Tuesday 29 November 2011

1812 revisited, Canadian identity real winner, Part I

 An American show is being developed about the war or 1812.   This is the war fought between the young American states and the British colony of Canada.  It is based on a Colonel Stone who was born in Connecticut in 1749.  Stone moved to Upper Canada during the American revolution.  He settled at Gananoque in eastern Ontario along the St. Lawrence.  He opened a sawmill and was appointed to a variety of government posts.

His quiet life ended when the United States declared war in June 1812.  Suddenly Col. Hill and his small community found themselves in the midst of the fight for Canada.  The St. Lawrence was the British Arm's sole supply route to Upper Canada and the Great Lakes.   Col. Stone and the Gananoque militia had to keep the supply route open.

On Sept. 21, 1812, Capt. Benjamin Forsyth, and 100 rifleman from North Carolina and Virginia attacked Gananoque in a night raid.  Their aim was to crate havoc, control the river and starve the British Army.  Col Stone fortunately defended to commemorate his efforts Ottawa is to build the Joel Stone Heritage Park.   The anniversary of the  War of 1812, is a moment for the country to be reminded the defence of Canada should be seen as a foundational moment for modern Canada.

Canada is not the only former combatant getting ready for the bicentennial.  The Americans are planning their own take on the war.  They think they won.  If Canada intends to claim victory in the War of 1812 were going to have to fight for it.  All over again.

" Canadian identity was largely shaped by the War of 1812," says James Moore, the federal heritage minister,  " It was a fight for Canada and the beginning of our independence."

Ascribing Canada's most basic characteristics - a constitutional monarchy, the preservation of a French speaking Quebec,  an accommodating native policy, our healthy economy and political relationship with the Americans - to the successful defence of Canada's borders.  Because of the War of 1812, we grew up to be uniquely Canadian, is how Moore sees it.

The main battle zone was to be Ontario and then called, Upper Canada.  At the time war was declared, the majority of 75,000 inhabitants were recent American immigrants lured across the border by cheap land and low tax.    President Thomas Jefferson's memorable phrase, the conquest of Canada," a mere matter of marching."

Getting int he way of this walking holiday was the charismatic and energetic Gen. Brock facing invasion by a nation of 7.5 million, Brock had just 1,200 British troops.  Despite the odds, Brock pulled off three stunning victories within the first three months of the war.  He ordered the capture of Fort Mackinac, a U.S. army outpost, at the junction of Lake Huron and Lake Michigan, before that garrison knew war had begun.

Then he stunned the continent by bluffing a nervous   U. S. Gen. William Hull into surrendering his entire army at Detroit without firing a shot.  Two months later he died at the battlefield of Queenston Heights, near Niagara, in the process of repelling an American force.   Brock's boldness embarrassed the Americans,  encouraged Britain's native allies to join the fight and rallied the population to the Union Jack.

Monday 7 November 2011

Conway 'The Road from the Coorain'

Earlier this year I came across the biography of Jill Ker Conway, a celebrated educator and author.
Her autobiography,  'Road from the Coorain', is about her childhood on a New South Wales, Australian station.  It is an insightful look at a country life that during draught years survival takes super human effort.

The Ker family who bought a station and took their chance to live on it and try to manage a fast amount of land with delicate soil and make a living out of the land is the setting for which Jill was born into.
Her Mother a nurse by training and her Father a farmer who had managed other properties for land owners were coping in this vast and delicate area of New South Wales.   Jill had no playmates and never saw another girl until she was seven years old let alone go to school was taught at home.   She has the ability to learn to read at an early age and her Mother to her credit made learning a game for her.

The enormous struggle to make the land profitable only has a year or two before the WWII.  Not only do they lose and help with the station but then a slow slide into a drought which is to last for five years and claim her Father's life and her mother's mental health.  Jill is thrust into the the suburban setting of Sydney in 1950 and its school life.  

Through the backdrop Jill embraces academia and finds a strained balance between caring for her Mother who has slipped into alcohol to deal with her problems.  Jill slowly gains strength, and comes into her own emotionally and intellectually which gives wings to her new found self.

Jill Ker Conway eventual went on to enrol in the Doctorate program at Harvard of the 1960/1 year.  From that point on she never looked back.   She became a Professor of History at the University of Toronto and the first woman Vice President and later the President at Smith College.

I would say with the stylish English it is a masterpiece.

Friday 4 November 2011

WWII and the BBC, a look on the past.

I have spent the last two days watching the beginning of the BBC series  The History of World War II.
I think I have watched about eight hours.  The footage is amazing the narrators and observations of the people who where directly involved make it fascinating.   This is history film at its best.   It also can reach a wider audience and easier access.

The BBC is I think the best television in the world.   Being a frustrated history teacher this appeals to me and I can watch it right through to the end.   I did have family involved in the war and affected by the war but then who didn't.

I have spent the last week watching the series.  The first two DVD's were on the Nazi rise to power and the war.  They were shown for the lack of organization at the top and how Hitler used his staff against one another, giving two men the same task.   Hitler's magnetic personality controlled and influenced people but what real interest did he have in the future of his people when he invaded Russia.   His arrogance and ignorance brought his people to ruination.  

The most amazing part is the Hitler admired the British (Empire) Commonwealth.  In his warped way that is what he tried to do for Germany.  It seems to me after reading about Kaiser Wilhelm II that he also had this envy.

The film footage and the interviews of the people who were there are excellent.   It is a tribute to the documentary maker they have made such an excellent piece of work.

I have to admit the DVD on the Submariners titled Battle of the Atlantic, has to be my favourite.   The sailer's and merchant marines who faced the German subs must be some of the bravest of men.

The series is a set of DVD's that are not in order of events.   The first is of the Nazi's on two DVD's  to a further four DVD's , The Road to War, War of the Century,  Dunkirk.  This is the first set.

The second set of DVD's, The War in the East, Battlefields, D-Day, D-Day to Berlin.  The final two are two DVD's on Auschwitz.

In toll there were 55 million people who died in the conflict.   This Remembrances Day  I will as I have always spent the minute in silence being thankful for not only my Father's contribution in the war but to the men of the forces who bravely sacrificed their lives and the ones who survived to end the evil of the war .    

Tuesday 18 October 2011

The King Speaks/ BBC and a Spirit Undaunted

This is a documentary about George VI, his life and his struggle to overcome a speech impediment.  The Daily Mails says it sheds more light on the remarkable story the inspired the movie the KIng's Speech.

King George VI faced the prospect of public speaking engagements and radio broadcasts to millions of people at the dawn of the age of mass media.  He was kept in the dark by his brother, EdwardVIII, until one week before he was to follow his brother to ascend the throne.   He not only had to look regal he had to sound it to.

Laurence Fox narrates this story of the lengths the King went to overcome his disability with the help of the unorthodox Australian speech therapist,  Lionel Logue.   Film footage of the King's speeches and interviews of some of Logue's patients show how the KIng found his voice and rallied a nation.

The film footage is amazing to see how authentic the movie was made.   There is no recording of Logue own voice but it is interesting to hear the KIng's real voice and his struggle.

I am an admirer, as with reading a lot of biography's I was fortunate enough to find a biography of George VI.   The book, 'A Spirit Undaunted', is based on the political role of the King.  

Winston Churchill spoke about the relationship that he had with GeorgeVI during the war.   Churchill had taken him into his confidence and the King showed remarkable shrewdness of judgement and character. It is one of the most interesting history books that I have read and portray's GeorgeVI as a great and underrated man and monarch.

It is interesting from the war perspective and also from the loss of this man at such a young age, 52.    It is through George VI, and Sir Winston Churchill both descendants of great leaders that Britain survived WWII.
The end of this book is the tribute to the King that was memorial in the figure of Christ on the Cross that bears the inscription:  To the Glory of God, and in memory of George, King, Servant of his People  1895 -1952 .

It is said that he left the throne more stable than England had known throughout almost her entire history.

It is no mystery our present Queen has set the example of service to the throne and her people.

Tuesday 4 October 2011

An era of elegance, order, romance and war in two award winning TVshows.

It came to my attention the other day the new  television series, ' Downton Abbey',  had won some big awards in the US,  Emmys.  I find that interesting, it has been shown on PBS, Masterpiece theatre.

 In this age for a show such as Downton to have received an award, says a lot about our romance starved culture, let alone,  the show and its theme of an upper class family and the servants who keep their world in order.   Somewhere in our modern existence is a craving for the attributes that made that world.

If we go back almost forty one years the original show of 'Upstairs Downstairs,' created by  Jean March and Eileen Atkins and brought to our televisions sets.   Eileen Atkins, an actor  family members had been in service and photos of that family that made her think how interesting it would be to have a show like this.  The producer, John Hawksworth, who very bravely decided to go with the program to London Weekend Television gave them six months to see if the show had any interest.

The difference with, 'Upstairs Downstairs',   the focus was the parallel worlds of the the servants and the high society people they worked for made for fascinating viewing.  Mrs.Bridges, the cook and Mr. Hudson, the butler where the master of the downstairs family.  Jean March played the part as the ladies maid and parlor maid who seemed to be an anchor for stories that she was central to the first story of 'Sarah' the young girl played by Pauline Collins of 'Shirley Valentine' fame.   Sarah first act of rebellion is to take a chicken from Mrs. Bridges larder and sell it, on the street, after she sees Mrs. Bridges selling a chicken to a friend possibly a former servant.   Sarah  continues on her one woman path to escape the chains of being  below stairs to eventually have the young master, Jame's child.  Although another servant girl the scullery maid  makes friend's with a footman from another house, a young Irish woman she dreams of marrying the young man.  When word reaches his employer, the scullery maid is told she can't marry the young footman.   The young woman goes into a depression and the future out of reach,  she does the unthinkable and kills herself.   Mrs. Bridges berates herself for being hard on the girl.   It is another side of the live that seemed ordered and predictable.  Romance was for the Upstairs, and a life of work and obedience was the Downstairs lot.

Sarah ask Mr. Hudson where he learned his strict code of behaviour and Hudson is his Scots, no nonsense fashion says, " from my Grandmother who starved to death as she was too proud to take charity from anyone".    Pride was one dignity owned by the Downstairs, occupants.

As Upstairs Downstairs,  Richard Bellamy and Lady Marjorie Bellamy, are like the Earl and Countess of Grantham although.   Richard is a pastor's son and Lady  Majorie the daughter of a peer.  The Earl of Grantham and his wife who is an American heiress.   A lot of the stories reflect the 19th C habit of the British upper classes marrying rich American woman.  Jennie Jerome, as I mentioned in a previous blog and Consuelo Vanderbilt both  brought very large dowry to pay off their husband's family accumulated debt.   Indeed in the Downton, the worry is that the Countess has not had a son to inherit and her family money has gone to keep the family property.   A young relations, a young doctor of the Earl is brought forward to inherit Grantham and a hope that the eldest daughter and he will possible marry.

Upstairs Downstairs has similar issues although there is no house to inherit.  Elizabeth the Bellamy daughter has come back from Germany with bohemian ideas which lead her to rebel against her  established lifestyle.   James the son has a daughter with maid, Sarah but stays in the army to eventually be in the battles of World War I.   At the end of the first series of Downton Abbey, they are also heading into war with the young heir signing up and with his profession a young doctor, it will make for a very interesting second season.

The similarities are obvious in the two shows, and they are both well acted and produced.  Downton has an edge in that it has been shot in Highclere, one of the great old houses owned by Lord Carnarvon's family,  one of the men who brought the King Tut treasures to the world.      

Sunday 2 October 2011

Miss Austen Regrets.

I thought the BBC series on, 'Sense and Sensibility', had a biography of Jane Austen but discovered tonight they had a Drama based on her life called, 'Miss Austen Regrets'.   I enjoyed it with again some very fine Actor's.

It starts off with Jane being asked to go to her brother's house now a widower to meet his nieces intended and shows Jane as a forty year old maiden aunt with a lot of spirit.  To add to the story a gentleman played by Hugh Bonneville an old beau is present visiting her brother.   It appears he is a minister.  Jane has an enjoyable visit and they have a party and dance.  She talks to her niece about love, life and marriage.  Encouraging the girl to be amused by her young beau a young law student.

After the visit Jane goes off to London to visit her other brother a banker who is ill.  She manages to get him a young doctor whom she has a flirtation with maybe a midlife crisis.  She manages to get her brother back on his feet.  At which point the niece comes to visit her in London and she tells Jane  her  beau has departed.  The young doctor manages to get Jane a interview with an official of the Regent.
He allows her to use the Regent's name in her new book, Emma.  She is hoping for a publisher and money from the sales of her books.

It seems  when she returns home there is a crisis in the family, the bank has failed for her brother and the other brother is involved.  Jane is also unwell.

It is made clear that the story has come from the nieces letters from Jane.  I have another biography and will watch it again to double check the story.  It is made clear she had proposal's of marriage but turned them down to her Mother's regret and due to her sister, Cassandra's urging.

Miss Austen Regrets  is more a social history and biography of the writer, Jane Austen.  I have to say this is going a bit off the mandate of the blog, Once bitten, as it is more intended as a history blog however from time to time I will use literature to support the history entry.  

Tuesday 27 September 2011

Sense and Sensibility, Austen 18th Century romance, history?

I watched the BBC 2008, version of,  'Sense & Sensibility', last night.   My favourite had been the Hugh Grant and Emma Thompson movie but after watching this version I actually understood it and appreciated the  actor's and how it was directed making it more credible.  Understated would be the best description with a lot of recognizable British actor's but no stars, they actually brought the era and the nuance of Austen's writing to the forefront of the story.

The young woman I know are enthralled with Austen, being a Bronte fan I have found it hard to get into the character's however I have put that down to being a feminist.  I also have a Yorkshire influenced background so living in a country parsonage makes more sense to me then a grand house with servants.  Although the Bronte's had their servants, maybe paid for by the parish.

I have also spent more time in the north than the gentrified areas of Sussex and Devonshire.  I have to say as a period piece it does capture the 18th century era.  I have not checked the timeline of Austen's writing although I know it had to be near the era of the Napoleonic Wars.  They are certainly not present in the scenes or spoken about neither are the hero's, Wellington or Nelson.

Jane Austen's awareness of emotion and female anxiety is brilliant.  It struck me as how two hundred years later we are still dealing with similar emotions with a lot less support.

I have to tip my hat to the Austenite's and the British cast and Director of the BBC  2008 version, it gave me an interesting window into that era and the woman who helped shape it.

Friday 23 September 2011

Jennie Churchill a celebrated life.

The DVD on  TV series on Jennie Churchill.   The series  taken from a two part biography on Winston Churchill's Mother, Jennie Jerome.   The series is Jennie's life from when she was a young woman and her meeting with Lord Randolph Churchill.  Jennie an American, with an interesting family history, was a dark haired beauty of her day.  Jennie's Mother moved her daughter's of whom I think were three to Paris.  This is where Lord Randolph and Jennie meet.  The intense affair of Jennie and  Lord Randolph resulted in a pregnancy and a rushed marriage, and a love match of two intense personalities.
The famous story of Jennie, a restless person decided to ride out with her sister, Leone which resulted in Winston Churchill being born in the entry of Blenheim Palace.  I have actually been in the small room where Britain's greatest leader was born.  Blenheim Palace is today open to the public and you can see the Louis XIV furnitures and mural from the SunKing's Palace.  The grounds are a wonderful place to visit with fountains and a bridge over a man made lake.  The palace was given to his ancestor the Duke of Marlborough for his victories in Europe by Queen Anne.

Jennie Churchill was Lord Randolph's greatest supporter in his career as a politician and his attempt to be a Prime Minister.   A great speaker who's life ended young from a disease that left him with a form of dementia.   His son, Winston greatly admired his Father and went to Parliament to follow in his foot steps.

Jennie, had a long affair with a Russian,  Count Kinsky.  She then went on to marry a man the age of her sons, a guard's  officer .   The marriage lasted ten years until he went off to marry one of the great actress's of the day, Patsy Cornwallis-West.

Two of Jennie's greatest achievements were,  besides her support of Lord Randolph, to organize a woman's group and raise enough funds to send a hospital ship to South Africa during the Boer War.  Her other achievement was to start a magazine, 'The Anglo-Saxon', aimed at the American market.

Before her also untimely death, she married, Arthur Porch a businessman.  Her life happy with her two sons married, and a growing number of grandchildren, Jennie fell down a flight of stairs and broke an ankle.  She never recovered from the break and died of gangrene.

Winston Churchill,  disappointment of his Mother's loss was twofold as he had hoped for her see him become Prime Minister.  Jennie died in he early 1920's and Winston achieved his greatest post in 1940.

Of all the American woman, who married into the aristocracy of Britain, Jennie Jerome made the greatest contribution, by her support of her husband, Lord Randolph, and her son Winston.

In the series she is played by the American actor, Lee Remick,


Wednesday 14 September 2011

'There was nothing to do but wait - and dance,' DeCourcy / 'We met on VJ night, supposedly celebrating victory. The bomb cast shadows that we have lived in ever since,' Bingham.

This summer I had found two books on a similar theme, the effect of prewar and post.
The first book is the poetic description of a world, a society ending,  culminating the post war world of WWI to the anxiety ridden, stillness of 1939, 'The Last Season', is sublime.
Anne DeCourcy's use of facts such as the dropping birthrate of the 1930's to the average age of marriage 27.7 for men and 25.58 for woman to her look at the violent crimes of the 1930's which were uncommon outside the home to the ability to wander freely and only certain area of London which where considered unsafe brings the era alive.
She then goes on to describe Germany from the view point of a visitor who would come back thinking that the corruption of civic life was grossly exaggerated, although the Berliner's look on and vainly had  worked to end it.  The book then goes on to describe the important figures of the day, Chamberlin to Churchill, and the society they lived in along with the debutantes of the era, diplomacy and dancing.  To the last paragraph which is the King's diary, 'Today we are at war again, and I am no longer a midshipman in the Royal Navy.'
The effect of this novel is like a still painting, a moment in time captured.

'Wind off the Sea,' by the author Charlotte Bingham is a romance novel.  Bingham's excellent writing and creation of war stories that she creates around her character's is the underlying beat of this book.
We know the character's have either been through the war or grown up in it.   She brings into her English southern coastal village an American stranger who is searching for his Mother's past or some of the history of his family.  Waldo Astley, her character comes into the life's of each family to bring about a better life or enlighten them on what life can be.  So enchanted is he with the village, he buys a home and falls in love with a war heroine.  This is set in the backdrop of a country struggling to overcome the war years  the economy and the freezing winters that were England's lot after the war.

Bingham is a skilled writer with a lot of work to her credit.  It takes a very good writer to make this type of story seem credible and she does it well.  

One of these books is more fact than fiction creating an era and the other is fiction in a setting of fact.  They are both a very enriching and entertaining.

Friday 19 August 2011

Royal Weddings and Monarchy, history of today and yesterday!

My last blog I wrote about the book Salaam Bricklane,  the author is Tarquin Hall.   I had spelt the title wrong.

Last night I watched the Royal Wedding.  I had really just wanted the music from the ceremony but got the DVD from the library.   I am a history buff and have just been watching David Starkey's Monarchy series.
It was with particular interest to view Westminister Abbey and see Edward the Confessor's altar.   I am not sure that when I was in the Abbey on my last visit to London that I understood the history of the Abbey.
I did enjoy seeing Elizabeth I and the two Mary's burial sites.   It is difficult without a full knowledge of history to understand who the burial sites in the Abbey belong to other than the fact they were  mostly rulers.  Starkey's Monarchy does give you a better idea.   I have also spent the winter reading about the Tudor era in British history.  At the moment I am half way through a book on Margaret Swynford, Duchess of Lancaster, who was the 14th century ancestor of the Royal family as we know it today.  The author of the book, Mistress of Monarchy is Alison Weir, a very fine historical biographer.   I can't say it is an easy read as it is not a novel but taken from historical fact but worth the challenge.

It does put a new light on history if you move on from history books to historical biographies.  Eventually you get a real sense of the era and the people.

The Royal Wedding of Catherine and William was I think enjoyable on several levels.  It had the wonderful pomp and ceremony fit for a future King and Queen, the Abbey lending itself to creating sense of the English people and their history.  The Church of England with its ability to use the language of people in a cultured and comforting way and still make people aware of its values.  The elegance of the bride and the wedding party.  The two Princes in their household uniforms, Irish guards, William and Household Guards, Harry.   The generations present;  Queen Elizabeth, Prince Philip and Prince Charles and his Duchess Camilla.

I think it is hard not to love that kind of pageantry.   And respect, the British who have retained their traditions.

The world may move on but the past holds people's hearts.

      

Wednesday 17 August 2011

A new Day and a book review, Saleem Bricklane!

My first blog!  I have decided to write a brief book review about a book a friend found and passed on to me.

The book is Saleem Bricklane by Tarquin Hall. Tarquin, a British journalist decides he wants to return to his native England after living in the India.

He gets to London and wants to live where he grew up but can't afford the Barnes area or the area nearby.
He searches around London and the only place he can live is the East End of London.   The East End of London is known for its multicultural immigration over  centuries, always  a tough but possible an accepting area to live.

He gets an attic flat and a hilarious landlord who has spent his formative years growing up in the East End but is from Bangladesh, a fellow tenant a Jewish lady who has spent her life in the area shows him great kindness and her world and a host of other characters in the area.

Tarquin is so concerned when his Indian girlfriend, Anu who has grown up in North Carolina comes to stay and sees his attic but Anu makes the most of the vibrant area and life in London. She discovers she has an Aunty who is willing to 'help'.

The book gives a new outlook on British immigrations and the British spirit and the effect it has on the people who go to the East End.   Best read I have had in a while.  It should be made into a movie.

I would give it a 8 out of 10.

Namaste