Wednesday
6th
May 2009
On the trail of Flora
Thompson: beyond Candleford Green by John Owen Smith
John Owen Smith
(left) was born in 1942 and trained as
a Chemical Engineer at London University, but spent most of his working life
designing commercial Information Systems for the paper-making industry.
Following redundancy, he 'fell' into researching and recording the local
history of east Hampshire, where he now lives.
His output of historical
community plays, lectures, articles and books includes:-
-
One Monday in November, the story of
the Selborne and Headley Workhouse Riots of 1830
-
All Tanked Up, the story of the benign
'invasion' of a Hampshire village by Canadian tank regiments during
the Second World War
-
Headley's Past in Pictures, an
illustrated tour of the parish of Headley in Hampshire in the first
half of the 20th century
-
A Balance of Trust, in which we meet
the founder of The National Trust, and cover 50 years of history in
and around Haslemere and Hindhead, Surrey, from the arrival of the
railway to the arrival of the motor car
-
Flora's Heatherley - a dramatisation of
Flora Thompson's time in Grayshott, Hampshire, 1898-1900
-
Flora's Peverel - a dramatisation of
Flora Thompson's time in Liphook, Hampshire, 1916-1928

The name Flora Thompson is
synonymous with the Lark Rise to Candleford trilogy which
vividly describes growing up in a north Oxfordshire village at
the end of the 19th century. It is widely assumed that the story
of "Laura", Flora's auto-biographical character, ended on the
last page of Candleford...
Any Speaker confronted with an audience of some
100 persons seated round tables and recovering from an excellent five-course
lunch is to be congratulated if he succeeds in capturing and holding their
attention.
This was the case for John Owen Smith whose
talk was entitled On the Trail of Flora Thompson beyond Candleford Green.
Flora Thompson was the author of Larkrise to
Candleford recently adapted into a very popular television series of the
same name. Flora spent a large part of her life at Grayshott and Liphook on
the Surrey/Hants border and many of her characters and places were based on
real life people and locations in the 1880s and 1890s.
Flora Thompson was born in 1876 in Juniper Hill
in N.E. Oxfordshire and died in 1947 in Brixham, Devon. A part of her
working life was spent in a Telegraph Office at Grayshott where her
customers included Arthur Conan Doyle and George Bernard Shaw. She was
married in 1903 to John William Thompson, a fellow worker in the Post Office
and they brought up two sons and a daughter.
John Owen Smith himself had lived in the
neighbourhoods described in Flora's books and it was this that led him to
study and research the background, locations and characters so clearly
brought to life in her works.
In conclusion, a vote of thanks to John Owen
Smith for an absorbing introduction to Flora Thompson's life and works was
given by John Hitchens.
David Staples
A selection of photographs of
the members and guests at Kingswood Golf Club are ...here.
We are pleased that
John Owen Smith
(Jo) has allowed the following to be used to supplement our report, this
ensure that many details we would have missed are explained fully.
On the Trail of Flora
Thompson Beyond Candleford Green: tells of fourteen years during which
this author, best known for writing Lark Rise to Candleford, lived and
worked on the Hampshire/Surrey/Sussex border before she became famous.
Includes details of genealogical methods used in the research.
Based on the book published by the author in
1997.
Those of you familiar with
Flora Thompson's work will recognise her habit of fictionalising the truth -
when she wrote about the life of 'Laura' in Lark Rise, it was of course
about herself, Flora. She tells us of her family and the people around her,
while changing their names and, to some extent, their history. This
technique became an issue for Oxford University Press when they wished to
take her work, since they did not normally publish works of fiction. But,
recognising the merit of the book, they did accept it - and such was the
demand from readers that they soon commissioned the sequels which became
Over to Candleford and Candleford Green.
It is perhaps interesting to
consider why Flora wove fact with fiction in the way she did. Sometimes it
may have been to protect her own feelings, and sometimes to protect the
feelings of others. It also allowed her the liberty of putting true events
into more readable contexts - we know of several instances where a good yarn
was reused in another piece of writing - and on her own admission she
sometimes combined the characteristics of two or more people into one for
the purposes of making a story.
Flora Jane Thompson was born (neι
Timms) in 1876 at Juniper Hill on the Oxfordshire/Northamptonshire border.
She started work in a neighbouring post office at the age of fourteen, thus
beginning a long connection with the Post Office. At the age of twenty-one,
she took a position as sub-office assistant to the postmaster in Grayshott,
Hampshire, and was to stay in Hampshire, more or less, for the next thirty
years of her life. On leaving Grayshott she moved to Bournemouth and in
January 1903 married John Thompson. Their daughter Winifred (called Diana)
was born in October of that year, and their first son Basil in 1909. In
1916, a month after Flora's favourite brother Edwin was killed in action in
Belgium, John Thompson applied for the position of postmaster at Liphook.
The family thus moved back to
within three miles of Grayshott, and Flora was able to renew her
acquaintance with the area. Easier times followed the end of the First World
War and, despite the arrival of a third child, Peter, in 1918, Flora began
writing more industriously during this period than at any other time. Here
she wrote her nature notes, 'The Peverel Papers', from her own observations
during her long and frequent walks in the area, and here in 1926 the family
bought a house of their own for the first time, having previously been
forced to live in rented Post Office accommodation. But hardly had they
settled in than John Thompson applied for promotion again, and moved to
Dartmouth in November 1927. Flora stayed in her beloved Liphook for nearly a
year more while the house was sold, and then followed, never to return to
Hampshire. During the next ten years she revised some of the notes she had
written about her early childhood and developed them into the book Lark Rise
which was to bring her fame late in life. The success of this book led to
the publication of two more, and their eventual appearance as the trilogy
'Lark Rise to Candleford'. She wrote a fourth book, 'Heatherley', a sequel
following on from 'Candleford Green' and telling of her time in Grayshott,
but chose not to publish it. Instead, she wrote 'Still Glides the Stream' -
her final publication. Flora Thompson died at Brixham, Devon, on 21st May
1947.
Flora Thompson arrived in this village a
hundred years ago to the month in fact, in September 1898 to take up a
new job which she hoped would, as she put it, 'prove to be a permanency'.
Those of you who have read Lark Rise to
Candleford will remember that at the end of that trilogy we find her leaving
her job at the post office in Candleford Green. She says she was 'driven on
by well-meant advice from without and from the restless longing of youth to
see and experience the whole of life, and that she then disappeared from the
country scene.' As far as we can judge, this happened in the autumn of 1897,
when she was coming up for her 21st birthday. We're not quite sure where she
disappeared to for the next year, but in September of 1898, as I say, she
arrived here.
How do we know this? Well, she tells us so in a
sequel to Lark Rise to Candleford which she wrote and then never published
a book called Heatherley. The first chapter of Heatherley is called Laura
goes farther, and begins 'One hot September afternoon near the end of the
last century a girl of about twenty walked without knowing it over the
border into Hampshire from one of its neighbouring counties.'
Heatherley was her name for Grayshott, in
Hampshire, in the same way that Lark Rise was her name for Juniper Hill and
Candleford Green her name for Fringford, both in Oxfordshire. And Laura, of
course, was her name for herself Flora.
She obviously felt more comfortable writing in
the third person about the life of Laura, rather than in the first person
about herself. Anyone who has tried to write something autobiographical can
probably sympathise with this.
Also, she was over 60 years old when she wrote
these books and you try thinking back 50 years or so (those of you that
are old enough) and see what detail you can remember!
Her books are really quite remarkable for the
things she does remember, and her descriptions of ordinary rural life at the
time of her childhood are thought to be some of the best available. But if
we try to relate her work to known historical facts, we can sometimes find
ourselves on shaky ground.
In her lifetime, she was quite open about
this. For example she said that her town of Candleford was based on the
characteristics of three local towns: Banbury, Bicester and Buckingham; and
that Candleford Green, as she puts it, 'is not Fringford, and very few of
the characters are Fringford people, though there is a little of Fringford
in it, with far more of a village in Surrey.'
A village in Surrey? interesting to consider
which village that might be. Grayshott is on the border with Surrey, but I
can't recognise Grayshott in Candleford Green. Anybody care to take that on
as a research project? I am confining myself to her time in East
Hampshire.
So we know that she cheated, by merging places
and people together for the sake of a good story in this way, and who can
blame her. But, as a local historian, I was interested to know how
accurately she would identify in Heatherley the people and places around her
here, in Grayshott, at the turn of the century. To what extent could we rely
on her work to add to our own store of knowledge about the area?
And I'd like to share with you some of my
results.
Let's start with her arrival in the village.
She tells us she walked from the station, Haslemere station that is, and
says she 'emerged from the deep, tree-shaded lane which led up from the
little town in the dip, came out upon open heath, and for the first time in
her life saw heather growing
. 'From where she stood she could see, far away
on the horizon, a long wavy line of dim blue hills which to her, used as she
was to a land of flat fields, appeared mountains
.'She stood as long as she
dared upon the edge of the heath, breathing long breaths and gazing upon the
scene with the delight of a discoverer; then with a buoyant
floating-upon-air feeling, passed on uphill towards the knot of red roofs
which soon appeared among pine trees.'
Now if you stand today at High Pitfold, at the
top of that tree-shaded lane which leads up from Haslemere, you will no
longer see open heath, or the long wavy line of the South Downs which Flora
said she saw from there. All you will see is houses and trees.
But it's important to realise that we are
talking of a hundred years ago and not many years before that, neither
Grayshott nor Hindhead existed as villages. They are not old-established
communities like some of the others around here like Headley for example
which is mentioned in the Domesday Book. The whole area of what is now
Grayshott and Hindhead was just one big expanse of open heathland and the
territory of some notorious gangs of ruffians to boot.
Things started to change when the railway
arrived at Haslemere in 1859 but the first shop was not built in Grayshott
until 1877, and the first house on Hindhead not until 1884 only fourteen
years before Flora arrived.
But Flora's is not the only record we have of
the scene she saw that first day. The archives of Haslemere Museum tell us
that Octavia Hill, the co-founder of The National Trust, had been taken up
the same track nine years earlier (in 1889), and that she literally gasped
with delight when she saw the view fairly good corroboration that it
really was a spectacular view at the time.
And corroboration is what I am looking for when
trying to pin down the truths in Flora's book.
I had a number of sources which I could use to
check up on her. One of these was the diary of Winifred Storr, aged 12½, of
Hindhead. Again from the archives of Haslemere Museum, we have this
wonderful day-by-day account of young Winifred's life in the years 1898 and
1899.
I looked at the entries for September 1898,
when Flora said she had arrived 'one hot afternoon' and found: "Tuesday
20th Sept 1898 Exquisite day, hot again! Mother, Auntie Sue and the two Miss
Aylings went for a bike ride, and Sue strained her ankle so badly that she
had to be brought home in a fly! Our little new Kodak came, Father has given
us it." So further corroboration with Flora it was a hot September that
year as well as some further background to other things which were
happening at the time the appearance of bicycles and Kodak cameras.
Flora came to work at the post office in
Grayshott because they needed a trained telegraph operator, which she was by
that time. She says the machine was 'newly installed' we actually know
from local press reports that Grayshott had had one for the past eight
years, but certainly there was a training job to be done. Flora tells us
that the previous operator had resigned, and the remaining assistant was not
yet qualified to operate the machine.
The assistant's name, according to Flora, was
Alma Stedman. Her actual name was Annie Symonds so here we have another
pseudonym, but at least the initials are right. Flora describes her as 'a
pretty, blue-eyed, sweet-natured girl of eighteen whose home was in the
village.' She was, says Flora, 'good and sincere, untouched by the world and
its problems and yet no fool, with inborn good taste and a sense of humour,
and was one of those rare persons who are happy and contented and wish for
no change in their lives.' She had a 'bright, sunshiny nature,' whereas
Flora, 'as people told her, was too much inclined to look on the dark side
of life.' When 'Alma' saw her brooding, she had 'pretty, innocent ways of
trying to cheer her which, though often simple to silliness, would usually
raise a smile.'
Was Flora's recollection of Annie accurate? Who
better to ask than Annie's daughters who still live locally. And they are
happy to confirm that their mother was exactly the character Flora
describes.
Who else does she write about? Well, her
employer the postmaster for one, whom she refers to as Mr Hertford. His real
name was Walter Chapman, but he had been born in Hertfordshire, so perhaps
that's why she chose this pseudonym for him.
Flora tells us of several melodramatic events
relating to him, ending in him murdering his wife shortly after Flora left
the village. I've met people who've read this in Heatherley and assumed it
to be a touch of dramatic licence on Flora's part, but sadly it was all too
true. Walter Chapman did indeed stab his wife Emily to death on the morning
of Monday 29th July 1901. At his subsequent trial he was found guilty but
insane, and sent to Broadmoor for the rest of his life.
We can probably assume that many of the other
pieces of information which Flora gives us concerning him were also true,
including his firing a revolver just outside her bedroom one night. She was
a lodger with them in the post office at the time because other lodgings
were hard to find on her salary, but she says that 'after that night of
terror
she had removed herself and her belongings' from the post office in
less than a week.
She moved in with a family to whom she gives
the surname Parkhurst. As with nearly all the people she mentions, we can be
fairly certain this wasn't their real name. Interestingly, in a previous
draft of the book we noticed she'd called them the Chivers family, and I
wondered if this time we had caught her out and discovered a proper name
but unfortunately I can't find a record of Chivers or Parkhursts in
Grayshott at the time. Perhaps when the details of the 1901 census are
released early in 2002, I'll have more luck. [I did the family was the
Levetts but, more to the point, Flora wasn't there at the time of the
census in March 1901!
She says they 'belonged to an obscure
dissenting sect which had no meeting place nearer than that in a market town
seven miles distant.' I have a feeling that she may have been referring to
Primitive Methodists, who had a chapel in Petersfield at the time, but so
far I've not been able to prove it.
The house they lived in was described by Flora
as a house which had been 'built by a speculating builder with the idea of
attracting a superior type of purchaser or tenant; but as it had a very
small garden and was closely neighboured by a group of poor cottages, he had
for some time been unable either to sell or let it. It had then been let to
two working-class families, one occupying the rooms on one side of the house
and the other those on the other side, and with one of these [that's the
Parkhursts] it had been agreed that Laura should rent their front room
upstairs. It was a fair sized room with two windows, one of them with a view
of the heath with, in the distance, the long wavy line of blue hills she had
seen on the day she reached Heatherley'.
If anyone can tell me where that house might
be, do let me know. I imagine it still exists, though without the view of
hills and heather now. [I found from the 1901 census that it was The Ferns
in The Avenue, Grayshott which still exists]
Some of her other contacts are easier to
discover. Hindhead was filled with eminent Victorians at the time here to
take advantage of the hilltop air, which at that time was declared to be as
pure as that of the Alps.
[And here, as an aside, I can thoroughly
recommend a book called The Hilltop Writers, written by Bob Trotter, in
which he documents the lives of no fewer than 65 recognised writers who were
living around the Hindhead area at the time well researched, and with an
excellent index]
These eminent gentlemen came down to Flora's
post office in Grayshott to send off their telegrams by wire. Remember this
was an era before the telephone had come into general use, and much of the
business we would now do on the phone was then done over the telegraph.
Imagine Flora's thoughts when she suddenly
found herself face to face with the likes of Arthur Conan Doyle, probably
the most famous author of the day. She describes how 'scarcely a day passed
without his bursting like a breeze into the post office, almost filling it
with his fine presence and the deep tones of his jovial voice. As he went
through the village he had a kindly greeting for all, rich and poor, known
and unknown alike. He was probably the most popular man in the
neighbourhood.'
He had moved to the area, like so many others,
to take advantage of the supposed health-giving properties of the air. In
his case, it was his wife's health that was the cause for concern, since she
had contracted tuberculosis. While living here, at Undershaw just by the
Hindhead cross-roads, he wrote most of his Brigadier Gerard stories and, in
order to earn some money, resuscitated Sherlock Holmes from his premature
death at the Reichenbach Falls. Among the stories in The Return of Sherlock
Holmes you'll find one called The Lonely Cyclist which is set along the
Hindhead to Farnham road.
Soon after she arrived, Flora also saw 'a tall
man on a crutch with a forked red beard and quick, searching eyes'
surrounded by a group of younger men 'who appeared to be drinking in his
every syllable.' This was George Bernard Shaw, who was living in Pitfold
House at the time, having rented it in June of that year from the
Beveridges, both to spend his honeymoon and to convalesce from a badly
infected foot. Apparently, as soon as the foot improved he threw away his
crutches and took to his bicycle again. But being rather accident-prone,
he'd fallen off and sprained his ankle, which was why, when Flora saw him,
he was on his crutch again! [And my thanks to Bob Trotter's book for that
piece of information.]
Later that year he moved closer to the village
centre and rented the building which now houses St Edmund's School, just a
couple of hundred yards from Grayshott Village Hall.
Flora mentions at least two more writers who
were famous at the time, but have since slipped from the best-seller lists.
One was Grant Allen, who had caused quite a storm of protest in the press
and elsewhere when he published The Woman Who Did and The British
Barbarians, his so-called 'Hilltop Novels,' while living here in 1895. Flora
says of him: 'Everybody who knew the author by sight, or even the outside of
the house he lived in, felt a burning desire to read his book, and copies
were bought and handed round until practically everyone of mature age in the
village had read and passed judgement on it. But some who had secretly
enjoyed reading his novel seemed quite disappointed when the bother it had
caused died down and the author still walked at large, apparently
unperturbed by the storm he had raised.' Sadly Grant Allen died of TB in
1899, before he was able to shock the world any further.
The other writer was Richard Le Gallienne,
mentioned by Flora as 'the young poet whose work was then held in high
esteem in literary circles,' and who 'raced about the parish at all hours on
his bicycle with his halo of long, fair hair uncovered and his almost
feminine slightness and grace set off by a white silk shirt, big artist's
bow tie and velvet knickerbockers.' He was then in his early thirties, had
'found' Hindhead on the recommendation of Grant Allen, and was living in
Kingswood Firs, just above Waggoner's Wells, at the time Flora saw him. He
had published one of his more famous works, The Quest of the Golden Girl, a
year previously but, as Flora says, because of the other 'locally revered
figures' such as Tennyson for whom 'the whole neighbourhood felt an almost
proprietary interest, this new young poet, who actually lived at Heatherley,
was little regarded locally.'
All these famous writers used Flora's post
office, and she tells us that as a result of seeing them all and listening
to their brilliant conversations, she 'destroyed her own scraps of writing,
saying to herself as they smouldered to tinder that that was the end of a
foolish idea.' I wonder what scraps of hers we lost?
At the time, she mentions walking out with the
local newspaper reporter. She tells us, 'he would even have risked losing an
item of news for the sake of a talk with her.' They shared experiences such
as a primrosing expedition on Good Friday, an August Bank Holiday tramp over
the moors, with stewed whortleberries and cream for tea at a wayside inn,
and it had been in his company, after a thunderstorm, that Laura, for the
only time in her life, had seen rose and mauve mountain-tints on the hills.
She tells us also that they had once shared a rather gruesome experience:
'After sitting side by side on the top bar of a sluice at the lakes laughing
and talking for an hour one summer evening they had learned the next day
that immediately after they left, the body of a drowned man had been taken
from the water.' [And in the Haslemere Herald of 12th May 1900 we read:
'There is an element of mystery surrounding the death of a labourer named
Albert Pannell, aged 35, whose body last week was found in Waggoner's
Wells']
It is almost certainly the reporter of the
Haslemere Herald with whom she was sitting there. His name was William
Austen Sillick, and he made a reputation for himself in later years as
someone who became an enthusiastic compiler of notes on the eminent people
of the area, such as Arthur Conan Doyle, George Bernard Shaw and the like.
In Haslemere Museum today, there is a lovingly gathered collection of
newspaper cuttings and jottings of his, and a notebook in which he recorded
information specifically about the personalities, famous and otherwise, who
lived in and around Grayshott.
How ironic, then, that it includes no mention
of the young girl he had walked out with on the heaths and sat with by
Waggoner's Wells. No mention of the future author of Lark Rise to
Candleford. But how was he to know then that the young postmistress he
befriended would also become a household name one day, and sit on the
bookshelves along with Doyle and Shaw?
While these men are easy enough to identify in
her book, some of her other contacts are less easy to pin down.
For example Mr Foreshaw, the retired big-game
hunter with whom she said she went to tea each Sunday afternoon. That made
tongues wag in Victorian Grayshott, she tells us. She also says that he died
while she was still in the village, and that it was the first time in her
life that she had felt such a sense of personal loss people she had known
had died and she had felt sorry, she says, but none of them had been near to
her; she had never before faced the great dark, silent abyss which lies
between the dead and the living.
She tells us he was buried locally, so in
trying to find out who he might have been, I searched the burial registers
of the surrounding parishes to see what elderly men who might fit his
description had died during the 2½ or so years that Flora was here.
Surprisingly few actually. In fact the only possibility seemed to be a John
Volckman who died on 10th August 1900 aged 63 and was buried in Headley
churchyard.
A note in the register says he was a 'stranger
at Grayshott'. A look at his will confirmed that this John Volckman was a
bachelor, as was Flora's Mr Foreshaw, and that he had a sister, as did her
Mr Foreshaw. More than that we cannot say. I have not managed to uncover any
further details about him. But if he was her Mr Foreshaw, then I can tell
you exactly where in Headley churchyard he is buried and where we would have
found Flora most likely on Sunday 19th August 1900, on the first free day
she would have had after his funeral when she tells us she went to lay
fresh red roses at his grave.
Another of the 'strange old men' who she says
she was accused of meeting alone was the herdsman she calls Bob Pikesley.
He lived with his sister, she tells us, in a
house 'so tucked away between two hills that it was possible to pass within
a hundred yards of it without suspecting its existence. It was a narrow
thatched cottage with outbuildings in a valley so narrow that their three
fields were ribbon like in length and breadth. As Bob said, you could throw
a stone from one hill to another right over the chimney and never know that
a house was there.'
Sounds like Whitmore Vale to me. If you walk
down the road in Grayshott by the side of the Co-op and carry straight on
when it becomes a track, you'll find yourself at the top end of Whitmore
Vale. Have a look for yourselves and see what you think.
Flora tells us bits and pieces about Bob and
his sister, but nothing that could positively identify them until she lets
slip later in the book that she'd heard that the sister 'had nursed her old
mother through her last illness and looked after the house and dairy, then
both she and 'Bob' had died 'in that influenza epidemic, as they called it,
just after the war. Both down with it at the same time and nobody to look
after them.'
That would be in the epidemic after the First
World War so once again I searched the local burial records, this time
looking for a brother and sister who might have been buried within a few
days of each other, in late 1918 or early 1919. I didn't find a brother and
sister, but I did find a husband and wife, Albert Alderton and his wife
Emily, who died within 6 days of each other of 'flue & pneumonia' in
February 1919 according to the Headley register. He was 51 and she was 47
and yes, they lived in Whitmore Vale. To add to this evidence, the Rector's
notes also state that Emily had been looking after her mother during a long
illness just before she died. Were they Flora's 'Pikesleys'? My guess is
that they were the basis for her characters. But once again, she has added
either her own invention, or more possibly someone else's characteristics,
to theirs.
But perhaps the most interesting character
Flora met in Heatherley was the young man she calls Richard Brownlow. She
tells us how he walked into her post office one winter's day, and seemed to
form an instant rapport with her. He lived in London, she tells us, worked
for a cable company, and came to the Grayshott area to visit relatives
sometimes bringing his sister with him.
Either the area or Flora attracted him back
several times, it seems, and she appeared to be hitting it off with him
rather well. Then suddenly it all ended he came to tell her of his
sister's diagnosis of TB, and to say that he had to look after her and
wasn't likely to be able to visit Grayshott much more in the future.
Then he rather startled Flora by saying to her,
'I can never marry, you know that, don't you?' Flora says she stiffened
inwardly at this, thinking, 'Good Heavens, surely he doesn't think I want
him to marry me!'
We can only imagine where the truth really lay,
but it was the end of the romance. Within three years Flora was married to
John Thompson, and Richard Brownlow was a forgotten dream until one day,
many years later when her youngest son showed her, as she recalls, 'one of
his technical journals for her to look at the illustration of a new liner
which had just been launched, and there, on turning the page, she read an
account of a presentation to Richard on his retirement from the service of
the cable company.'
She goes on to describe the gist of the
article, and the picture of him which accompanied it, and she noted that he
had remained a bachelor.
The challenge for me then was to find the
technical journal which contained this article, and so identify the real
Richard Brownlow.
I decided to try first the most obvious cable
company that might have employed him, Cable & Wireless. They let me look
through their old house magazines, and in the issue dated April 1937, there
I found an article and a picture much as Flora described. It was of a
William Elwes.
Had I found Richard? Some things in the article
didn't seem to fit not the least that he appeared to have been posted in
Madras at the time he should have been meeting Flora in Grayshott!
But he looked too good a match in other ways
for me to ignore entirely, and by searching through his Will, I traced
descendants of his sister, whose name was Lillian. She had survived to marry
Col. John Josselyn and bear children, and I was able to contact a
granddaughter of hers.
I asked this granddaughter to read Heatherley,
and she was immediately struck by Flora's description of 'Richard' first
entering her post office. "That's Uncle Bill!" she said. She also told me
that he had come home for long periods of leave, and therefore the Madras
posting didn't prevent him from being 'Richard Brownlow.' Also that his
sister was devoted to him, and that they did go around together as Flora
said.
But there were other parts of the story which
didn't fit. For one thing, Lillian was tall and elegant with blue eyes, not
as Flora had described Richard's sister. She had also never suffered from
tuberculosis, and would never have considered doing anything so menial as
working for a living as Flora had suggested Richard's sister did. The family
at that time, on the admission of today's generation, were 'a bit snobbish.'
She told me that 'Uncle Bill' had been known as
a 'bit of a flirt,' and was in demand with the ladies but apparently
always had to get the approval of his sister before starting anything
serious! And this might be the key to our conundrum. Flora, it seems, is
unlikely to have been regarded as sufficiently 'top drawer' for the Elwes
family at the time, and if Bill's flirting with her began to look as if it
was getting beyond a casual affair, Lillian may well have decided to put a
stop to it. If so, then the excuse of his sister being ill as the reason for
Bill pulling out could have been fabricated, either by Flora or by Bill, to
save face.
So Flora was never to become Mrs Elwes, and I
wonder if she had whether Flora Elwes would have given us Lark Rise to
Candleford? I think it doubtful, so perhaps we should be thankful to
Lillian.
Flora left Grayshott shortly after losing
Richard (or Bill), but it was not by her choice. She was effectively made
redundant when another telegraph office opened in September 1900 at
Hindhead, very much closer to all those eminent men who had largely been
using her services. On the following day, she tells us, 'the number of
telegrams sent and received at Heatherley went down by 80%,' and this is
confirmed by the local press. Her services were no longer needed, and she
says that 'as soon as arrangements could be made she left Heatherley.'
Quite when this was I'm not sure. She mentions
being in Grayshott when Queen Victoria died in January 1901, some four
months later and elsewhere she mentions leaving Grayshott in the summer.
But she was certainly gone by the time the postmaster murdered his wife at
the end of July 1901 [and now we know she had gone by the census date of
30th March 1901.
So, somewhere between September 1900 and July
1901 she left Grayshott, and found employment elsewhere we believe in
Bournemouth, where her future husband was already working [but we also now
know from the 1901 census that she first went to Yateley, and that her
future husband John Thompson was working temporarily nearby at Aldershot at
the time so we assume that this is where and when they met].
They married in 1903, settled down in
Bournemouth and had children. And that might have been the end of her
connection with this part of the world had her husband not applied for
promotion in 1916 and been accepted as postmaster at Liphook, just down the
road from Grayshott.
So Flora came back again to her old haunts, and
stayed in this area for another twelve years before finally following her
husband on another promotion move to Dartford in Devon. From there in 1938
she submitted the manuscript of Lark Rise to Oxford University Press they
accepted it, and the rest, as they say, is history.
But here in Grayshott is the place where she
says her adult life began, where she passed through what she called her
'Sinister Street' years, and went on to face the world as a more mature
person.
The village has grown a bit since her time, but
I think she would still recognise it a hundred years on. Most of the older
tile-hung buildings are still there, including Victoria Terrace in Crossways
Road where she used the library facilities at 'Madam Lillywhite's'; and she
would know the Fox and Pelican which opened in 1899, where she bought her
'immense nine penny dinners'; and St Luke's church, which was being built
and also opened while she was here.
And although we in Grayshott allowed her old
post office to be pulled down in 1986, and have no plaques on walls (we have
now, in 2009!) for her as they have in Liphook, Devon and Oxfordshire, we
are still proud of our association with her.
© John Owen
Smith and thanks for permission to reproduce
for this site on Wednesday
6th
May 2009
more on http://www.johnowensmith.co.uk/
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