What I learned from my Bible
Dec. 15th, 2007 12:43 amI was a little bored this evening, so I double-tasked a bit: with CSI on the TV, I shifted books around.
Last year, a man and his lad came to lay fresh fluffy insulation in my loft. When they came back down, they brought treasure with them: three ancient hickory-shafted (and very warped) golf clubs, and two books. One is a random and disintegrating volume of an encyclopaedia; the other is the classic family bible, vast and portentous. They are both exceedingly dirty, so mostly they've been sitting around untouched. But I moved them, I set them on a new shelf, I thought "must run the vacuum over those sometime" - and then I realised there was something in the bible.
Three somethings, to be exact. Two images, of which more later, and a small envelope on which is written - in pencil, in proud copperplate - "School Referance" [sic]. Inside is a little fabric tag with an ancient safety-pin, which I suspect of being Boys' Brigade or similar; it shows two flags beneath a crown, and they're identified as 'Tyneside Scottish' and 'Tyneside Irish'. The tag is folded into a sheet of paper, a letter, with the printed headers 'Newcastle-upon-Tyne Education Committee' and 'Westgate Hill Council School (Senior Department)'. [I should point out that I live on Westgate Hill, and the school is a hundred yards from my house.)
The letter reads:
"Harry Hoad has recently left the above school. He is a capable and intelligent lad and occupied a high position in the Seventh Standard. He has ability more than the average in sketching and geometrical drawing. His conduct was always excellent and I can most heartily recommend him for employment.
"A R Shaw, Head Master."
It's dated 09/02/11.
Googling Harry Hoad turns up people of that name in Kent and Sussex and Australia, but not in the north-east. Nevertheless, I hope he had a long and happy life, and I hope this letter helped.
*is moved*
Last year, a man and his lad came to lay fresh fluffy insulation in my loft. When they came back down, they brought treasure with them: three ancient hickory-shafted (and very warped) golf clubs, and two books. One is a random and disintegrating volume of an encyclopaedia; the other is the classic family bible, vast and portentous. They are both exceedingly dirty, so mostly they've been sitting around untouched. But I moved them, I set them on a new shelf, I thought "must run the vacuum over those sometime" - and then I realised there was something in the bible.
Three somethings, to be exact. Two images, of which more later, and a small envelope on which is written - in pencil, in proud copperplate - "School Referance" [sic]. Inside is a little fabric tag with an ancient safety-pin, which I suspect of being Boys' Brigade or similar; it shows two flags beneath a crown, and they're identified as 'Tyneside Scottish' and 'Tyneside Irish'. The tag is folded into a sheet of paper, a letter, with the printed headers 'Newcastle-upon-Tyne Education Committee' and 'Westgate Hill Council School (Senior Department)'. [I should point out that I live on Westgate Hill, and the school is a hundred yards from my house.)
The letter reads:
"Harry Hoad has recently left the above school. He is a capable and intelligent lad and occupied a high position in the Seventh Standard. He has ability more than the average in sketching and geometrical drawing. His conduct was always excellent and I can most heartily recommend him for employment.
"A R Shaw, Head Master."
It's dated 09/02/11.
Googling Harry Hoad turns up people of that name in Kent and Sussex and Australia, but not in the north-east. Nevertheless, I hope he had a long and happy life, and I hope this letter helped.
*is moved*
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-14 11:55 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 12:55 am (UTC)What age would Mr Hoad have been at this point -- what's "Seventh Standard"?
Do you think he has descendants in the area who might be interested in this? Does the family Bible have any birth or death records or the like written in it? This sounds like a job for -- CAT-WAXING, LOCAL HISTORICAL RESEARCH VERSION!
You could probably get a solid week of not working on any of your projects out of this.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 08:16 am (UTC)I think it's cool! Good name, too, it has a ring to it.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 08:52 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 08:57 am (UTC)And yes, I could & should pursue local contacts. Just, it's not really my thing, all that talking-to-strangers stuff. The joy about cat-waxing is that one can do it at home and in private. I will check the bible for records (nice point: I should've done it already, but oh, it is filthy...).
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 08:58 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 09:04 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 09:13 am (UTC)If you did want to find out more about Harry Hoad I know someone who is a hot genealogy researcher type (actually
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 10:09 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 10:43 am (UTC)Idetrorce
Date: 2007-12-15 11:01 am (UTC)Idetrorce
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 12:52 pm (UTC)*beams in gratitude*
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 01:00 pm (UTC)I bet he died in the trenches. I hope for something better, but he'd have been just the age for it.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 01:08 pm (UTC)And, um, yes. It's all too likely. I can do optimism (both my grandfathers fought the whole war and came through; many many others must have done the same), but even so...
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 01:56 pm (UTC)Strangely wonderful--110 years after his birth and ninety years after his death, people around the world are talking about him, using inventions he probably never could have imagined. Is there anyone still alive who remembers him, so many years later? Likely not--and yet, his name circles the globe, pulled out of the past from the pages of a grimy old Bible.
Something about this makes me smile.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 04:28 pm (UTC)Mom has a cake plate in her china cupboard that belonged to her grandmother, or maybe her great-grand. And none of us kids know which plate that is in the stack, nor if the other plates are anything special.
Who put the Bible in the attic? Who forgot to say that it was something important, that a family treasure had been tucked away? Did the last person who knew about the Bible forget it was there? These are the moments I wonder about.
K. [of course, I am curious about the 2 photos, too]
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 04:36 pm (UTC)Being a Yank, I don't know as much about WWI as I probably ought to. Neither of my grandfathers, though they were of military age in WWI, served in it. My uncles who fought in WWII never spoke about it. I learned most of what little I know about WWI from the soldier's point of view by reading Tolkein and the Great War, a remarkable piece of work.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 09:52 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-15 11:28 pm (UTC)But it's all the more interesting, then, as these were not the regiments he served in...
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-16 01:01 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-16 03:07 am (UTC)I don't know if you get to-- if these things are yours-- but early golf stuff is highly, highly collectible. A potential supplement of your income, is my first thought.
Not that they wouldn't be neat to keep, too, of course.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-12-16 05:00 pm (UTC)If, as you surmise, Henry Hoad died in the trenches, then his name would be on the net in lists maintained, I think, by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. I'll research this later this week, if I remember (nudge me).
This seventh standard may be a reference to the system in force then where, if you could pass the final exam (which may have been the seventh standard) you could leave school early. My grandmother left school when she was 12 (in 1899) because of this.