Author Topic: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"  (Read 58042 times)

Offline Blondie1

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #216 on: Monday 01 December 08 18:08 GMT (UK) »
Hi  Matt,

It's  so wonderful to have so much faith.    You wonder how she managed to carry on, but it was her faith in God that did that.   What a wonderful lady she was.

Val
Gibson  Rushton Woodcock Brownhill Marchant/Merchant  Watts  Coleman Hepworth Senior Robinson, Howard Woodall/Woodhall,  Dunbar, Reed/Read.  Allchurch, Rigney Shepherd

Offline GAYNOR WILKINSON

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #217 on: Monday 01 December 08 18:11 GMT (UK) »
Matt,
I have followed your story about Mary Ann and her family and the tragic times they had to endure. One thing that strikes me though, and that is your obvious sensitivity to wards your predecessors. I was quite shocked when I realised just how young you are and I can't help thinking that if more young people and older people for that matter had your sensitivity to wards others and their plight, how much better our society would be. Good on you Matt.

Gaynor
Frimston Flint
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Iball Bistre, Hawarden
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Scott Staffordshire
Wilkinson Cheshire

Offline Paul Caswell

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #218 on: Monday 01 December 08 19:36 GMT (UK) »
Matt,

I hope you're studying literature at uni, but whatever you study I think you will excel. It has been a pleasure to read your work and, unlike most I read on the internet, I intend to go through it again from the start when you have finished.

You are good!

Paul
Caswell - Durham(Jarrow), Northumberland(Berwick), Dorset(Netherbury)
Drury - Middlesex(Kensington), Shropshire(Oswestry/Selattyn)
Turner - Dorset(Parkstone)
Speight - Essex(Braintree), Kent(Gravesend), Westmorland(Kendal)
Stockley - Dorset(Corfe Castle)
Amey - Suffolk(Haverhill)
Cousins - Norfolk(Ketteringham)
Sears - Bedfordshire(Potton), Cambridgeshire(Gamlingay)
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Offline kesannah

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #219 on: Monday 01 December 08 19:44 GMT (UK) »
Matt,
I have finally finshed reading this blog together with all the comments from other Rootschatters.

Well done you.  I shall look forward to the next instalment.
It is good to know that there are young people who are interested in their family history  and  have such respect too.

I wish you good luck in all you do.

Kesannah
Hide/Hyde Kent,Sussex,West Ham
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Reed West Ham,East Ham London
Banks Seaford,Rottingdean Sussex
Koller Poplar London,Como Italy.
Checkley Northamptonshire.
Bentley Northamptonshire.West Ham,Poplar
Ridley Gatehead Durham Northumberland.
Poplar.Galt, Ontario, Canada
Corbyn Poplar,West Ham.Suffolk
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Watson Norwich,West Ham


Corbyn Fressingield Suffolk
Ridley.Galt Ontario


Offline mazwad

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #220 on: Monday 01 December 08 19:50 GMT (UK) »
You're not the only one getting choked up Matt and that is down to how beautifully you tell the story.
Claridge, Banes, Davidson, Guthrie. West Ham area.

Offline bishenbertie

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #221 on: Monday 01 December 08 21:16 GMT (UK) »
 Wonderful writing.  Definately a two boxes of tissues story.
Westbrook - London, Oxford
Squibb, Brooks - London
Kingcombe, Parsons, Penny, Crocker, Brooks - Devon

Offline craizi daizi

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #222 on: Monday 01 December 08 21:29 GMT (UK) »


More tissues please..........         :'(



Daizi
Flisher : UK and Sth Africa and Australia<br />Munro  : Scotland,  Inverness, Ross and Cromarty and Australia<br />Prust   : Bristol, UK, and Australia<br />Woodburgess/Wood/Burgess/Wood-Burgess,  Adcock/Brudenall in Lincolnshire UK and Australia<br />Taylor :Yorkshire,  Nottinghamshire and Australia<br />Mathers  : Montrose , Scotland and Australia<br />Johnson  :  ?? and Australia
Dixon Australia and Cumberland

Offline JJbeech

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #223 on: Monday 01 December 08 21:48 GMT (UK) »
This woman was amazing!! ::)
credit crunch?? we dont know we're living!! :'(
here was me worried bout xmas pressies!!!  :-\
if only we knew the half of it!!
 :o oops we do know! thanks to some fantastic writing!!! well done raeybo!
Hope your still enjoying writing it!! I sure am enjoying reading it!! (novel been dumped!! ;D ;D)

Offline Matt R

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #224 on: Tuesday 02 December 08 00:53 GMT (UK) »
Nothing But Bad Times: Chapter Twelve, Part Two

It was May 15 1940, and in Stephenson Way, Corby, Nellie received the letter from her mother, spurring her on in a moving last message to her daughter. Nellie did gather some strength from it. Her mother had been in this situation seven times, twice with her parents, twice with her husbands, and thrice with Lizzie, Catherine and Patrick. She knew what it was like to feel pain, to go into hell with only one option: keep going until you reach the other side.

Nellie's faith seemed to pay off. She was told that she could take Michael back home, as long as he took his medicine. I have a picture of Michael in the hospital bed, he is just a child. Nellie and Harry must have been so worried about him, it is of course, natural instinct to be so. Therefore, so it was that Michael came back home again, to the relief of the entire family. However, there was still a war on. On the evening of May 23 1940, a Nazi Luftwaffe plane dropped a bomb that scored a direct hit on the house three doors down from the Russell family. The children, Michael included, were terrified, and screamed the place down. At this time also, Nellie was heavily pregnant with another child, Francis. His birth was brought on early by the panic of the nights hiding in the air raid shelter, a shelter that Harry had built himself. Francis was born in mid June. Just days later, little Michael died suddenly. He was supposed to be recovering well from his fall. I do not have his death certificate but I have an inclination he may have died from something like swelling of the brain, or fluid on the brain. Nonetheless, it ripped through Nellie and Harry like shrapnel. They were devastated. The whole family grieved like they had never grieved before. Nellie became depressed and poor newborn Francis hadn't got a clue what was going on at all. Things just hit rock bottom for the Russell's. And for Nellie, there was further bad news from Scotland. Her auntie Elizabeth had died. Another one of Mary Ann's siblings had passed on. She, along with her brother Joseph, were the only surviving children of Bernard and Eliza. Elizabeth died on October 19 1940, in Carfin. She is buried in St Patrick's, New Stevenston.

As the nights become colder and the days shorter, Nellie was losing hope. She would read her mother's letter over and over again, she nearly wore out the pencil lines! In a moment of completely being overwhelmed whilst reading this letter, I noticed that on the last page of the letter (it was 4 pages long) I saw a dark spot about five lines from the bottom. I turned to my gran and I said “That could well be where one of your mum's tears landed”. My gran simply said “could be. My mammy had a hard life”. And it was to get harder still.

The bombing of Corby once every other week meant that the Russell's had to take cover in their back garden shelter. Nellie and her children rushed into the shelter as soon as the sirens sounded, Harry did not move. He preferred to stay indoors and smoke his pipe!!! A true Brit if ever there was one! The Nazi's scored a few direct hits on Corby, but not many. Yet, the family had not yet really recovered from Michael's death, and more heartache was to follow. Baby Francis started to develop a cold, and after spending several nights in the air raid shelters, he easily and quickly caught a cold. Just a few months old, he almost didn't stand a chance. He quickly caught pneumonia, and died on December 11 1940. This is where I arrive at the bit I have long struggled with. I cannot put this into words, but I notice that when the topic of Michael and Francis' deaths comes up, the mood suddenly changes. My gran always looks to the floor and as she thinks about what she saw back then (she was eight), you can tell she is waiting for someone to change the subject. Words like heartache and devastation belittle the tragedy that Nellie and Harry faced. In just six months, Nellie had buried two of her baby boys. Francis died early in the morning in his mother's shaking arms, and what happened next comes directly from my granny. The family were so grief stricken that the afternoon after Francis' burial, Nellie really did hit rock bottom. She struggled with her crutches, hopped away and found a field, on which she fell to the ground and wept uncontrollably. Harry found her after he followed in the family car, and the whole family sat in the field and cried their eyes out all day. This was raw grief, in it's naked and cruellest of forms. Nellie  looked up to the sky and shouted at the top of her voice. Shouting the names of her two sons. Shouting “No, no, no!” That day in the field has haunted the family ever since. My gran and her siblings who were alive at the time, never forgot it. After these few lines, I myself am in tears. I just cannot imagine this loss. The children are referred to as “poor wee Michael and Francie”. They are buried together in “the old” cemetery, Corby. How can I possibly describe it? How on earth does somebody even attempt to go on after such consecutive tragedies? Well, upsetting as it is, it wasn't over yet...

Copyright © Matthew Reay, 2008
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