked up the very steep hill, I kept feeling the Old Holborn tin in one
pocket, and checking the lumpy hanky in the other. I KNEW I’d found something
very special. I KNEW it was lying on the beach waiting for me to come along and
find it. It was something that I KNEW belonged just to me – and would, forever.
I KNEW it was a special day. I was excited! My discovery made my head glow.
When we reached 17, Trevarveneth Crescent, I skipped up the back
garden path, past the three gooseberry bushes (one for Jimmie, one for Charles,
and one for me), pushed opened the glass door, and ran straight into the
kitchen. Mum and Grandma were standing by the white enameled cooker, waiting
for the kettle to boil. Charles was sleeping in Mum’s arms. Jimmie was tucking
into a jam sandwich. Beside myself with excitement, I shouted, “Mum,
Mum, Grandma, Jicky, I beat Dad. Filled my tin first. See what I found. It’s
brilliant.”
I took out my OLD HOLBORN tin and showed them what I’d collected
on the beach. ‘And look at this,” I said, as I unwrapped my hanky. I
knew then by the look on Jimmie’s, Mum’s and Grandma’s faces that the yellow
rock I had found was special. And I found it on my birthday, too.
“Where’d you find THAT? Dad, where’d he find that? Did
you give it to him?” Jimmie asked. Dad shook hid head. “’E found it.”
“What a birthday surprise.” said Grandma. Mum looked at it again, sitting
in the palm of my hand. “THAT beautiful yellow rock was waiting for you,
Johnny,” she said, “just for you. It’s a treasure. A real treasure. Put
it in one of your OXO treasure tins, Johnny, and keep it there, forever. Forever.
You hear me? Forever and a day.” I squeezed my treasure tightly in
my hand and took it into the kitchen. I had never held such treasure before.
I turned on the hot water tap and washed off the grainy sand with hand
soap, dried my special rock with newspaper, stroked it, and looked at it again.
I put it on the dinner table, next to my birthday tea treats - the
big blue and white plate of bread splits, a jar of jam, Cornish cream, treacle,
and yellow saffron buns. “What is
that, Dad?” asked my brother, Jimmie, again, looking at Mum and Dad. Jimmie
picked it up and stroked the yellow pebble. Mum and Dad shook their heads and
said they didn’t know, but, as Mum explained, the yellow discovery was
something very, very special. Beside himself with curiosity, Jimmie exclaimed, “T’ain’t heavy. Ain’t a pebble, is it, Mum? I
ain’t never found one like that.” “Don’t say ‘ain’t’, Jimmie, please.” Mum
said. “Don’t worry. You’ll find one next time we go pebbling. Just have to
keep looking.”
Dad’s story, when we settled down after my birthday tea, was about
his Dad working in the tin mine in St. Just, digging in tunnels deep down under
the blue sea. “Bet he never found a yellow rock like yours, Johnny,” he
said. “Found good stuff, though.”
When I went upstairs to bed, I put the treasure into an OXO
tin, slipped it under my pillow, curled my fingers around it, and, slept with a
smile on my face. I fell asleep. What a birthday it had been.
As I dressed in the morning, I put the small OXO tin inside my
left-hand trouser pocket, next to my favorite small seashell, to take to school
to show my teacher, Miss Harvey.
Dad reminded me as I went out the door with Grandma. “Got your
yellow rock for your teacher, Johnny? Don’t forget it. You know what your ma
said. Got your dinner, them OXO cubes, too?”
I couldn’t wait to get to school to show Miss Harvey. Even before
all the boys sat in their seats, I was standing by her tall desk, the OXO treasure
tin in my hand, spluttering, “Miss Harvey, Miss Harvey, see what I
found! I found it on the beach, after school, yesterday. You know, next to the
harbor wall. I found it on Lariggan. Went there with my dad. You know, when the
tide was out, when you can see what the tide brought in.”
Every word came out in a rush.
As Miss Harvey looked inside my scratched OXO tin, her eyes
widened! It wasn’t, apparently a rock at all. It was ancient fossilized tree
resin, and, she said, it was called amber. Miss Harvey knew that amber
was millions of years old and came from the inside of trees.
Resin? Fossilized? Amber? Ancient? What beautiful words, I
thought. I rolled the words around in my head. Resin. Fossilized. Amber, amber.
Miss Harvey held my beautiful amber in her hand, smiled, looked
down at me through her glasses that balanced on the end of her sharp nose, and
said loudly, so everyone in class could hear, that it had come from a far-off
country. It had probably been washed ashore after a long, long trip in the sea.
“And Johnny Paull was lucky enough to find it.”
Miss Harvey held my golden amber in her hand, smiled, looked down
at me through her wire glasses that balanced on the end of her sharp nose, and
said loudly, so everyone in class could hear, “THIS is amber…..it’s fossil
tree sap………it’s been washed ashore after a long, long trip in the sea. Johnny
Paull found it.” Miss Harvey handed the amber back to me and then wrote the
word A M B E R on the board. “Show it to everyone, pass it around.” Miss
Harvey said. “Share it – that’s what scientists do. And, Johnny Paull,
you’re a real scientist!”
What’s a scientist, I wondered? Is that something dead
good? I turned a little red as I faced everyone in the room. As I held out my
hand and showed the class, everyone stopped chattering. They were curious and
wanted to see what I had found. I handed it to Johnny Hoskins. Almost
immediately, Edgar James hissed, “Pass it ‘ere, boyo. Quick. Lemme see!”
“Quiet, everyone, quiet!” Miss Harvey said, turning to me, “Johnny
Paull, why don’t you draw a picture of your amber? Here, here’s some white
paper. Use this. Don’t just draw the amber, draw the other beach pebbles, too.
Just as you remember. Can you see them in your head?”
Closing my eyes, I remembered just how the amber looked when I saw
it lying on the beach with all the other pebbles. I couldn’t wait to grab some
yellow, black and brown crayons from the big biscuit tin lying on her desk.
My head glowed. It was
on fire. I was a scientist – whatever that meant! That was it. I was
hooked. I’ve been a scientist - and a treasure tin
collector - ever since, thanks to my mum and dad and my teacher.
As I was drawing another picture of one of my wishing rocks,
Miss Harvey came next to me and, with a broad smile, said, very emphatically
so that everyone could hear, ”Keep it, Johnny Paull. The amber. And that
wishing rock! They’re wonderful. Keep them. Keep the amber. Keep it in your oxo
tin, your treasure tin, and save it. Save it forever. And, you, Johnny Hoskins,
go and find your own. Go and find your own amber on the beach, the next time
you’re there.”
When playtime came, everyone wanted to see and touch the
beautiful, yellow amber. Roger Symons said loudly, and with a note of
frustration, he’d been down to Lariggan a million times. “Ain’t never found
anything like that. Let me touch it, go on, let me touch it. Wish I found it.”
I told him, and Johnny Hoskins, in a secretive whisper, that I was
going to save the amber forever, safely, in a treasure tin, just as Miss
Harvey told me. “Wassat?” asked Johnny. “Wos a treshure tin?”
“Come over ‘ere,” I said, “I’ll show you.”
In September, when school reopened after the summer holidays, I
took my amber to school and, standing in front of the class, told Miss Harvey
that I hadn’t lost it. Johnny Hoskins put up his hand and told Miss Harvey that
he hadn’t found any amber. “And I’ve searched the beach a million times.
Sure you found that amber thingy down there?” he asked.
He turned to the class. “Johnny
Paull’s dead lucky.”
Yep, I was…..and am to this day.
For well over 60 years, from my very special 5th birthday
day, the smooth, yellow treasure, my amber, and my wishing rock, reside in the
OXO tin.
They’re a big part of my life. Sometimes, the precious, magical OXO
tin is in my right-hand trouser pocket, sometimes in the left.
I touch it a million times a day – just to make sure that it’s
still there, just to make me feel good.
I touch it and I remind myself of that magical
birthday all those years ago.
Many years later, when teaching 5th
graders, we were sharing their treasure tins at the start of another day.
The treasure
box was renamed a pocket museum
by Michael, one of my students when he said to me,
“Like a museum, ain’t it? Dad says mine was a
pocket museum.”[2]
“Can we call ‘em
pocket museums, Mr. Paull?”
I asked the class what they thought to
the idea.
Everyone agreed that it was a great
idea.
It was...........:)
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
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