Sunday 25 May 2014

Schools and Museum made Designer Deckchairs with a difference






















 Fancy a doze on a deckchair in the Budleigh Salterton sunshine?  Some very special seating will be available for visitors from this season, but in limited numbers.
 
 
The East Devon town is proud of its place on the Jurassic Coast, a World Heritage site made up of cliffs dating back 180 million years.  But Budleigh’s Fairlynch Museum is looking back only one hundred years with its current exhibition about the impact of the 1914-18 world conflict on residents of the town and surrounding villages.
A total of ten designer deckchairs have been produced to mark the event, using artwork provided by children from local schools.  Some of the seating will be on show outside the Museum, but local shops will also be hosting the unusual artefacts.

 

 “I think the deckchairs are a great idea,” commented Budleigh Wines owner James Findlay. “They’ll be an interesting talking-point in the shops and a colourful addition to the town.  The Great War is very much part of our heritage and it’s so good that children have been involved in the project.”






Deckchairs on display  outside McMillan's Delicatessen on Budleigh High Street


 ‘The Great War at Fairlynch’ Exhibition runs until Sunday 30 September 2014, and is scheduled to be repeated next year. The Museum is open from 2.00-4.30 pm daily except Mondays.  
The Exhibition has benefited from an award of £6,300 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to mark the First World War Centenary.





 Local schoolchildren who designed artwork for the deckchairs show off the finished product outside the Museum




A colourful display with a message. And the deckchairs are comfortable as well




Pictured above are Museum Chairman Roger Sherriff, left, and Martyn Brown, who masterminded the Fairlynch deckchairs project  



‘The Great War at Fairlynch’ 2015 exhibition at Budleigh Salterton’s very special museum! Reviews included: “Wonderful display on WW1, informative, bright and relevant. Well done!! 
The Exhibition has benefited from an award of £6,300 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to mark the First World War Centenary.





Saturday 24 May 2014

Royal Marines Remembered





The Crest of the Royal Marine Commandos

Four Royal Marines associated with the Lower Otter Valley are worthy of note, including three who lost their lives during World War One.

Lance Serjeant William Richard Bull is recorded as having died on 3 May 1915 during the Gallipoli Campaign, although one source gives an earlier date of 26 April. He is buried in Twelve Tree Copse Cemetery in Turkey along with 1,134 identified casualties. 

The Campaign, lasting over eight months,  was an attempt to capture the Ottoman capital of Constantinople. It was a major Allied failure and one of the greatest Ottoman victories during World War One, but casualties were heavy on both sides.  The first VC of the war was won at Gallipoli by a Royal Marine, but the Plymouth Battalion in which Lance Serjeant Bull was serving was reduced to half its strength.   



















Image credit: Romtobbi
The memorial seen here commemorates the loss of the hundreds of thousands of Turkish and Allied soldiers who perished during the Gallipoli campaign. It is famous for the tribute written by Kemal Atatürk, the first President of Turkey.  Perhaps these words, inscribed on the memorial at Anzac Cove, provided some comfort for the families of the fallen:

 "Those heroes who shed their blood and lost their lives … you are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours… You, the mothers who sent their sons from far away countries, wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land, they have become our sons as well."

 













Twelve Tree Copse Cemetery, near Helles, Turkey, where William Bull is buried
Image credit: Commonwealth War Graves Commission

William Bull is listed among those who ‘died in their Country’s Service’ on the Budleigh Salterton Roll of Honour, a copy of which is on display in Fairlynch Museum.  But strangely his name is absent from other memorials in the town, and further information about his links with Budleigh is being sought.


 












The last moments of HMS Queen Mary, as seen from a German ship during the Battle of Jutland

Private William Henry Mutters died on 31 May 1916 during the Battle of Jutland. Born in Dawlish to James and Mary Ann Mutters, he was noted in a newspaper account as a former builder’s labourer and resident of Knowle. He was serving on board the battlecruiser HMS Queen Mary when it was hit by enemy fire and exploded. His name appears on Budleigh Salterton’s War Memorial.

 






















Private William Harding died, aged 49, at the Royal Naval Hospital in Stonehouse, Plymouth, on 10 November 1917 and is buried in East Budleigh churchyard. His widow Louisa lived at Brook Cottage in the village. He was awarded the Long Service and Good Conduct Medal and is remembered on the memorials in All Saints Church and in East Budleigh village. 


 




























Lieutenant Colonel Algernon St. Leger Burrowes is another Royal Marine whose grave can be found locally, in St Peter’s Burial Ground. He died at home on 18 December 1925 after a distinguished military career, being mentioned in despatches three times during the 1882 Egyptian Campaign and again in the Sudan Campaign between 1884 and 1885.  He was made a Companion of the Order of the Bath in 1911. During World War One he was a Recruiting Staff Officer in Bristol between 1916 and 1918 before retiring to live at Moorside on Sherbrook Hill, Budleigh Salterton. 

‘The Great War at Fairlynch’ 2015 exhibition at Budleigh Salterton’s very special museum! Reviews included: “Wonderful display on WW1, informative, bright and relevant. Well done!!