Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Chelsea Pensioners help me keep my promise: Update on a previous post

Last year, I did a post about the inscription in a Royal Hampshires Journal of 1915, and here I give an update taken from another blog that I have started regarding my new venture trying to sell items in antique markets.


My other blog can be found at: http://vintageandantiquesmarket.blogspot.co.uk/

The relevant section is toward the end of this posting, however, I thought that I would include the whole written piece to put it into context.

Let Down by George IV in Chiswick, but Promises Kept Thanks to Chelsea Pensioners at Covent Garden (After An Ambush by The Ninja Nanny)



Sunday was a wet and miserable day in Chiswick Antiques Fair in the George IV pub in Chiswick. So much so that the back courtyard was flooded during a particularly heavy thunder storm.



Poor 'Steve The Market' had hurt his back the night before, so it was left to his wife Suzie and Justin to organise us all (not an easy task first thing on a Sunday Morning)!



Being open from 11am, it was probably more like 12.30pm before the first tentative customer walked in. A brief walk around the room and back out to the bar again, hardly stopping to catch a breath, let alone a look at any of the stalls! You would imagine that we were all growling at them from behind our respective stockpiles!! lol



The manic antics of 'Steve The Market' were sadly missed to entertain us. The venue we use is usually a comedy venue, and I think Steve sees himself as an undiscovered comedic tallent. It usually works, bringing in customers and making them smile and relax while browsing.



Having just been given a huge stock of Victorian and Georgian candlesticks to sell, we thought that we were on to a winner on such a dark and dismal day, and the anouncement that Utility Bills are to increase (AGAIN!) before winter with a threat of blackouts in prospect. Surely we could move some of them on?



We did manage to get rid of two pairs mid afternoon, and a heavily discounted Afghan Rug much later. After paying the provider of said items and for our stall, a negative balance ended our day a little depressingly!



Monday morning at 4.30 is not my natural environment! However there was a little hope that we might recoup the losses of the previous day.



Things started well with the sale of 5 sets of 1920's/1930s doorhandles and a Palais Royale Picture Frame within the first few minutes to another trader!



As we continued to set up the stall, installing all of the electrical items that give us light and a presence at the various venues, there was suddenly an almighty explosion! While trying to manouver the Itlian Chandalier, it hit the Eddison Squirel Cage light bulb on one of the electrical insulator lamps, shattering it, and blowing the main fuse, showering glass all over!! Was this an omen for the day?




A little later, a little old lady of probably 80+ years young, shuffled toward us on her zimmer frame. I spent a pleasant few minutes explaining my Trench Art Collection, lulling me into a false, smug, sence of security. Within seconds I was charmingly ambushed by this Ninja Pensioner. Talk about velvet gloves and a cast iron fist!! "how much is your Verdun Letter Opener?" "£10 love." (What I had paid for it plus a £1 profit for my efforts of sourcing and bringing it back from the Paris Markets). Anyone else, I had been quoting £15 for the same item, but I felt sorry for the poor old soul on such a cold and miserable morning. "The tip is bent back. I'll give you £7 or nothing." The Viet Cong would have been proud of such a vicious and incisive ambush on a weak and feeble opponent! Crushed, I caved in to her demand and even wrapped it in bubble-wrap and put it into a bag for her!! I will be older and wiser the next time that I meet the Ninja Nanny!!!



As at other Markets over the last few weeks, all of the traders have been having a bad time. Trade is slow and the buyers not buying. It was another slow day, but, as ever it is really nice taking time chatting to other traders and the customers that are interested in particular items. My mother was fond of the addage that 'the Devil makes work for idle hands, so plenty of time was utilised polishing candlesticks and Trench Art! lol





The large slab of Jade was of particular interest to customers this week. We have had it at about three or four sales and hardly got a notice. Yesterday though, it seemed that almost everyone wanted to know about it.



All that I know is that it was collected in Hong Kong in the 1950's. The form reminds me of a fishing weight or anchor, however, we have been given a few alternatives. One gentleman suggested that it was a funerary offering, and yet another, a head rest. Someone has also suggested that it might be from New Zeland rather than Chineese because of the colour, but I have absolutely no idea. If any of the readers of this blog have any further suggestions, please feel free to comment as it is a facinating piece, and beautifully tactile.



You might imagine though, there was no sale of the slab of Jade to give us 'a little tickle,' (as my friend Dee says when she makes a really nice profit).



The last time that we were in France, we picked up a bundle of French Metis Linen. This has given us 'a nice little tickle' over the last few months, and the best sale of the day was our penultimate linen sheet. It went a long way toward paying for the stall, and coupled with a few more small sales, left us with a tiny profit after paying for the parking too.



During the late afternoon, feeling like I was watching paint dry, a rather colourful pair of gentlemen approached the stall. Clad in the scarlet black and gold of the Royal Hopital Chelsea, (http://www.chelsea-pensioners.co.uk/) they browsed the stock, taking particular note of a book that I have used for display purposes only. (There is a long story about how I aquired this document, and why took the subsequent actions that I am about to explain. If you are interested in the document and back story, you can read it on my other blog at: http://trenchartswordsintoploughshares.blogspot.co.uk/2012/11/one-from-collection-in-memoriam-pt.html)


The book itself is the Hampshire Regimental Journal of 1915 with a memorial inscription on the internal flyleaf.


"I really like that, but I'm afraid to ask how much as I'm sure I can't afford it. It would be nice to have it at chapel on Sunday when we meet 'The Hampshires'."


"Excuse me gentlemen, I couldn't help overhearing your conversation. Are you meeting with the Royal Hampshires on Sunday?" The response was in the affirmative. "I was wondering if you might do me a favour?" "If we can, young man." "I need to get 'The Journal' to 'The Hampshires' for their Regimental Museum or Archive, and I was wondering if you might pass it on for me?"


Well, I thought that they were going to fall through the floor! lol These were the most charming men that you could have met, full of fun and the joy of life. Teasing eachother while they chatted with me, I spent the most pleasant few minutes with them, and with a parting handshake, they invited me to their service on Sunday at the Royal Hospital on Sunday at 11am with Parade at 10.40am in the courtyard. 


Having agreed to try to make it, I now realise that I am double booked, so will not be able to attend, so I make a public apology here for my non attendance to Hussar Bill (Paddy) Fox BEM, (Chelsea Pensioner Chief Tour Guide) and to his camrade Sapper John Denton of the Royal Engineers. I salute you gentlemen for your service to the country, for helping me to keep my promise to return the Journal to the Hampshires, and for making my day.



Sometimes it is not about the financial reward of work, but the human contacts that enrich your life. 

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Stow Maries WWI aerodrome saved by £1.5m grant


An aerodrome thought to be the last intact World War I airfield in Europe is to be restored thanks to a campaign by volunteers and a £1.5m grant.
Stow Maries in Essex, built in 1916, was a base for the new 37 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, who helped defend London from German bombing raids.
It closed in 1919 and remained overgrown until 2009 when it was rediscovered by a group of enthusiasts.
Now the National Heritage Memorial Fund grant means its future is secured.
Of the 250 aerodromes built during World War I, Stow Maries is the only one to have remained in near-perfect condition of the 10 that still exist.
Brigade staff inspecting plane
  • Stow Maries was home to 37 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, led by 19-year-old Captain Claude Ridley
  • The last Zeppelin shot down during the war was by the 37th Squadron in June 1917
  • The first mid-air collision of the war was recorded at Stow Maries in 1917
  • In 1918, it was the first British airfield to accept US squadrons
It was built as a direct response to increased attacks by German Zeppelin airships and later Gotha fixed-wing bombers on British mainland.
There are more than 24 original Grade II listed Royal Flying Corps operation buildings remaining, including the original officers' mess, other ranks' mess, blacksmith's, ambulance station and morgue.
The site had been in danger of being sold for redevelopment.
The Stow Maries Great War Aerodrome Trust will now restore the airfield to its wartime condition and open a museum commemorating the men who flew here.
It will also host workshops, teaching the old skills of aircraft construction.
Russell Savory, from the Friends of Stow Maries Aerodrome, said: "There's much spoken about the land warfare and how terrible that was... but there's not so much known about the aviators who were writing the books on how to fly for when WWII came along.
"Such a sacrifice was paid by those guys and I think it's my duty with this little aerodrome to keep that recorded."

Mr Savory's ambition is for the museum to be one that "smells and works and [is] not just a display."
The chairman of the trust, Jeremy Lucas, said he hoped the next five years would see "a sustained commemoration" of "extraordinary human exploits and stories".
He said: "By opening up this site, the public and particularly young people will gain a greater understanding of how as a nation we overcame it."

The site was bought from a private vendor with backing from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, Essex County Council, Maldon District Council and English Heritage.

Sunday, 13 October 2013

WW1 beyond the mud and trenches: BBC’s plans for the centenary of World War One

BBC chief says the First World War programmes lined up for 2014 will consider both the wider conflict and its impact on Britain



It would be “utterly inappropriate” if the BBC’s treatment of the centenary of the First World War adopted a tone of “celebration”, according to the senior executive in charge of the corporation’s four years of coverage.

Adrian Van Klaveren told The Independent that he was equally determined that the BBC’s output would not be trapped in the sombre mood of the annual Remembrance Day service but would explore the impact of the conflict on Britain’s economy, its class system and its place in the world.
He said the BBC had a duty to look beyond the popular idea that the Great War was a story of “mud and trenches” and to impress on British audiences the pain suffered by Australia and New Zealand over the Gallipoli campaign of 1915. Unveiling details of the BBC’s coverage, the former controller of Radio 5 Live revealed that the BBC would be screening My Great War, a version of the classic 1964 television series The Great War, which was originally voiced by Michael Redgrave. “There is a lot of material in that series that wasn’t used; interviews that never saw the light of day,” Mr Van Klaveren said. “We are re-exploring that and making a programme specifically around that archive.”
The BBC’s coverage will begin early next year with a four-part BBC 1 series presented by Jeremy Paxman. On 28 June, the BBC will broadcast live from Sarajevo, where the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand – which prompted the outbreak of war – is being marked by events including a concert performed by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. The moment will be examined in a real-time documentary on Radio 2 hosted by Jeremy Vine.
Day by Day, a Radio 4 documentary series presented by the historian Margaret MacMillan, will then trace the 37 days between the Sarajevo attack and Britain’s declaration of war on 4 August. The same period will also be covered in a three-part BBC 2 drama called 37 Days.
Mr Van Klaveren compared his role to that of a “conductor” and said he was determined that “the different perspectives” of the war were understood. “There is a danger that the WW1 is seen purely in terms of the Western Front, in terms of mud and trenches and barbed wire and through the perspective of what the poets wrote,” he said. “There is much more than that.”
The BBC’s output will include coverage of the Easter Rising in Ireland in 1916 and the participation in the war of a million troops from India. No programmes have been commissioned from German sources, although Mr Van Klaveren said German perspectives would be represented in shows such as The Passing Bells, a five-part drama series from Tony Jordan which tells the stories of two young soldiers from opposing sides.
The other key centenary anniversaries that are likely to be the subjects of live broadcast are Remembrance Week 2014, Gallipoli in April 2015, the battle of the Somme and the battle of Jutland in 2016, the battle of Passchendaele in 2017 and the declaration of peace in 2018.
Mr Van Klaveren is anxious that the coverage of the conflict, which cost 37 million lives around the world, strikes the right mood. “What we can’t do for four years is something which feels like the tone adopted throughout Remembrance Day because you won’t be able to get into the more difficult and uncomfortable questions,” he said. “Equally what it can’t be about is about celebration either – that would be utterly inappropriate. It’s about a tone which is poignant but not mawkish and which is serious but not over sombre.”
Mr Van Klaveren was given the role following his involvement in the BBC’s Lord McAlpine fiasco last year. In the wake of the Jimmy Savile scandal, he was seconded from Radio 5 Live into a temporary role as head of news – only for Newsnight to promptly make false allegations of sex abuse against the former Conservative Party treasurer.
Following publication of the critical Pollard report into BBC News, Mr Van Klaveren was given a new role. He expressed pride in his record at 5 Live,  “successfully moving the station from London to Salford” and giving it “a sense of purpose”. He denied that some BBC colleagues were resentful of his new role after an episode that damaged the organisation’s reputation. “I’ve really not picked that up at all,” he said. “My sense of this project is that people see how important it is and are keen to be involved and supporting me in my role of trying to make [the BBC] do everything it possibly can.”
He admitted feeling “great responsibility” for overseeing a project which will have an important part in underscoring the BBC’s public service role as it prepares to negotiate its licence fees beyond 2016. “This is a wonderful opportunity to show this is what the BBC is worth and what it can contribute.”

100 years on: Highlights of the BBC's centenary coverage

Britain’s Great War
The opening series in the BBC’s four years of First World War coverage, Jeremy Paxman’s four-part documentary for BBC 1 will draw upon his expertise of British history and examine how the conflict changed the country and the lives of the people.
The Passing Bells
Drama writer Tony Jordan (creator of the BBC’s Life on Mars and leading writer for EastEnders) is writing a five-part BBC 1 series following two young soldiers, one British and one German, as they adapt to life on the front.
37 Days
Three-part BBC 2 drama, written by Mark Hayhurst and starring Sinead Cusack (pictured), Ian McDiarmid and Tim Pigott-Smith, which questions assumptions that the Sarajevo shooting made the conflict inevitable.
My Great War
Film made from the unseen archive of the classic 26-part 1964 series The Great War, which recorded hundreds of hours of interview footage. BBC 4 Collections will also publish a selection of the original interview recordings in their entirety on BBC iPlayer.

Selling Trench Art at the London Markets





I have been really busy recently, and been remiss in posting on this site due to the fact that I have been doing a stall selling items at local Antiques Markets. 

There used to only be one 4 o'clock in my day, and it surely was not AM!! lol



Early mornings and long days are part and parcel of the Antique Market Trade, and it is something that I will just have to get used to. In this dire ecconomic climate, we have to do everything that we can to keep the wolf from the door, this includes selling all of my cherished Trench Art collection.




Our merchandise is eclectic (to say the least!) ranging from vintage and antique French and African items, to antique English Prints, various electrical lights and pices of stained glass. We have a superb pair of lamps custom made from ceramic electrical insulators at the moment that make quite a statement.



Tomorrow (Monday 13th October) we are in Covent Garden Antiques Market in London (details above) from 5am to 5pm if you would like to call in and say hello.





Having just aquired a car, we hope to be off to France soon to refresh our stock from the Vide Greniers, Marche aux puces, and Brocantes. Should things go well, we would look to do this at least monthly (any excuse for a trip across the Channel)! lol





We will be offering local deliveries and an international postal service for our items, and a warm welcome to all callers, from the casual browser to the serious collector.

To support this endevour, I have set up another blog through which I hope to bring news, photographs and stories from the markets that we attend, and can be viewed at: http://vintageandantiquesmarket.blogspot.co.uk/ I will also add snippets on here to keep all informed of what I am up to.




Malala Yousafzai warns Barack Obama against Pakistan drone attacks



Malala Yousafzai, the girl who defied Taliban orders not to go to school which resulted in her being retributively shot by the group, has met with  US president Barack Obama.
The inspiring 16-year-old from Pakistan has been lauded for her education and women’s rights activism, leading her to be hotly-tipped for the Nobel Peace Prize which was issued on Friday.
Arriving in Washington to speak at two events, the teenager said that she asked the president to engage in greater co-operation with the Pakistani government.
‘I thanked president Obama for the United States’ work in supporting education in Pakistan and Afghanistan and for Syrian refugees,’ she said.
‘I also expressed my concerns that drone attacks are fuelling terrorism. Innocent victims are killed in these acts, and they lead to resentment among the Pakistani people. If we refocus efforts on education it will make a big impact.’
Malala missed out on the coveted Nobel prize, which was given to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons for its work in destroying Syria’s arsenal.
President Obama – who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009 – met Malala on Friday alongside his wife, Michelle, and their daughter Malia.
Their meeting had even more significance because it coincided with the International Day of the Girl, which was declared as such by the United Nations at the end of 2011.
Malala has been in the public eye since she was attacked by members of the Taliban as she travelled home from school in October 2012.
She received medical treatment in the UK and is currently residing in Birmingham with her family.
Militants have vowed that they will kill the schoolgirl if the chance arises, because they believe she ‘targeted and criticised Islam.’
Her continued campaigning on the importance of education for young girls has been heralded across the globe.
A memoir entitled I am Malala was released on Tuesday, while she was awarded a Pride of Britain award a few days earlier and received an invite to visit the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
This week she also made The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart speechless with her moving reply to a question he had posed to her.

Malala says she's no Western puppet



Malala Yousafzai hit back at claims that she has become a figure of the West, insisting she was proud to be a Pakistani.
The 16-year-old, who was shot by the Taliban for championing girls' right to an education, claimed she retained the support of people in her homeland, and reiterated her desire to enter Pakistani politics.
The activist was shot in the head on her school bus on October 9 last year for speaking out against the Taliban.
She was flown for specialist care in Britain, where she has continued her education, while she has been feted and honoured in the West.
On Thursday, she won the European Union's prestigious Sakharov human rights prize, while US President Barack Obama welcomed her to the White House on Friday.
Asked in a BBC television interview broadcast Sunday about some people in Pakistan thinking she was a "figure of the West" and "a Westerner now", she said: "My father says that education is neither Eastern or Western. Education is education: it's the right of everyone.
"The thing is that the people of Pakistan have supported me. They don't think of me as Western. I am a daughter of Pakistan and I am proud that I am a Pakistani.
"On the day when I was shot, and on the next day, people raised the banners of 'I am Malala'. They did not say 'I am Taliban'.
"They support me and they are encouraging me to move forward and to continue my campaign for girls' education."
She highlighted the problem of education in the midst of the Syrian conflict.
"We want to help every child in every country that we can," she said.
"We will start from Pakistan and Afghanistan and Syria now, especially because they are suffering the most and they are on the top that need our help.
"Later on in my life I want to do politics and I want to become a leader and to bring the change in Pakistan.
"I want to be a politician in Pakistan because I don't want to be a politician in a country which is already developed."