Fire from the Sky

Old LaF 2013

In her interviews for Exploring Filey’s Past Ann Wilkie née JOHNSON recalled two incendiary raids on Filey during the Second World War. In the first, the bombs rained down on the West Avenue area and brought a dance at the Southdene Pavilion to a premature close: –

…the dancin’ finished straight away and you were scurryin’ on and duckin’ down, y’ know. One thing, we only had to go from Southdene to Rutland Street so there’s just Brooklands in between, y’ know…and me friend lived in Bell Vue Street. So we hadn’t far to go but it was frightening, scurryin’ along, y’ know. And, of course at home, y’ see, we, when the sirens went, we just went down into the basement, y’ know it was, erm, well, safe I suppose down there. But, erm, yes and then at the Laundry End I think it was worse still, y’ know…

Doreen Mason née HOLMES remembered: –

…we were at the Southdene Pavilion dancin’ and …somebody said, I’ll go and get you a glass of cider at that pub at bottom … and these incendiary bombs were comin’ all off the roofs, so I dashed out and, by God, din’t I run home?

For Doreen, this was the night of the Laundry Hill raid and when she heard that her job had gone up in flames: –

…ooh good laundry’s burnt down. Good, hurray, hurray (laughter). Oh lovely…

Filey Laundry today, 54.212080, -0.290342

Lily Cronk née COLLING was working at the Brigg Cinema when the incendiaries began to rain down. She reckoned that 11,000 were dropped on the town and she had close encounters with a “helluva lot” of them.

I went up on t’ roof at Brigg…with a sweepin’ brush and swept ‘em off (laughter). I don’t know how the hell…I wunt do it now but I did. Hung through thing and took a brush, long brush, y’ know… I ‘ad ‘em off before they went off, must ‘ave ‘ad because [they] din’t do any damage… I just swept ‘em off top… I din’t care where the ‘ell they went as long as they weren’t on top o’ cinema…whether I did right or wrong. But I can’t a done wrong can I? (laughter). It was still there next mornin’.

Keith Lang’s sister worked at the Laundry and he recalled that she lost some of her clothes to the flames.

Nancy Mann nee BROWNING was employed at the Laundry for quite a long time but her health suffered and Dr Dibb wrote a letter enabling her to leave for more amenable work as a shop assistant. During the war, she was a First Aider and was expected to work alternate nights – but to turn up for duty if bombs were falling. On the 26th February –

…it was my night on and I went round as large as life an’ they ses, where were you last night? I ses, I was in bed, why? Well, din’t you ‘ear bombs droppin’?

About 80 metres south of the Laundry an incendiary fell onto Cammish’s Shop, 2c Mitford Street. Robert ‘Bobbin’ CAMMISH raked the tail fin from the gutter – and here it is, with a 20 pence piece to give an idea of scale… Thanks to Joanne for allowing me to photograph it.

The missing “business end” would have been about 12 inches/30 cms long.

Joanne emailed to say that the cast iron guttering still has a crack in it and “every time it rains a poor unsuspecting passer-by gets a reminder of Hitler’s actions to this country”.

Anniversaries

1880 Filey · Birth  George was the fourth of ten children born to Mark SCOTTER and Alice COLLING. He married Mary Ann SAYERS when he was 21 and had two children. He died at the age of 36, a few months before his father was shot and killed by a U Boat crewman while fishing from his yawl Susie.

Shared Tree

1789 Frodingham (or Beeford) · Baptism  George was the non-bio father of Martha ROOM (Anniversary Marriage 27 January). I speculated a month ago that Martha was a nurse child of George’s wife, Rachel MAULSON. This Rachel has since been replaced by another – Rachel ROOM. So Martha was maybe raised by her mother’s sister and George. The church register indicates that George was a widower when he married Rachel Room.

Shared Tree

1867 Filey · Marriage  In the thirteenth year of his marriage, William was washed overboard from the yawl Elizabeth and Emma off Robin Hood’s Bay during the Great Storm of 1880. He is remembered on the Fishermen’s Window in St Oswald’s church. Johanna (or Joanna Hannah) married again. She is the brother of John (Anniversary Birth 3 February).

Shared Tree

1976 Filey · Death

Photographer unknown, no date, courtesy Martin Douglas.

I think Arthur’s shop was in Queen Street – and he’d relied on those crutches for many years.

He was cremated on 27 February and his ashes were buried with his wife Ruth on 3 March.

Shared Tree

Beach 158 · Butcher Haven

Whiting Wrongs

The day after my Tailor, Soldier, Sailor post, the family of William COLLEY and Elizabeth WHITING was re-arranged on the FamilySearch Shared Tree. William, the Tailor of Scawton, was given a new wife and eight of his children vanished.

With Elizabeth née JARMAN taking her place in William’s bed, what has become of “our Elizabeth”?

WHITINGeliz_sonGeoX_FSTss_20200102

Elizabeth is with her rightful husband here, William the Bricklayer, and one of her 18 sources is the 1841 Census showing the couple in Skipsea with daughter Maria, 18, and Robert PAPE, 14, also a bricklayer. Christening sources for Maria and George are also correct. I think Walter should have stayed in Scawton. Twelve sources attached to Elizabeth are bogus, being the christenings of children belonging to the cutler, the soldier, the sailor and the tailor. The 13th is the proof of her own christening. Wrong year, wrong place, wrong father.

1793_WHITINGeliz_Chr

I don’t yet know if this daughter of John reached adulthood and married. When exiled from Scawton a few days ago she took Elizabeth Jarman’s death date with her. She kept the 1811 marriage date too but on the 19th December that year, it was a different Elizabeth Whiting who married William Colley. Hence the Big Red X on the screenshot above.

William’s burial in All Saints churchyard, Skipsea, is correctly sourced. Elizabeth rests eternally nearby but not as a Colley. When I couldn’t find a death registration for her, I guessed she must have married again.

About the time William died in Skipsea, Frances FALLOWDOWN breathed her last in North Frodingham, five miles to the west. A few months later, on 11 October, our Elizabeth married widower Phineas Fallowdown. With Victorian etiquette advising widows to wear “full mourning” for two years, this appears to be a tad unseemly. But our Elizabeth’s birthplace, Beeford, is only two miles from North Frodingham, so the Whitings may have known the Fallowdowns for years. There are also tantalizing glimpses in census returns of families GRAINGER and BARR being Fallowdown neighbours. William Colley’s sister Elizabeth married a Barr and his daughter Maria a Grainger. (In 1851, Ellen Grainger, age 13 and a “visitor”, was with Phineas and Elizabeth on census night.)

Our Elizabeth died in North Frodingham in 1858 and her body was taken to Skipsea. It may have been her wish to be buried with her first husband.

1858_FALLADOWNeliz_BUR

Second time around, Phineas was fourteen years a widower. He died towards the end of 1872, aged 78. At census the year before he had been living alone. I haven’t found a burial record for him. Phineas has two PIDs but a minimal representation on the Shared Tree. You can find our Elizabeth as a single girl, with parents and siblings, here. The church register entry for her marriage to Phineas identifies her as the widow Colley and the daughter of the Miller of Beeford.

1845_FallowdownColley_Mar

Today’s Image

The first trees in Filey Parish Wood were, I think, planted in 1996. I remember being underwhelmed when I first set eyes upon it in 2010. This is how the wood looked this morning.

20200102ParishWoodPano1_8m

The ghost of Jude is standing a few feet beyond the gate on the left.