Tuesday 27 August 2013

Two go to the moors! ;-)




We are lucky enough to live a stone's throw from Dartmoor

and so we took a jolly jaunt across it, yesterday.






Haytor Rocks... covered like a rash, with people!





As we make our descent to Widecombe in the Moor, we can't help 

but admire the view of patchwork.






We are greeted by mossy, stone walls... and sheep.




I love this house but I do wonder how they cope with the tourists

passing by their door in such huge numbers!






Widecombe in the Moor is quietly basking in the sunshine;

 it is at its best today.







There is no better place to stop for a refreshment than the Rugglestone Inn...

but we can't get in the door! 

T'is a very popular watering hole!

We walk on.










Seeing this, I suddenly realise that it is almost time for that very famous fair

at Widecombe in the Moor!








We retrace our steps, looking at the different tors as we go.






And then we take the road to Manaton. We soon stop again,

 to look at the stunning view.








Simply lovely!

;-)



Sunday 25 August 2013

Leslie Honeywill...submarines....and an auction! ;-)








Leslie Honeywill was born in 1899 to parents John and Bessie Honeywill.

Bessie was the daughter of James and Mary Gidley... and before she was a Gidley,

Mary was a Smerdon and sister to Bessie Smerdon, who was my great grandmother.

So, that made Leslie something like my third cousin once removed! (I think!)


And now we move on 16 years…


In 1915, Leslie Honeywill said goodbye to his days at Newton Abbot Grammar School

 (the same school which I attended many years later)  and he headed to Devonport,

 to become a boy artificer in the  Royal Navy. Thus began, for him, a career as a

 submariner; a career about which he wrote many diaries  and manuscripts. 


Moving on many more years…


I was introduced to Leslie not long after I was born! 

Not that I remember a thing about it!

Leslie was chosen to be my Godfather and from what I remember of him,

I know that my parents made  the very best choice.  When I was a little older,

I remember him as being a very softly spoken, kind and  unassuming man;

one of life’s gentlemen. I didn’t see him often but he was one of those people who 

would have a very calming effect on you and you couldn’t help but be drawn

to his gentleness.  Leslie  never married; he had no children.


Sadly, Leslie passed away when I lived away from Devon, in 1978.

However, some of his diaries and writing became the property of my dad

 and these only surfaced recently, when my mum was sorting out my dad’s room.

Not really knowing what to do with Leslie's work, but knowing that they ought

 not be thrown away, my mum enlisted the help of a local antiques expert.


The rest is here:






Unfortunately, I can't attend the auction but I am sure that the diary and books will

be greatly sought after by those people who are interested in the history of submarines.

I would like to think that a very good home is found for Leslie's work.


And I'll be interested, of course, to see what sort of coverage

 is given on Antiques Road Trip!