Like many History Girls I love watching Who Do You Think You Are? and am always struck by how little I know about my own antecedents. This poem pieces together snippets from things my gran told me about growing up in Belfast. She was born in 1908 and must have had memories of the Great War, the Great Flu, the Home Rule Crisis, Civil War, and the Belfast Blitz, but she always spoke about the domestic: home and church, work and leisure.
There was nothing remarkable about her family. Except of course to her.
The Duffs of Beechfield Street
The Duffs built the
Titanic.
In 1913 James Duff moved
his family
two streets further up the
Newtownards Road
To save on the tram fare
to the Yard.
The Duffs all worked at the Yard |
The Duffs were stalwarts of the Christian Endeavour
At Albertbridge
Congregational Church.
They won prizes for
Attendance and Bible Knowledge.
If you didn’t eat your
dinner, James would say,
Put it in the oven, she’ll eat it when she’s
hungry.
A Belfast street |
Upstairs, hidden in her
pinny, Frances never tiring
of the story of the wee
Pomereen pup
found sleeping in her
daddy’s boot.
The Duffs did as things
did with them.
When James died Fanny took
in sewing
And made sure the
children had good clothes for Sundays.
The girls left school at
thirteen, sewed shirts,
and hoped to marry. Sadie
died at sixteen.
Annie, the kitten smuggler, Sadie who died, Frances, my gran |
Alexander loved dancing. He
always got Sandy.
Frances married Charles
from a semi-detached
With a garden up the
Castlereagh Road.
Jim went to Australia.
Annie dreamed of Australia
But when her mother died in
1936 she stayed
In Beechfield Street with
her brother John,
And a cat called Dinky
who was allowed upstairs.
Fanny Duff's death notice in The Belfast News Letter, 1936 |
Thank you Sheena - you made them real to me. Of course they were already real, but you know what I mean?
ReplyDeleteThanks both! I am sure I have some details wrong, as they are based on my memories of Gran's memories, if that makes sense. And for example, she always called a Pomeranian dog a 'Pomereen', which isn't correct but seemed like the right word.
ReplyDelete