Hang on, hang on. It is all too easy at the back end of the
year to get over enthusiastic about throwing things out. I love having a good
sort through my shelves and cupboards but I do wonder if I get carried away and
throw out something precious. Or more to the point, something that might be
precious to others in the future. At the beginning of this month I had the great good
fortune to have a behind the scenes visit to the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
The curator of Early Modern Manuscripts, Mike Webb, produced a small number of
treasures to illustrate various stories about life during the seventeenth
century. One of the objects he showed us was an accounts book kept by Mary
Gofton, previously Lady Sandys, between 1645 and 1649. In this little volume
she listed every item of expenditure she made. They range from £2 11s 6d for ‘16 yards of selver and gold lace
for my morning cotte’ (mourning coat) to 2s 6d for a ‘play thinge for nick and
miles’ (her grandsons), while on other occasions she made huge donations to her children, such as £2,000 to her son stuard in March 1647, the equivalent of £250,000 or $375,000 in 2015.
Account book
of Mary Gofton (née Hanbury,
afterwards
Lady Sandys,
afterwards
Richardson), 1645-1649
Shelfmark:
MS. Eng. e. 3651
|
Page beginning 16 March 1647 |
When I was working on my first book Fearless on Everest, about the disappearance of Sandy Irvine with
George Mallory on Mount Everest in 1924, I had a stroke of luck with a find of
material that too might have ended up in the bin. Sandy was my great uncle,
though of course I never knew him.
Willie Irvine, 1877 |
I did however once meet his father, my
great-grandfather, Willie Irvine, when I was a baby. There is a photograph of
me aged about 9 months with legs like sausages sitting on the old man’s knee.
He was 93 and died not long after the photograph was taken. Fast forward 38 years and I was living in
California with my young family. Our third son had been born in Stanford and we
called him Sandy after his namesake because, like him, he was blonde haired and
blue-eyed. A few weeks after he was born I was walking down the high street in
Palo Alto when I saw a photograph in a bookshop window. It was the last
photograph of Mallory and Irvine taken the morning they left camp IV to head
for camps V and VI before launching their bid on the summit on 8 June 1924.
They disappeared in a blanket of cloud at about midday, last seen by Noel Odell
in what is probably the most famous sighting in mountaineering history. They
were, in his words, ‘going strong for the top.’ We came back to Britain in 1998
and the following year George Mallory’s frozen remains were found by an
Anglo-American team and interest in the mystery of Mallory and Irvine soared.
Sandy Irvine, Spitsbergen 1923 |
Sandy Irvine (left) with Willie, Evelyn (my grandmother) and older brother Hugh, 1904 |
The trunk, found 75 years after Sandy's death |
The fact that this trunk had not been thrown out is almost
unbelievable. The house had been sold after Willie’s death and run as an old
people’s home. Then Alec Irvine, Sandy’s younger brother, bought the house back
in the late 1970s and by the luck of the stars no one had bothered to clear out
the attic. The letters, in particular, gave me Sandy’s voice. He wrote as he
spoke, in a breathless and impatient way. When he couldn’t find the words to
describe something he would draw it. The letters were literally priceless to me
for my book. And for posterity?
Sandy's letter to his mother from Sikkim, en route to Everest |
So, when you are throwing out the old to make space for the
new, just ask yourself if in doing so you are condemning something not only to
the bin but to silence…
8 comments:
What a marvellous find - and what a legend to have as part of your family!
Thanks Sue, it certainly was a wonderful find. And it started me off on the course of what I call my 'career' but is actually my life and passion.
Fascinating, Julie. And thanks for saving me from the bother of doing a new year clear up. I'll just post all my receipts and old Christmas cards down the crack in the floorboards for somebody to find in 100 years.
Excellent Janie. Leave them to percolate through to the future ...
Gosh, how spine-tingling to discover that trunk with its contents intact - all credit to you for persevering and to recalcitrant historians refusing to throw away the old. And how marvellous that you have since published on this story. Thank you for now sharing the back story too!
Thank you Clare, I've not been on the website for a few days so missed your kind comment. I keep hoping that one day I'll find another trunk but I suspect I'm more likely to find one on an elephant in the zoo. However, I'll keep looking!
I was at your book signing & talk in Birkenhead School many years ago now. I treasure the book and its links to Birkenhead. I still know people who refer to Tata steel in Deeside as Summers. The old headquarters is all boarded up but it looks a fantastic building on the banks of the Dee
Tony
Thanks Tony. That's quite a few years ago now. I am shattered to say that I started work on that book twenty years ago this summer. Must be getting old. I'm very touched that you treasure it. It certainly kicked off an eventful career that has taken me and my research all over the world. My next book involves another Summers-related character but at the other end of the spectrum from Sandy Irvine.
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