Echoes of the Great
War
In August 1984, Radio
4 ran a programme on an intriguing War diary kept by a rector called Dr Andrew
Clark . By a strange coincidence this
was the name of my 'hero' in The Long Shadow, a story of World War One as it
was experienced by the Allies in Salonika ,
Greece . My husband was busy
sorting out a load of old newspapers and copies of the Radio Times that he's
kept all these years for various reasons of his own and this article caught my eye as he rifled through them
The real Andrew Clark was a quiet scholarly rector in the peaceful
village of Great
Leighs in Essex . He was born in 1856 in Dollar, Clackmannanshire. As a young man he went on to Oxford
and took a first class degree in Greats, returning to Scotland where
he married and had children. He
eventually moved to Oxford
where he became known as a skilled historian. He left Oxford with some reluctance
due to the fact that his wife hated university life and preferred the quiet of
a rural backwater such as Great Leighs proved to be He was a popular and
successful rector there and well liked by his contemporaries.
Dr. Andrew Clark |
When war was declared in August 1914, Clark
decided that he would collect as much information as possible about the reactions
and events that occurred to ordinary people as the war progressed. No one dreamt it would last as long as it did
or that one million British soldiers would not return home again. Clark 's
historical background served him well and with meticulous care and a keen eye
for observation he determined to note everything he
heard or saw relating to the War, from air raids to billeting, and from health
issues to news of fatalities. He also
collected letters, recorded rumours and conversations he overheard, compared
them to the officially released news with all their edited propaganda and useless
information.
He also collected ephemera,
recruitment posters, pasted and transcribed letters from soldiers in Flanders,
Salonika and Italy
that had been sent to villagers and commissioned the local schoolchildren to
write essays with their impressions of any events that took place locally. For
instance there was the occasion when 8,000 troops marched through the village
on the way to war. At the time the children
would have been enormously thrilled and excited by such a spectacle in a quiet farming
village like Great Leighs where life had been slow quiet and orderly for centuries. He also wrote to his daughter in Scotland and gathered news from whatever sources
he could find such as YMCA officials, travelling salesmen, wounded soldiers,
men on leave and academic men in Oxford .
Dr Clark wrote up his diaries at
night and noted events hour by hour until the 28th June 1918, when the war
ended with the signing of the treaty of Versailles . He had once been a curator at the Bodleian
library and the librarian there encouraged Clark to send in his diaries as each
one was compiled, foreseeing that these would have value one day as records of
the period as seen from the ordinary lives of people who were not soldiers but
nonetheless drawn perforce into what was in effect a 'people's war'. There was not one, city, town, village or
family in Britain
that remained unaffected. Even Great
Leighs, a small village of 600 people, sent 72 men to war and 19 of these never
returned.
These books lay forgotten in the Bodleian
library for 70 years but were at last published as Echoes of the Great War in 1985, edited by Dr James Munson who also
gave the talk on radio 4.
St Mary the Virgin, Great Leighs |
Lyon Hall home of the Tritton family |
My interest aroused, I recently made a visit to the
village, Great Leighs. It was always a
spread out village, now bordered by a great deal of new housing. The trees had grown and little remained of the wide empty country lanes of early last century. However, we began with the church where the Rector held his services, St Mary the Virgin. This attractive little church has an unusual tower. In the graveyard we found many of the Tritton family who had lived at Great Leighs for years and still do live there at Lyon Hall opposite the church.
Poor Dr Clark! He had quite a walk from his own home at the Rectory to the church. Imagine doing this in the dark of a snowy winter morning or early evening, hardly any heating allowed in the church because coal was rationed. Yet, he seldom allowed himself to shirk his duty unless sick.
The Old Rectory |
We found the Old Rectory, now looking very
magnificent with wrought iron gates and sweeping driveway. I suspect Andrew Clarke would have liked to
see it looking as smart as this. He
struggled hard to keep up the work and the big garden during the war years when
his groom/gardener, Charles Ward, was taken away to fight. Charles had come to work for him as a lad of fifteen
in 1909 and was responsible for the pony, drove the trap when required, looked
after the paddock, kitchen garden, orchard and lawns, drains and various other jobs. For this he got 16 shillings a week. Dr Clark did his best to keep Charles at home
with him because the young man was short in stature and did not have the required chest
measurement. Other village lads were at first
rejected on such grounds and felt very upset. They had thought it would be good to be paid
to enlist and see Egypt , Malta , France
or Germany .
It was still considered a splendid
opportunity to see the world and get away from the village and the hard work of farming and labouring.
Dr Clark did his best to keep Charles
Ward with him because the young man suffered badly from weakness of the chest
and wet weather would send him to hospital at once. However, letters to the
Recruitment Office were of no avail as they considered that if the young man
could do all that work, he should manage army life. Dr
Clark, however, knew he wouldn't be of much use to them on the Front and sure enough,
young Ward was in hospital within a few weeks of joining up. As soon as he was well, he was sent back to
the front again. He adored the Rector
and wrote regularly with his news; simple, ordinary little letters of a country
lad, but often quite touching.
Meanwhile the ageing Rector
struggled with the upkeep of his home, his sick and dying wife, though he made
no allusion to his private life in the diaries. He was also obliged to join a
form of Home Guard as he was too old to go to war himself. This meant walking around at night, patrolling
the streets and lanes to ensure all light were out and no strangers hanging about. Spy stories were constantly flying about and anyone vaguely foreign looking or odd was regarded with deep suspicion. Zeppelins were often heard going close by and
making bombing raids on nearby Chelmsford .
Some of the stories brought back
by soldiers on leave were truly horrendous.
They put paid to the official bulletins which gave away little or nothing of
the true state of affairs in order to keep up morale at home. But the problem was that rumours then flew
around, fuelled by gossip and were
often more alarming than the truth.
Little by little old class systems were being
swept away and even women were being called upon to work as all the able bodied men had to enlist. The girls had as yet, a confused idea of identity and could at times dress in a rather comic fashion, unsure whether to
look like a man or a woman. Nothing like
as elegant as in a BBC TV production, I'm afraid, where they all look pretty and smart!. Andrew Clark describes a day when he saw some
land girls walking through the village dressed in riding breeches, a long smock
over these, an ordinary woman's hat atop their heads and a rattan cane in hand.
There was still a good deal of disapproval
of girls who worked on the land or in factories and often from other women. The wages, however, were high and many local girls
went off to do factory work, spending the money as fast as they earned it and
flaunting their 'wealth'. But when the
war ended and munitions factories closed down, wages also lowered with the
resultant discontent and difficulty in re-adjustment for both men and women.
It was a strange period in human history and the diaries of Dr Andrew Clark have captured it in all its
everyday detail full of moments of pathos, deep meaning and ridiculous trivia
and gossip.
the End Way, Great Leighs |
4 comments:
All wars are tragic, but the Great War seems especially so, looking back through history. It's wonderful that he kept such pithy records. The book sounds like a must for historians or anyone writing about that era.
Thanks so much, Elizabeth. Yes, it is an amazing record and it's these unsung, often un named people who do something in the background who are also heroes to me.
My Grandmother was born in Great Leighs at the Post Office/ Wheelwright.(I used to play there as a child and helped picking the fruit from the garden which stretched down the road almost to the stream.) My great grandfather was the Wheelwright. At the time of the book my Grandmother had married and gone to live with her husband in Twickenham. Her sister was post mistress and is mentioned in the book taking the telegrams from the front to be read out in church. Her brother was away at war. It is a fascinating book for me, and the think that amazed me was how suspicious the villagers were of strangers and their reactions.
Hi tthanks for sharing this
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