Showing posts with label photographs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photographs. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 March 2010

The photograph that defined the class divide















Something interesting for the History Buffs in the family:

In 1937, five boys were famously snapped standing outside Lord's. But who were they, what were they doing there – and what happened to them?

By 1937 Eton and Harrow had been playing each other at cricket for 132 years. Their annual match was, and remains, probably the oldest regular fixture in a game that has the richest and longest traditions of any team sport played with a ball. It lasted two days and attracted big crowds – over 30,000 during its Edwardian heyday. To use a violent modern image, a bomb dropped on this crowd would have obliterated many of the most powerful people in England.

Male spectators wore toppers and tails, and women their summer hats and frocks. The Harrovians and Etonians themselves came in their most formal outfits – "Sunday dress" as Harrow called it – which only a very able student of the English social system could differentiate. The pupils at both schools wore, with minor variations in style, the clothes that at some point in the 19th century had become the uniform of the well-dressed English gentleman: a top hat, a tail coat, a silk waistcoat, a cane.

On the morning of Friday 9 July 1937, Peter Wagner and Thomas Dyson stood dressed in this way outside Lord's. They were Harrow pupils, aged 14 and 15, and this was the opening day of the match. The event had lost some of its social eminence in the years since the great war, but the crowd strolling into the ground that morning was still large and smart. Local boys, porters for the day, unloaded wicker hampers from spectators' cars and carried them into the stands. There were quite a few photographers about. But where in this melee was the Wagner family: Peter's father, mother and older sister?

The Wagners had made an arrangement. Peter and his friend Dyson (known as Timmy or Tim) would come down from Harrow with their cases packed so that, after the day's play was over, they could go straight to the Wagners' Surrey house for the weekend. A little before the match started at 11am, the two boys would meet the Wagner party at the Grace Gates. There could be no mistaking the rendezvous: the Grace Gates were easily the most splendid entrance to Lord's, remodelled in the previous decade to honour the memory of the legendary Victorian cricketer. This was also the first entrance that the Wagners, motoring east up St John's Wood Road, would see.

The two boys waited, the minutes ticked away. No sign of the car. Peter had started at Harrow barely three months before, at the beginning of the summer term; Tim had arrived the previous year. They were in different forms and different houses – Peter at The Park and Tim at West Acre. Peter was the smaller and the younger and also, perhaps, the cleverer boy, because he had won a scholarship and Tim had not. They knew each other through their parents, who had met on a cruise. We can speculate that waiting gave Peter more anxiety. Now the burden of responsibility (his parents, their lateness) made him turn his back on Tim and stare westwards down the likely route his parents' car would take....

More from The Guardian.

Tuesday, 24 March 2009

The Burma Orphanage Project!



Introducing the aptly named, ‘Burma Orphanage Project’!

To avoid confusion, it is a project! A project I want to undertake that will help a Burmese orphanage. One in particular, as there are a countless orphanages littering Burma and it would indeed be a monumental task to assist all! However I am not adversely hostile to the idea of expanding operations in the future, if it received positive results. I believe that any help or assistance you can give to someone who is disadvantaged is better than nothing!

I could have perhaps thought of something a little bit more sparky. Something that would catch the eye but I am not in the marketing business. The truth is that the Burmese Government, would loath to be affiliated with an orphanage, or even the word ‘orphanage!’ Many are forced to rename themselves or face closure. You will find many a ‘Child Development Centre’ or the like in Burma.

Basically - I want to get involved with helping the ‘Peniel Children Home' which is situated in Kalaymyo in northern Burma. The director, Zohmingthanga has made his need clear and when Dad and I visited we were able to give a small gift which fed the children for one month. The need for a new building and for regular sponsor for basic provisions like food is still essential.

I intend to run the Potter’s alf in July with Tom to raise money for the structure but I need help with the regular sponsor. If we could pool resources then we could make a positive impact. I know this is asking a lot in this time of economic uncertainty! But resources don’t necessarily need to be financial! We are blessed to have such a diverse family with many different skills and talents. If anyone has any ideas about how I can make this project effective and have a deep impact then please don’t hesitate.

If you do decide to provide a regular monthly sponsorship then remember it is investing in some one’s future! Like we have committed to saving in Tom’s Natwest saver scheme, we in effect are investing in our own future and there is nothing wrong with that, but £10 a month in Burma, cumulatively, could make a massive difference to someone else’s future!

This is all very much still on the drawing board. Thoughts and ideas welcome.

Here are some pictures of conditions...



Just under 30 children all live in this upstairs



This is the roof that lets in the water during the raining season, and causing floods downstairs.



The pretty basic toilets they all share!



The building from the outside!



And some of the children as we handed out fruit when we left!

I wish you could see the video of them singing to us when we first arrived. Of all the places we visited it was the one that moved me most. I don't believe that Dad's involvement through Shwekey was by chance. I think us Bettanys can help here!

Thursday, 28 February 2008

Friday, 28 September 2007

Sunday, 17 June 2007