Thursday, 14 February 2019

Archives advice


To find archives material

Our records are spread over two catalogues, both of which should be searched.
1. National Archives’ Discovery catalogue:
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ (Tip: If you filter your search results by: Lewisham, you will limit your search to records we hold).

2. Local archives records on the Lewisham Council website at:
https://www.lewisham.gov.uk/inmyarea/history/Pages/archive-catalogue.aspx

Tip: Control + F pops up a searchable textbox on the screen. Enter simple keyword then click Next to move through the pdf file contents. Your keyword is highlighted each time it appears in the file.

We understand that searching catalogues is not always easy, so please contact us if you need help.

To order archive material

All archive material must be ordered in advance. Please email us a list of the archive references of the items you wish to consult. We require ten standard working days’ notice (not Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday) to retrieve archive documents for viewing, and we generally set a limit of twenty items per visit (depending on their size). Once we have processed your request, we will contact you again to make an appointment at a mutually convenient time. Please note that we do not make appointments until we have retrieved the material. If there is a problem or delay, we will contact you.



Thursday, 7 February 2019

Comrade Kath – a brief life of Kath Duncan


Kath Duncan, communist political activist in 1920s and 30s Deptford, is the subject of a new play Liberty and a biography The #Last Queen of Scotland by Ray Barron Woolford. Red Blouse Theatre, a local radical theatre company first formed in the 1930s and newly re-formed for the Deptford Heritage Festival, will stage the play in February 2019.

Katherine Sinclair Duncan (nee MacColl) was born in 1888 Argyllshire, Scotland. She became a teacher and joined the National Union of Teachers (NUT). After a marriage of convenience to Alexander “Sandy” Duncan in 1923, the couple moved to Hackney. They joined the Hackney Labour Dramatic Group, part of the Workers Theatre Movement, a revolutionary, left-wing theatre movement which had it’s origins in the Russian revolution of 1917. After a time in the Independent Labour Party, she joined the Communist Party of Great Britain because of the UK General Strike of 1926.

In 1929 she was elected to the party’s central committee, but stood down a year later when she moved to Deptford. During the 1931 General Election she hit the local headlines as the communist party candidate for Greenwich where she received over 2,000 votes.

A powerful public speaker at demonstrations, town hall deputations and street meetings, she championed the National Unemployed Workers Movement and other working class causes such as opposing the Means Test, defending the rights of Lewisham street-traders, supporting the hunger marchers and the South London gas charges protest (“The great Gas Fight”) of 1936.

Kath Duncan addressing a crowd during the great Gas Fight.

In 1932, local dockers demonstrated against ships sending arms to Japan which had just invaded Manchuria, China. Opposed to fascism and war, Kath spoke at a demonstration in Woolwich and was hospitalised after the police charged the crowd. Demonstrating the next day in what became “The Battle of Deptford Broadway”, Kath was charged with disturbing the peace. She refused to be bound over and so spent a month in Holloway Prison.

After her release the London County Council tried to remove her name from the teachers list. Helped by a 5,700 strong petition and letters of support from many Deptford trade unions, Kath soon won this battle and went on to stand unsuccessfully for the L.C.C (London County Council) in 1934.

Arrested again in 1935 for refusing to stop speaking outside a New Cross employment exchange in Nynehead Street, she was charged and convicted of willfully obstructing a police inspector in the execution of his duty. The National Council for Civil Liberties took up her case, the first time they had done so. The appeal was dismissed but Duncan v Jones [1936] became a landmark case. It established that free speech was allowed unless likely to cause a disturbance. The case has been cited in the courts in defence of the rights of animal rights protesters, Stonehenge campaigners and demonstrations at an RAF air base. Red Blouse Theatre, a local radical theatre company first formed in the 1930s and newly re-formed for the Deptford Heritage Festival, will stage Liberty.

Later, Kath spent much of her time opposing fascism. She was involved in the Battle of Cable Street and an active member of the Aid to Spain Movement, interviewing volunteers for the International Brigade in the Spanish Civil War.

During the 1945 election, she worked for the Labour Party addressing envelopes in Deptford Labour Committee rooms even though she had arthritis in her hands.

After her death, the London District Committee of the Communist Party published a pamphlet “Deptford’s Tribute to Kath Duncan” which is available on reference in Lewisham Local History and Archive Centre. Kath Duncan died in Scotland 1954, but she lives on in the popular memory in Deptford.

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian, Lewisham Libraries
local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk


Monday, 4 February 2019

Clemence Dane’s ‘Regiment of Women’


Clemence Dane, pen name of Winifred Ashton (1887-1965), was a successful screen writer, playwright and novelist. She was famous (infamous?) for her novel ‘Regiment of Women’ which claimed to be a study of lesbian relationships in a school setting. But did you know that she was born in Blackheath and went to Sydenham High School? She also lived in Sydenham from 1913-1919.
After the WWI she took up teaching in a girls school. She took the pseudonym ‘Clemence Dane’ from the church, St Clement Danes on the Strand, London.

‘Regiment of Women’ was published in 1917 and was widely influential in terms of social attitudes. The novel may have inspired Radclyffe Hall to write The Well of Loneliness, but it has since has been criticised for its negative portrayal of lesbian sexuality even though Clemence Dane was almost certainly a lesbian herself.

Clemence Dane


According to Britannia’s Glory: A History of Twentieth Century LesbiansClemence Dane was probably a lesbian who went to great lengths to keep her private life private. Using documentary evidence including Dane’s will, author Diane Hamer suggests that Dane had been in a long-term relationship with Elsie Arnold who lived with her. She also writes that the relationship came to an end and that Dane then became romantically involved with another woman-Olwen Bowen-Davies.

Dane’s other writing credits include the screen play for Anna Karenina for Greta Garbo and A Bill of Divorcement staring Katherine Hepburn.

Her play Enter Sir John was adapted into a film called Murder by Alfred Hitchcock with Sir John Gielgud.

By the time she died in 1965 she had written over 30 plays and 16 novels.

Regiment of Women (Clemence Dane) and The Well of Loneliness (Radclyffe Hall) are both available from Lewisham libraries. You might also be interested in Virginia Woolf’s novel Orlando which presents a different, more positive, presentation of sexuality and gender identities although written about the same time.

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian. Local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

In the navy: women serving as men in the Royal Navy


We know that women served as sailors in the Royal Navy as early as 1650. Unfortunately what is we know about these women is not first hand. Few sailors (men or women) knew how to write. As a result, there exists no first-hand, autobiographical accounts, with three exceptions.

Three women, “The Lady Tars”, have left memoirs of their experiences serving as men in the Royal Navy. They are Hanna Snell (1723-1792), Mary Lacy (1740-1773+) and Mary Ann Talbot (1778-1808). Mary Lacy had strong Deptford links.

Hanna Snell

Originally joined the army but deserted over an unfair punishment to which she was subject. She then joined the marines and was wounded several times in the Battle of Pondicherry. She later worked on stage where she would wear her uniform, do military drills and sing patriotic songs.

Hannah Snell in uniform.


Mary Ann Talbot

Started her military career in the army disguised as a boy servant to an officer. After his death at the Battle of Valenciennes, she deserted and was pressed into the Royal Navy. She served as a cabin boy, and fought at the Battle of the Glorious First of June where she was wounded.

Engraving of Mary Anne Talbot


Mary Lacy (c. 1740 – 1801)

A British sailor who became a shipwright. She is the only known, fully credentialed female shipwright of the era for which she later received a pension.

Lacy ran away from home dressed as a boy at the age of nineteen in 1759, and worked as a servant for a ship's carpenter of the British navy under the name William Chandler until 1763. She then studied as an apprentice to be a shipwright. In 1770, she took her exam as a shipwright, arguably the first woman to have done so. In 1771, however, she was forced to stop working because of her rheumatism, and applied for a pension from the admiralty under her legal name, Mary Lacy, which was granted.

On 25 October 1772, at St Mary Abbots, Kensington, Mary Lacy married Josias Slade, a shipwright, of Deptford, Kent.

In 1773,she published her memoirs The Female Shipwright or Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Mary Lacy.

That same year, Mary gave birth to her first child, Margaret Lacey Slade, who was baptized at St Nicholas, Deptford, Kent, on 29 August. Their other children were Josias Slade (1775–1777), Mary Slade (1777–1777), Josias Slade (1778–1781), Elizabeth Slade (1780–1780), and John Slade (born 1784).

In 1775 Mary petitioned for her husband to be granted a servant because of his 16 years' service as a shipwright. She had also applied unsuccessfully before Lord Sandwich for her husband to succeed Thomas Boyles, who lined the stuff for the Sawyers at the dockyard.

Mary died in 1801 and was buried at St Paul, Deptford, Kent, on 3 May 1801. Her husband, Josias Slade, died in 1814 and was also buried at St Paul, Deptford, Kent, on 13 February 1814. In his will and codicil, he only mentions his son, John Slade, and daughter, Margaret, now wife of Joseph Ward (Margaret Lacey Ward died the following year and was buried at St Paul, Deptford, Kent, on 23 April 1815).

Opening page from Mary Lacy's autobiography first edition.



Further reading

Hannah Snell, Mary Lacy and Mary Anne Talbot.The Lady Tars: the autobiographies of Hannah Snell, Mary Lacy and Mary Anne Talbot (2008). Contains all the three memoirs. (Available at Lewisham Local History and Archives Centre-reference only).


Peter Guillery. The Further Adventures of Mary Lacy: 'Seaman', Shipwright, Builder. History Workshop Journal, Volume 2000, Issue 49, 1 January 2000, Pages 212–219.(Not available from Lewisham Local History and Archives Centre).

Enquiries:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk


Saturday, 2 February 2019

Irish Family History Online






Over the past decade the Irish authorities have made many Irish family history resources freely available online. Ireland is now a world leader in the field. Most of the records are in English so lack of knowledge of the Irish language should not be a problem for the most part.

Getting started


Excellent starter online article from the Irish Timeswith links to lots of useful resources.



A good, free pdf booklet is available from the National Library of Ireland (NLI).



Useful quick tips but get the NLI guide download as well.



Good questions for you to ask.


Useful FREE publicly funded websites:


Home to the historic records of Births, Marriages and Deaths of the General Register Office since 1864. State registration of all non-Catholic marriages began in 1845. In 1864, civil registration of all births, marriages and deaths began.



• Census Records for 1901 and 1911, Census survivals for 1821-51, Census Search forms for 1841-51.
• The Tithe Applotment Books from 1823 to 1837.
• Soldiers’ Wills from 1914 to 1917
• Calendars of Wills and Administrations from 1858 to 1922.
More is being added on an ongoing basis.



AskAboutIreland.ie and the Cultural Heritage Project is an initiative of public libraries together with local museums and archives in the digitisation and online publication of the original, the unusual and the unique material from their local studies' collections to create a national Internet resource for culture.

Links to Griffiths Valuation. The Primary Valuation was the first full-scale valuation of property in Ireland. Overseen by Richard Griffith, it was published between 1847-1964. It is one of the most important surviving 19th century sources.

Try doing a keyword search in the Libraries search box to find a range of information on many topics.



The website brings together a number of databases produced by the Libraries and Archive Service. Most of the original records from which the databases are created are held by Dublin City Library & Archive. Includes Dublin Directories 1647-19708 , Dublin Electoral Registers (1908-1915) and more.



The Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) is the official archive for Northern Ireland. PRONI is the main archive for Northern Ireland and holds millions of documents, covering a period from 1600 to the present day. These include valuable genealogical sources such as church registers, landed estates records, court records and wills.



The National Library Ireland site contains Catholic Church Parish registers for the whole of Ireland. Religious denomination is important in determining which records are relevant to your research.


Catholic Parish Registers are also available on Ancestry and Find My Past

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian, February 2019
Local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Facing the music with Cecil Coles


Behind the lines-original bloodstained manuscript.
Cecil Coles (1888-1918) was a Scottish composer killed near the end of the First World War. 
He studied at the Royal College of Music and moved to London. He lived in Lewisham where he married Phoebe Relton in 1912. At this time, he worked at Morley College where he met composer Gustav Holst.

In 1915 he signed for overseas service in the 9th London Regiment, Queen Victoria Rifles. Stationed in France, he served as a bandmaster and stretcher bearer which involved picking up wounded soldiers, often under gunfire.

During the war, his wartime address was 11 Vancouver Road, Catford.

Image result for cecil coles
Photograph of Cecil Coles in uniform
Throughout, he composed music. His wartime work was sent to Holst, including a bloodstained manuscript of “Cortege”. This was the intended third movement of a four movement suite “Behind the Lines.“

His music remained almost unknown until 2002 when his daughter rediscovered his music. Recordings and performances followed. His work is included in “Music from behind the Lines.” Cortege became the theme tune to the Channel 4 documentary series the First World War.


     

Friday, 1 February 2019

Parish Records


Prior to civil registration in 1837, most births, marriages, deaths as well as burials, baptisms and banns, were recorded in the Church of England church or parish register (irrespective of religious belief). We normally turn to parish registers when we have gone as far back as we can through General Registration records and census returns. These will indicate which parish you need to search.
Ancestry does have many of these records online. Try searching directly on these records by selecting UK Parish Baptism, Marriage and Burial Records.



Parish registers in Local History and Archives Centres

These will usually be the records for the area that they cover. But many London and Kent area records are held by the London Metropolitan Archives. As well as original registers, many registers are available on microfilm or transcripts (written out in book form). The same register in a different format may well be housed in different archives. 

How to identify the parish register you need

You will need to identify where the individuals lived and which church holds their records. This is not always easy as there will be several churches in any given area, so you may have to look through several church registers to find what you are looking for.

To find out if Lewisham Local History and Archives Centre has the register you want to see

 Please email local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk with the following details:

• type of register (e.g. marriages, baptisms, burials)
• dates (e.g. 1826-1842)
• full name of Church (e.g. St Paul, Deptford; St Paul’s Lewisham, Forrest Hill)

We will check our records and then get back to you to arrange an appointment or invite you to a drop in day. If we do not hold the register(s) you seek, we will try and identify who does hold them for you and let you know. If you drop in without checking with us first, please note that we may not have the register you wish to see or it may be in the archives (not produced on demand). 

Parish registers on the Internet

Family Search https://www.familysearch.org/

FreeReg https://www.freereg.org.uk/

Parish Registers Online https://www.parishregister.co.uk/online

The Genealogist  https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/

UKBMDParish https://www.ukbmd.org.uk/parish

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian
local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Saturday, 26 January 2019

National Trust should stop 'privileging heterosexual lives' in family histories at stately homes


The National Trust (NT) should stop emphasising the role of families in the history of stately homes because it ‘privileges heterosexual lives’ according to a National Trust curator. Her comments were reported in the Daily Telegraph (26 January 2019) and have provoked a row over how history is presented. They also highlight the lack of LGBTQ visibility in heritage generally.

This is not the first time LGBTQ issues have been raised in the heritage sector.

In 2017, the National Trust ran a ‘Pride and Prejudice’ campaign, marking 50 years since the decriminalisation of homosexuality. The campaign caused some controversy when it outed a late country house squire, in a film narrated by Stephen Fry, 48 years after his death.

The debate is timely because it comes on the eve of LGBTQ history month which runs through February.

In recent years heritage organisations such as the National Trust, the V&A, Historic England and others, have made greater efforts to be more inclusive and recognise a wider range of groups who have been marginalised, misrepresented, under-represented or who have been made invisible. This also includes a greater emphasis on widening access and increasing participation.

Lewisham Local History and Archives will be running a series of LGBTQ history themed posts throughout the month. We will bring you information on archives where you can do research, links to guides for finding records and a self-guided tour of the V&A, as well as some family history related links and resources.

To get the best out of the postings, please join us on Facebook.

Recent copies of Newspapers are available in the Information Section, Lewisham Library, Lewisham High Street.

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian.
Local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

 @LewishamHistory          #LewishamHistory
Lewisham Heritage Blog: http://lewishamheritage.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, 15 January 2019

Free talk: the life and activism of Kath Duncan

Free Talk:  The Life and Activism of Kath Duncan. 

Revolutionary ? Deviant ? Misguided? or the most important UK LGBTQ and Civil Rights activist in the past 100 years? You decide. 

Date: Saturday 9th February, 11.00am. 

No need to book.

Venue: Large Meeting room, The Library at Deptford Lounge, 9 Giffin Street, Deptford SE8 4RH.

The speaker, Ray Barron Woolford is a long term Deptford Resident. Ray has written 4 books about Deptford and established a local food bank. Ray has also written Liberty, a book and play about Kath Duncan, that will be staged in Deptford as part of the Global LGBT history month 14-28 Feb at Zion Baptist Chapel New Cross Road Deptford SER14 6TJ  and the first biography  to be written about Kath Duncan, The Last Queen Of Scotland.




Lewisham Local History and Archives Centre │199-201 Lewisham High Street, Lewisham, London SE13 6LG │ local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk │020 8314 8501 │
Facebook @LewishamHistory    Twitter  #LewishamHistory                             
Blog: http://lewishamheritage.blogspot.com/

Friday, 21 December 2018

A Christmas meal at Lewisham Military Hospital WWI


Christmas was often celebrated with official approval during the WWI as it was considered important to boost morale. In military hospitals like Lewisham Military Hospital, wounded soldiers would have been joined by army officers, nurses and doctors to celebrate the festive season. Wars were decorated. Food was often plentiful as this dinner menu card from 1915 shows.

Dinner menu Lewisham Military Hospital 1915 ©Lewisham Local History and Archives


The reverse of the menu card shows the programme with details of the evening’s entertainments. It reveals the titles of songs sung. The names of individual soldiers are listed making this archive item a rare record of ordinary men whose existence might otherwise have been lost to history. As such this simple menu is a snapshot of a moment in time in the First World War taken from a local perspective.

Dinner menu programme Lewisham Military Hospital 1915 ©Lewisham Local History and Archives

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian


Facebook: @LewishamHistory
Twitter: #LewishamHistory

Free History Tour St Mary's Church, Lewisham 26 January 2019



St Mary’s Church, Lewisham is the oldest building in the London Borough of Lewisham. Find out about it’s history on a FREE tour with local historian Julian Watson. No booking needed. Meet inside the church 11.00am. Tour takes approximately 2 hours. Saturday 26th January 2019. Suitable for all ages.


Entrance to St Mary's Church, Lewisham

Thursday, 20 December 2018

Dinner for One


Every New Year’s Eve millions of people all over Germany sit down to watch an 18 minute British comedy sketch called Dinner for One. 

It holds the Guinness World Records for the number of repeats having been shown on German TV every year since 1972.

Many people also enjoy this festive slapstick, by British Comedian Freddie Frinton in Denmark, Sweden and a number of other European countries. In Germany a stamp has even been issued in his honour.

Frinton plays a butler who helps his employer Miss Sophie celebrate her 90th birthday by impersonating long dead guests and downing their drinks until he is very tipsy.

This year it will be shown on British TV on New Years Eve by Sky.

Friday, 23 November 2018

Christmas Closure Local History and Archives Centre


The Local History and Archive Centre will be closed for the Christmas period on Monday 24th December 2018-5th January 2019 inclusive. The first drop in day after reopening will be Tuesday 6th January 2019.  Please note that staff will not be able to answer any telephone or email enquiries during this period beginning 12.00 noon 21st December 2018. We are sorry for any inconvenience this may cause.

In the meantime. We invite you to explore our collections online at www.leisham.gov.uk/myservices/libraries (books and pamphlets) or www.nationalarchives.gov.uk (archives).

You can still follow us on Facebook @LewishamHistory, Twitter #Lewisham History and our blog http://lewishamheritage.blogspot.com/ for scheduled postings, including some special festive postings running most days while we are closed.

We are very grateful for your support over the past year.

Best wishes

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian

Thursday, 1 November 2018

Remarkable Residents: Kwes

Throughout October to celebrate Black History Month the Lewisham Local History Archive Centre will post our chosen 15 truly remarkable residents. People who were born in the borough or lived within its borders


15/15: Kwes


Kwes: Art work for record cover
Kwes (Kwesi Sey) is a record producer, songwriter, musician, mixer and recording artist from Lewisham.

Kwes is best known for his production and collaborative work with a variety of artists including Bobby Womack, Damon Albarn, ELIZA, Kelela, Loyle Carner, Micachu, Nao and Solange. He has also reworked several artists including Hot Chip, Metronomy, Lianne La Havas, Zero 7 amongst many others.

Born in 1987 he has been actively interested in pop music, since he was four years old it began in Lewisham in 1990, raised on a diet of Top of The Pops and the Top 40 Chart Show. On his seventh birthday, Kwes received a gift that rapidly accelerated his musical prowess – a keyboard from his grandmother.

In 2011 signed with Warp Records and in the summer of that year Kwes travelled to the Democratic Republic of Congo as part of Oxfam's DRC Music project. He was invited along by Damon Albarn to join a team of fellow producers and musicians that included Richard Russell, Actress and T-E-E-D.

In summer 2012 and early winter 2013, Kwes partnered with Go Opera and Peroni Brewery to create a series of opera concerts, entitled as Opera di Peroni. The project was staged live in various cities throughout the UK and had featured Kwes’ and Go Opera's take on selected arias from Verdi's La Traviata and Puccini's La Boheme and La Rondine.



Local History and Archives Centre. Email:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Remarkable Residents: Maxi Priest


Throughout October to celebrate Black History Month the Lewisham Local History Archive Centre will post our chosen 15 truly remarkable residents. People who were born in the borough or lived within its borders


14/15: Maxi Priest

Max Alfred "Maxi" Elliott (born 10 June 1961), known by his stage name Maxi Priest, is an English reggae vocalist of Jamaican descent. He is best known for singing reggae music with an R&B influence, otherwise known as reggae fusion. He was one of the first international artists to have success in this genre, and one of the most successful reggae fusion acts of all time.

Maxi Priest was born in Lewisham, the second youngest of nine brothers and sisters. His parents had moved to England from Jamaica to provide more opportunity for their family. His father was a steelworker in a factory, while his mother devoted her life to Christianity; she was a missionary at a Pentecostal Church and lead singer for the church choir, and as a youngster.  Maxi grew up listening to Jamaican greats such as Dennis Brown, John Holt, Ken Boothe and Gregory Isaacs as well as singers like Marvin Gaye, Al Green, the Beatles, Phil Collins and Frank Sinatra.

He was working as a carpenter when he was invited to build speaker boxes for the prominent Saxon International sound system. It wasn't long before his contacts there discovered that he could sing as well, and soon he was participating in live dancehall shows; in 1984, he and Paul "Barry Boom" Robinson also co-produced Phillip Levi's "Mi God Mi King," the first U.K.- born reggae single to hit number one.  

His first major album was the self-titled Maxi Priest (1988) which established him as one of the top British reggae singers.



Local History and Archives Centre. Email:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Tuesday, 30 October 2018

Remarkable Residents: Erica Pienaar

Throughout October to celebrate Black History Month the Lewisham Local History Archive Centre will post our chosen 15 truly remarkable residents. People who were born in the borough or lived within its borders


12/15: Dame Erica Pienaar DBE, FRSA

(born 20 March 1952) schoolteacher, educationist, Freedom of the Borough of Lewisham

Erica was born in Cape Town. On Christmas Eve 1954, her family chose to leave the country boarding a ship bound for Southampton. Her family quickly established themselves in Crystal Palace and has been loyal to her South East London ‘roots’ ever since. Erica’s family revered education; it was clearly understood that it was through a good education that one not only developed as a person but also gained control of one’s destiny.

 She began her career as a Science Teacher in 1973 and taught for 40 years in South East London. Until her retirement in September 2013, she was Executive Head Teacher of the Leathersellers’ Federation of Schools. The Federation was established in September 2008 in Lewisham and comprises three Colleges: Prendergast-Hilly Fields College, Prendergast-Ladywell Fields College and Prendergast-Vale College.

 In 2013, Erica was made an honorary Freewoman of the Borough, for her illustrious career in Lewisham. The Council agreed:

‘Her involvement in national and educational change has inspired countless educationists, teachers and students with resulting significant local and national impact. Her belief in our young people has shone through her work and has changed their futures.’

Erica was appointed a Dame on the 2014 Queen’s Birthday Honours list, for her long and distinguished career in education.


Local History and Archives Centre. Email:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Monday, 29 October 2018

Remarkable Residents: Mica Paris

Throughout October to celebrate Black History Month the Lewisham Local History Archive Centre will post our chosen 15 truly remarkable residents. People who were born in the borough or lived within its borders.


11/15: Mica Paris

(born Michelle Antoinette Wallen; 7 April 1969) 
is a British singer, actress and presenter on radio and television.

She was born in Islington and moved to Lewisham when she was about nine. She grew up singing in her grandparents' church and by her mid teens was making regular appearances with 'The Spirit of Watts' gospel choir. At the age of seventeen, she got her first break as a backing vocalist with the UK band Hollywood Beyond.
In 1988 she released her debut, platinum-selling album, 'So Good’ from which she had her first top ten hit, 'My One Temptation'. 

Mica Paris is one of the UK’s most respected female singers with a career full of Top 10 hit singles and albums worldwide. 2003 saw Paris being presented with the Gold Badge Award by the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters for her special contribution to the British entertainment industry. In 2004 she was in the Top 10 list of the 100 Great Black Britons, which was compiled to celebrate the achievements and contributions made by the British Black community over the centuries. 

In 2007 she wrote an empowering book 'Beautiful Within,' to critical acclaim. Mica has extended her talents, acting in many dramas and performing in numerous West End musicals.


Local History and Archives Centre. Email:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Did you know Agatha Christie was a VAD in WWI? Accounts of women’s nursing experiences in World War One



 Vera Brittain –Testament of Youth

First published in 1928, Vera Brittain’s account of her wartime experiences and how she became a pacifist was one of a handful of books which broke the silence over the First World War. She relates how she lost her brother, fiancĂ©e and friends while working as a V.A.D. (she trained at Camberwell). A passionate account, it stands as a moving memoir and epitaph for a “lost” wartime generation. Since it first appeared, it has become an ‘A’ Level literature text book, a television series (twice) and a film. Still resonating with successive younger generations, it has stood the test of time. Available in Lewisham Libraries.
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Dorothea Crewdson- Dorothea’s War: a First World War Nurse tells her story

Born Bristol 1886, raised in Nottingham. 1911 became a VAD in British Red Cross and passed her exams the next year. She began by helping out at local hospitals or serving tea and buns to wounded soldiers on hospital trains. In May 1915, she was stationed in Le Treport, northern France and spent the rest of the war working in different field hospitals. Although not a fully trained nurse, the military was under great pressure to relax the rules and allow women like Dorothea to serve in  military hospitals in France. Despite over 40 military hospitals in France by April 1915, they could not cope with the high numbers of casualties. She began at No.16 Stationary hospital, Le Treport, France. In 1918, Dorothea was awarded the Military Medal for bravery. She died in France in 1919 while still working as a nurse after contracting peritonitis. Her dairies were published by her nephew in 2013. Available in Lewisham Libraries.
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Erica Nadin-Snelling -Matron at War: the story of Katy Beaufoy (1869-1918)

Sister Katy Beaufoy was born in Birmingham and served in both the Boer War and was a QUAIMNs nursing sister then Matron on His Majesty’s Hospital Ships in World War I. She kept a war time diary of her service and excerpts have been published from 1915-1917, together with some letters to her family. The dangers of nursing service at sea are revealed as are the details of daily life. Katy was officially reported missing believed drowned after the hospital ship Glenart Castle was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat on 26th February 1918. Her medals include the Dead Woman’s Penny and the medal for reorganising the Queen of Italy’s nursing service. Available in Lewisham Libraries.
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Agatha Christie –Autobiography.

Before she became a bestselling crime writer, Agatha Christie joined the VAD in 1914. She served in a Devon hospital in Torquay.

She began by doing first aid courses in early 1914 followed by practical work visits to local hospitals.
‘That was intimidating because the regular nurses, who were in a hurry and had a lot to do, despised us thoroughly.’

Initially she was a ward maid, a reserve force, before she became a V.A.D. She also had pharmaceutical lessons from a local chemist to help her prepare for examinations.

Later her medical service stood her in good stead. She worked as a hospital dispenser in World War II. Doubtless this is where she gained her knowledge of poisons which feature as a murder method in so many of her crime novels. Available in Lewisham Libraries.

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian
Enquiries:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Treating Tommy: a day in the life of a British Military Hospital in World War One


During the First World War, the military hospital day in hospitals like Lewisham Military Hospital usually began at 6.00am. If able, men would make their beds and wash themselves.

The men had to wear a special hospital uniform. This was a blue jacket and trousers, a white shirt and a red tie. You can see the men wearing hospital uniform in the photograph below.

Patients wearing hospital uniform at Lewisham Military Hospital. ⒸLewisham Local History and Archives Centre.

 Breakfast was at 7.30am. Porridge, tea and eggs. Eggs were often donated by local residents who kept hens. Presumably they were keen to support the war effort.

After breakfast, those patients who were able helped to clean up the ward and do the washing up. Hygiene was essential to prevent disease and infection. Dressings were also changed in the mornings.
 
11am. Doctor’s inspection. After this patients were free to exercise in the hospital grounds until 1.00pm when lunch was served.

Lunch was usually meat, vegetables and a pudding.

In the afternoon, patients would have free time. They might visit the local town or attend parties hosted by local charities. Concerts and gramophone recitals would also have taken place. At Lewisham Military Hospital some patients were even treated to a motor car outing!

Article from the Kentish Mercury. ⒸLewisham Local History and Archives Centre.


About 7.00pm patients were served supper. A typical supper would have been cocoa, bread and butter.

Most patients recovered and many would have been sent back to the front lines to continue fighting.
Others did not survive. On 25 May 1915, the Kentish Mercury reported the first funeral of a soldier at Lewisham Military Hospital.


First funeral of a soldier from Lewisham Military Hospital.ⒸLewisham Local History and Archives Centre.

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian, Lewisham Local History and Archives Centre.
Enquiries:local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk

Treating Tommy: from the Front Line to Lewisham Military Hospital in World War One

The First World War quickly produced devastating injuries on the battlefield which posed a real challenge to treat. Survival depended on quick medical intervention. The wounded were often moved several times.

Regimental Aid Post (RAP)

Initially, the walking wounded tried to reach the nearest RAP, while others were carried by stretcher bearers. RAPs were often set up in trenches or abandoned buildings typically, 2---300 yards of the front line. There, they would be treated by a regimental medical officer (RMO). The RMOs were qualified doctors but knew little about treating war wounds. RMO’s administered pain relief, anti-tetanus injection and a basic dressing. Sometimes stretcher bearers trained in First Aid helped out.

Evacuation

Evacuation began from the RAP and continued to advanced dressing stations (ADS) further away from the front line where soldiers could be treated. Casualty Clearing Stations (CCS) were next up the line and were the first static units a casualty would encounter. CCSs often moved, casualties being moved back to base hospitals in France and Flanders.

Medical personnel

As well as Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) doctors, military medical staff included the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (QAIMNS), the Territorial Force Nursing Service (TFNS) and the Voluntary Aid Detachments (VADs) . Other ad hoc organisations not under military control such as First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY) and the Society of Friends –Friends Ambulance Unit, (FAU), Quakers and conscientious objectors, also made a contribution. QAIMNS sisters were sent to France in 1914 and their numbers increased after that as the need for experienced nursing staff increased.

Nursing staff and patients, Lewisham Military Hospital. ⒸLewisham Local History and Archives Centre



Hospitals in France and Flanders

There were two types of base hospital stationary and general. They were mainly located in large towns or ports, notably Boulogne and Etaples. Unofficial, voluntary hospitals supplemented these RAMC units but were not officially approved by the military authorities. The work was hard and time off for doctors and nurses was usually only given in cases of illness.

Transport

Transporting the wounded was a real challenge and barges were eventually used to transport men direct to hospital ships due to pressure on the railways. Once at a British port, casualties were transferred to an ambulance service train and sent to a receiving station. Receiving stations were local hospitals such as Lewisham Military Hospital. They were the last stop on a wounded soldier’s medical journey.

Lewisham Military Hospital

In 1915, the Lewisham Workhouse Infirmary was cleared to make way for expected wartime casualties. The hospital was then renamed Lewisham Military Hospital. It cared for officers, ranks and German POWs. It was headed by Dr Frederick Sherman Toogood who was given the temporary rank of Major with the Royal Army Medical Corps. The Hospital Workhouse Infirmaries were ideal for conversion into military hospitals as they often had gardens and other amenities for the staff and patients.

Lewisham Military Hospital had beds for 24 officers and 838 rank and file. They also had provision for shell-shocked officers. The first wounded arrived in May 1915, including some injured during the infamous gas attack at Ypres when chemical weapons were first used on a large scale.

The hospital treated those who needed more specialist treatment or who needed a longer period of time to recover.

The first patients would be walking wounded in cars followed by stretcher cases carried by ambulance.

Once at the hospital, the men would wash, uniforms fumigated and replaced with a hospital military suit. The hospital suit was a blue jacket and trousers with a white shirt and a red tie.
Patients details were taken and then they were taken to the wards.

After the war, the hospital reverted to civilian use in 1919. Eventually it became University Lewisham Hospital.

Julie Robinson, Local Studies Librarian
Enquiries: local.studies@lewisham.gov.uk