Channel Island Book of Days

The Channel Islands are unique—a result of 800 years of independence. Taking you through the year day by day, The Channel Islands Book of Days contains quirky, eccentric, momentous and amusing events and facts from the earliest period of the island's history to the present. Entries cover a huge variety of subjects and are drawn from a myriad original documents and sources, including 300 years of newspaper reports; diary entries from the English Civil War and diary extracts from the time of the German occupation, written by government officials, teenagers, German officers and slave workers. Ideal for dipping into, this addictive little book will keep you entertained and informed. Featuring hundreds of snippets of information on a huge variety of historical subjects, it will delight residents and visitors alike.

1114955736
Channel Island Book of Days

The Channel Islands are unique—a result of 800 years of independence. Taking you through the year day by day, The Channel Islands Book of Days contains quirky, eccentric, momentous and amusing events and facts from the earliest period of the island's history to the present. Entries cover a huge variety of subjects and are drawn from a myriad original documents and sources, including 300 years of newspaper reports; diary entries from the English Civil War and diary extracts from the time of the German occupation, written by government officials, teenagers, German officers and slave workers. Ideal for dipping into, this addictive little book will keep you entertained and informed. Featuring hundreds of snippets of information on a huge variety of historical subjects, it will delight residents and visitors alike.

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Channel Island Book of Days

Channel Island Book of Days

by Mark Brocklesby
Channel Island Book of Days

Channel Island Book of Days

by Mark Brocklesby

Hardcover

$18.95 
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Overview

The Channel Islands are unique—a result of 800 years of independence. Taking you through the year day by day, The Channel Islands Book of Days contains quirky, eccentric, momentous and amusing events and facts from the earliest period of the island's history to the present. Entries cover a huge variety of subjects and are drawn from a myriad original documents and sources, including 300 years of newspaper reports; diary entries from the English Civil War and diary extracts from the time of the German occupation, written by government officials, teenagers, German officers and slave workers. Ideal for dipping into, this addictive little book will keep you entertained and informed. Featuring hundreds of snippets of information on a huge variety of historical subjects, it will delight residents and visitors alike.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780752491066
Publisher: The History Press
Publication date: 11/01/2013
Series: Book of Days
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 5.10(w) x 6.80(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Mark Brocklesby is the author of Jersey: Not a Guide to.

Read an Excerpt

The Channel Islands Book of Days


By Mark Brocklesby

The History Press

Copyright © 2013 Mark Brocklesby
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7524-9416-6



CHAPTER 1

January 1st


1903: 'The first day of the year is with all classes in Guernsey the one most strictly observed as a holiday, and, in all but the religious observance, is more thought of than even Christmas Day. Presents are given to friends, servants and children, the heads of families gather around them those who have left the paternal roof, more distant relatives exchange visits; young people call at the houses of their aged kinsfolk to wish them many happy returns of the season, and, in many cases, to receive the gifts that are awaiting them; and receptions – now become almost official in their character – are held by the Lieutenant-Governor, the Bailiff and the Dean. Cake and wine are offered to visitors, and the day ends in most households with a feast in proportion with their means in society.

All the morning the roads and streets are crowded with groups of persons hurrying from house to house ... when neighbours join in eating the many cakes for which Guernsey is famous and which are considered suitable for the occasion ... and so completely is this repast looked upon in the light of a family feast, that parents living in the country send presents of these cakes to their children who have taken service in town.' (Edgar MacCulloch, Guernsey Folk Lore)


January 2nd

To most outsiders, the traditional rivalry between the two larger Channel Islands is somewhat baffling. Indeed for the most part it is good-natured banter between the Jersey 'crapauds' and the Guernsey 'donkeys'. However, the gloves come off on the day of the annual Muratti Cup final between the two island's football teams. Numerous times the match has ended with violence between the two sets of supporters:

I was glad it was us won. The Jerseys came down to the harbour after the match to see us off in the boat. It was loaded with people, what with the team and supporters. Jack Priaulx, who was captain of our team, was standing high up on the deck, waving the cup about. It's true he'd had a few drinks and was perhaps looking too pleased with himself. One of the bright Jersey boys shouted out 'Guernsey donkeys!' The others laughed and we laughed too; but then a whole crowd of the sods started calling out 'Guernsey donkeys! Guernsey donkeys!' – our boys wasn't having that. They started shouting, 'Crapauds! Crapauds! Jersey crapauds!' There would have been fights if we could have got ashore, but the gangway was up ... They came over to Guernsey the next year and got it back.


All this banter is immaterial to the Auregnais and Sercquiais, who are convinced that theirs is the best island anyway. (G.B. Edwards, The Book of Ebenezer Le Page)


January 3rd

1795: A reporter for The Times gives a picture of life for the military stationed in Guernsey at the end of the eighteenth century:

It is a happy circumstance for the troops that barracks are about to be erected here. Numbers of men die daily for want of proper accommodation, the sick and healthy being promiscuously huddled together. Their diseases are dysenteries and fevers; the latter supposed to have been imported by transports from the West Indies. We have at present 4,000 regulars here, and more daily expected, which, with 2,000 militia belonging to the island (for here every man is a soldier), and our iron-bound coast, we may bid defiance to a far stronger force. This day the brig Eagle, Capt Corand, from Norfolk, Virginia, sailed from hence for Morlaix, with 40 French Prisoners taken at Martinique in hopes of bringing back an equal number in exchange; but of which we are doubtful.

The climate is so temperate, that we have at this time carnations, stocks, &c in full bloom. Provisions are dear, but liquors are very cheap. Port wine, 1s 6d, Claret, 1s to 2s, brandy and rum, 4s per gallon, Hollands, 3s and cyder, 1½d per quart.

(The Times)


January 4th

1943: The freezing night of 4/5 January saw the sinking of the SS Schokland a mile off the south coast of Jersey. The Schokland was a Dutch merchant steamer that had been commandeered by the Germans to carry cargo, passengers and occasionally military personnel between France and the Channel Islands. On this day there was a large contingent of German troops at the harbour in St Helier waiting for passage to St Malo. Their expected troop transporter had been delayed and they were told that they could travel on the Schokland, which was to leave at 6.30 p.m. that evening and 284 men choose to do so. As the ship, with its crew of twenty-six, left the harbour the night was clear and the sea was calm, although it was very cold.

The Dutch captain had been flown into Jersey only that afternoon and had no previous experience of the local waters. Just south of St Brelades Bay the Schokland struck a reef. It suffered severe damage below the waterline, and within half an hour she sank. One of the two lifeboats on board had been launched, but most of the passengers and crew had gone down into the cold January water. Of the 310 people that had steamed out of St Helier harbour, only 170 were rescued. Amazingly four people survived the freezing waters that night and were picked up in the succeeding days having drifted on makeshift rafts. (John Ovenden & David Shayer, Shipwrecks of the Channel Islands)


January 5th

January is the start of the ploughing season in the Channel Islands. In the past this was a social event were the farmers would pool their labour in order to get the task done during the short winter days. This tough task, called Grand' Tchéthue in Jersey and Le Grand' Querrue in Guernsey, demanded that farmers cooperate as the ploughs were drawn by as many as twelve horses, or by a mixed team of oxen and horses. It was a social event of the first importance among many of the farmers, for, so large is the number of men and animals employed, that the neighbours help each other in strict rotation throughout the seasons. The farmer whose turn it was to have his field ploughed kept his neighbours and employees well supplied with cider, bread, cheese and fried cod. During the mid-morning and mid-afternoon breaks other specialities eaten included large dough cakes – gâche à fouée, gâche de pate and gâche à corînthe – consumed with copious amounts of cider.

Before the use of the plough there would have been the back-breaking task of digging the fields by hand. L'Amy gives the work being known in the local patois as une fouôrie – 'a digging'.

Les temps passé nou-s'avait des grandes fouôries,Acheteu ch'est des grandes quéruries.

(Times past, we had great diggings, now we have great ploughings.)

(John H. L'Amy, Jersey Folklore)


January 6th

Battle of Jersey, 1781: Baron Philippe de Rullecourt led an invasion of around 1,000 French troops. Despite managing to capture the Governor of the island, they were unable to force the surrender of Elizabeth Castle. Writing in 1799, John Stead describes the battle in the Royal Square and the death of Major Pierson:

An attack was therefore instantly made, by our troops, with such impetuosity, that in less than half an hour the enemy were totally routed and driven into the market place, where they endeavored to make a stand. Their commander, exasperated at this unexpected turn of affairs, did all he could to wreak his vengeance on the captive governor, whom he obliged to stand by his side during the whole time of the conflict, which, however, was quickly over; the French were broken on all sides, the Baron himself received a mortal wound of which he expired that evening, and the person who succeeded him in the command was obliged to surrender himself and the whole party of prisoners of war; while Governor Corbet escaped without a wound, although he had received two balls through his hat. In this moment of victory fell the gallant Major Pierson, to whom this island is indebted for its deliverance, and whose loss was most sincerely lamented by every officer and soldier, both of the regulars and militia, as well as by every inhabitant of the island.

(J. Stead, Caesarea, 1798)


January 7th

Birth of Gerald Durrell, 1925: Gerald Malcolm Durrell, author, naturalist and animal conservationist, was born in Janshedpur, India, the youngest of five children. Following the death of his father in 1928 the family moved to England where Gerald indulged his passion for wildlife. At the age of six he announced to his mother that he would have his own zoo one day.

In 1935 the Durrell family again moved, this time to the Greek island of Corfu. In a trilogy of books, the most famous of which is My Family and Other Animals, he described his forays to seek out wildlife. Following the Second World War Gerald became a student keeper at Whipsnade Zoo where he first became aware of the role of man in the extinction of species. At the age of twenty-one he came into his father's legacy of £3,000. This enabled him to travel the world collecting wild animals for zoos. His adventures in doing so became the material for a number of bestselling books.

However, he still dreamed of opening a zoo of his own. Finding nowhere in the United Kingdom suitable, a sixteenth-century manor house, Les Augres Manor in Trinity, Jersey, came to Durrell's notice by chance. The Jersey Zoological Park was opened to the public in 1959 on 26 March. (Gerald Durrell, My Family and Other Animals / The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)


January 8th

Opening of the General Hospital in Jersey, 1793: Much of the funding for its building came from the bequest of Marie Bartlet (who had died over fifty years earlier, in 1741). Mrs Bartlet had left the money for the building of a hospital for the poor of the island in St Aubin's, but a committee that acted as the will's executors failed to find any suitable land in that village. However, Philippe Bandinel, the Seigneur of Mélèches, offered a plot of land stretching from The Parade to the sea, on the sand-hills outside St Helier. After much legal wrangling over the terms of the will, building finally began in July 1765. The military had their eyes on the new building to barrack the growing number of troops in the island, and in 1779 General Conway requisitioned the building to house a regiment of Highlanders. Four years later a store of gunpower exploded, destroying two-thirds of the structure. After much delay, the British Government gave £2,000 to rebuild the structure so it could finally be used as a hospital for the poor and sick. On 18 July 1859 the building was again gutted by a fire. (G.R. Balleine, Biographical Dictionary of Jersey)


January 9th

1225: Since 1204, when King John had lost Normandy, the Channel Islands had been in the front line in the conflict between the English and French monarchs. It was at this time that Mont Orgueil in Jersey and Castle Cornet in Guernsey began to be built. There are many references in official documents for men and materials being sent to the islands. John's successor, Henry III, on this day wrote:

The King to the Sheriff of Southampton. We have ordered the constable of Porchester to supply you with 1,000 tree-trunks in our forest of Bere (Bere Regis near Wareham), wherever is most convenient and closest to Porchester, to be felled and transported by you to Porchester for making stockades in Guernsey and Jersey. So we bid you fell them and carry them to Porchester, handing them over to Geoffrey de Lucy's men.


Later that month, on 18 January, the king ordered his treasurer and chamberlains to send £200 to de Lucy 'for the subsistence of the knights and serjeants posted by our orders to Guernsey and Jersey'. Then, ten days later, he wrote to Bailiffs at Southampton 'to supply from the income of their town 5 cartloads of lead, for the maintenance of the castles there.' This flow of men and treasure to fortify the islands shows just how strong their strategic value was to successive English kings. (Charles Stevens, Close Rolls: The Lettres Closes and Ancient Petitions: 1200-1454)


January 10th

1781: Burial of Major Peirson in the Town Church of St Helier, with full pomp and pageantry. The States sent a letter to Peirson's father:

Convinced that we owe our present power of deliberating to the gallant behaviour of your son ... who purchased our freedom at the inestimable price of his life, we think it our indispensable duty to express to you our sincere grief and condolence on so great a public and private loss. Be assured, Sir, that every sentiment of gratitude to the memory of their brave deliverer will ever be deeply rooted in the hearts of the Inhabitants of this island.

We hope and trust it will, in due time, be a powerful motive of consolation to you, in this severe trial, to reflect that your son, in whom every military and moral virtue shone so conspicuously, finished his career, in the dawn of life, in a manner the greatest heroes have wished to finish theirs. He fell, Sir, in the moment of victory, saving a free and loyal island from impending tyranny and oppression.


Peirson is buried in front of the pulpit and on the south wall is his grand memorial. Hanging from a pillar are the two regimental colours carried into the battle by the English troops and Jersey militia. The leader of the French forces, Baron de Rullecourt, is buried in the churchyard. (Peter Hunt, A Guide to the Churches of Jersey, J. Stead, Caesarea, 1798)


January 11th

1847: 'Guernsey shops are good, and the streets – not dirty. The women are very pretty; their faces of more classic form and feature than we meet commonly in England; and they all dress well. The men are of a more clumsy material; the beau is fat and foppish ... There is much beauty in the children; and an evident care is taken with their appearance, even among the lower orders; their hair is curled, and their clothes are in good taste.

The country women dress in the old English style – a costume with us nearly worn out. But here is still to be seen the black mode bonnet, most elaborate in its build, and under it the neatly plaited cap: the quilted short petticoat, the short linen jacket for hard work, and the chintz gown, open in the front, and drawn through the pocket-holes, for best; they call it the Guernsey fashion; but we remember, some hundred and fifty years ago, when the old gude gran'dam of the farmhouse wore this very self-same dress in England.

The market-women are picturesque in the extreme ... and when they speak French as they pass, it adds to the captivation of the picture. How little these people do with, in comparison to our market folks at home!' (Anonymous, The Channel Islands or a Peep at our Neighbours, 1847)


January 12th

1886: Banking crises are nothing new in the Channel Islands, and the nineteenth century saw a slew of them. Among the worst was in 1886 when, on 11 January, the Jersey Banking Company or 'States' Bank closed with a notice on its door stating, 'Unforeseen circumstances have compelled the bank to suspend payment'. The bank had been insolvent for years and Philip Gosset, the State's Treasurer, had been gambling with its funds. Worse was to come the next day, when the firm of Charles Robin and Company, a major fishery supplies merchant who owned extensive properties in Jersey and Canada, closed its doors. La Chronique lamented:

In the old Ordnance Yard at the harbour, the seat of Robin's business, where once the sound of hammer and saw rang out in the vast warehouse and fish stores, where hundreds of men were employed throughout the long winter months, drying and stacking fish; the workshops where sails were mended, the offices which employed numberless clerks and book-keepers and dealt with voluminous correspondence, once the scene of animation and life, a great hive of industry, now there reigned the silence of death.


However, financial disaster was averted with the help of surviving banks who offered to advance to the States the amount due to their creditors. Gosset was sentenced to five years hard labour for his role in the bank's collapse. (Marguerite Syvret and Joan Stevens, Balleine's History of Jersey)


January 13th

1943: 'The day opened rather fine after an awful gale which did a lot of damage. Seventeen boats were smashed up in the Old Town Harbour, many beyond repair they tell me. The Germans had moved a sort of pontoon there and they tell me it broke adrift and did the damage.' (Diary of J.C. Sauvary)


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Channel Islands Book of Days by Mark Brocklesby. Copyright © 2013 Mark Brocklesby. Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

January,
February,
March,
April,
May,
June,
July,
August,
September,
October,
November,
December,

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