During
a recent sort out, my mum found a small square of newspaper, cut out and neatly
gummed onto a piece of glass cut to size. It had been sellotaped too,
protecting the ink and turning the paper a deep golden-yellow, but before it was
stuck down someone had penciled their name on it in three different places, as
well as scratching their initials on the back. The date, handwritten alongside,
is 28 June 1919.
The
clipping is from the ‘London “Daily Express” Aeroplane Post’, and the headline
is ‘Peace Proclaimed.’ You don’t get much of the story, but
everything important is captured in sixteen words: ‘The Peace Treaty was signed
by the Peace Emissaries of the Allied and Enemy Countries today’.
Dick Mulley's keepsake of the announcement of peace, 1919 |
The
penciled name is ‘R Mulley’. This was my grandfather, Richard Mulley, better
known as Dick, then a fourteen-year-old boy with very tidy writing. He was clearly
hugely aware of how momentous that day was, marking the end of what was then
known as The Great War. Little wonder, since one of his older brothers had
served in the Royal Navy and was twice on ships that were torpedoed - although
amazingly he survived to run a toyshop in the peace. Dick’s deep sense of
moment is captured both in the number of times he scribbled his name on the
paper, and in his determination to write so neatly on this small keepsake of
history.
I
have very little that once belonged to my dad’s dad, although there are a few
photos of his many naughty, handsome brothers and long-suffering sisters. I
love the fact that this small plaque has survived, a momento of a boy who had
clearly been following the war, and had a sense of history as well as of victory.
It is also a momento of my father, who must have cautiously held this fragile square
of paper and glass, just like I have, and wondered about the boy who grew up to
become his father. These two men carefully kept this small cutting safe for ninety-five
years.
My
husband, Ian, has similarly precious little from his father’s father; in fact
he has even less. However, as a child he did inherit his father’s stamp
collection, which he carefully stuck in an album bought for the purpose in the
1960s, adding to it as he went. Looking at the individual stamps, however, some
of these must have come down from another generation, from Ian’s father’s
father, Reiner.
This
album contains stamps from all over the world. The smaller the country, the
more fabulous the stamp, my dad once told me, looking at his own childhood
collection with me. The same is true here, but the most fascinating stamps in
this album come from Ian’s grandfather and father’s birth-country; Germany.
Germany
first issued stamps in 1872. Sadly there are none in this album from then, but
there are two Germany pages, very neatly distinguishing stamps dating from 1949
which were issued in the Deutsche Demokratische Republik, ie post-war Eastern
Germany, and look suitably Soviet, from an older collection from the Deutsche
Reich.
These
Reich stamps are fascinating. The oldest, perhaps, is a pretty dark blue one
showing a stylised hunting horn for a value of 6 marks. The collection quickly
moves up in face-value however to 200, 400 and 500 marks. In the years after
the First World War the value of the German mark fell rapidly, mainly as a
result of reparation payments and the penalties imposed on German trade, combined with the depression. As the
German government printed money, the country experienced rapid, debilitating inflation. German
stamps in circulation were overprinted to reflect this. A pink stamp in the album that had been issued at a face-value of 500 marks, had been given a value
of 250,000 marks in around 1923, while below it a paler pink 200 mark stamp is
overprinted with a value of 2 million marks! Some of these stamps do not even
look used, as though even when revalued in the millions they could hardly cover
the cost of delivering a letter.
Deutsche Reich stamps from the album, c.1920s |
So
while, as a lad, one grandfather, Dick Mulley, was cheerfully sticking his
newspaper cutting on to some glass to keep it nice, another, Reiner Wolter was
- possibly less cheerfully - not sticking stamps onto envelopes, but keeping
them safe nonetheless, with a sense for preserving history that was just as
keen as Dick’s.
So
what happened to these two boys when they grew up? In the Second World War my father’s
father, Dick, served as a chef in the navy, cooking Christmas dinner for 1,400
men one year; ie for two troopships. He survived the war, and later worked for
the New Zealand Shipping Company. Story has it that one day, in a storm, he chopped
his own thumb off but simply sewed it back and got on with dinner.
Ian’s
grandfather, Reiner, was drafted too, but he was less lucky. There are several
stories as to his end, but the one that seems most likely is that he was sent
to the Russian Front, and died or was killed at Stalingrad, with so many
others. We don’t really know. His widow, Ian’s beloved German grandma, fell in
love again a few years later, with an English soldier based in the
British-occupied zone of post-war Germany. They married, and although her older
sons chose to stay in Germany, she brought her youngest son, Ian’s father, with
her to England when her new husband was posted home. Very little came with
them, no photos that we know of, but a few Christmas tree baubles and a small
collection of stamps. And she sang wonderful German carols in their house
at Christmas time.
So my
children have great grandfathers who fought on both sides of that second
terrible world war: men who were boys once, and collected small souvenirs of
peace – little bits of gummy paper that still survive to tell us something rather
wonderful about them, something about being aware of the zeitgeist that they might
have recognised in each other.
3 comments:
What a fascinating piece of family history and great story.
A touching piece Clare and one that reminded me of my own father's war and the few little mementoes we had. Even fewer now, as his medals and other things went missing but we have the photographs of him, thin from dysentery in the Middle East, before he was declassified from A1 and sent to Italy. But how I wish my mother had kept his wartime letters!
I loved this post. I don't have much from my grandfather - only a very posed photo of him in his WW1 uniform, holding sternly onto a chair, and, strangely, a tiny carved wooden shoe - I've no idea what its purpose was, but I do associate it with him. And memories.
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