On the subject of shipwrecks I well remember, when living at No 127 High
Street, Sandgate, rather grandly called in those days "Admiralty
House", a house which went with the job of District Officer, that
cargoes from wrecked ships often got washed up on the beach. I recall my
father gathering up tins of Huntley & Palmer’s biscuits for instance,
white stiff shirts and motor-car tyres for which we children got 1/- for
every salvaged tyre. Best of all, though, were the cases of apricot brandy
which floated ashore. I’ll say no more!
Every Kent Branch of the Legion was represented at the funeral, including
Women’s Sections. There were many tributes from comrades, even one from
Douai, France. My father organised a sort of "hands across the
Channel" ceremony on Armistice Day in 1929 when a huge bonfire was
built on the Dover cliffs high above Folkestone. Upon being lit by him the
bright and glowing fire was immediately answered by the French Legion in
Calais.
My father was also very keen on amateur theatricals. He loved the theatre
and the fast emerging world of cinema. In fact, when he was Drafting
Commander at Chatham Naval Barracks during WWI, he formed a concert party
and put on pantomime. He was himself a very good Dame! One naval recruit
applied to him to be kept in Chatham rather than being drafted abroad
somewhere. He was, he said, the owner of a small picture house in the Town
and wanted to keep it running. My father granted his request. This
"recruit" subsequently rose to be head of Gaumont British Film
Distributors. He never forgot my father’s gesture and, out of gratitude, I
was always able to get free tickets to any London GB cinema from him.
Finally, I must mention that my father became a Governor of the Sandgate
Branch of the Star & Garter Home then situated on Sandgate Hill and now
the HQ of SAGA. The inmates of this home, I remember, were horrendously
disabled military personnel – some had no limbs and yet managed to paint
pictures by holding the paint brush in their mouth. With my sister, Joyce,
in his concert party, he frequently put on shows to entertain these
unfortunate people, to make them laugh and, perhaps, get them to forget for
a moment or two.