Showing posts with label General. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General. Show all posts

Friday, 1 August 2014

Ten coastal towns get £8.5m for projects, BBC News

Jubilee Pool Lido, historic arches in Portsmouth and the coast in Lands End

Ten coastal towns have been given £8.5m in government cash to help create nearly 1,400 jobs and repair storm-damaged areas.

Schemes set to benefit include the Jubilee Pool in Penzance, Old Portsmouth's historic arches, and the South West Coastal Path.

The cash will be used to create tourist attractions, regenerate historic sites and provide new flood defences.

The awards come from the Big Lottery's Coastal Community Fund.


Funding award list

  • ·        Jubilee Pool, Penzance, Cornwall - £1.95m

  • ·        Historic arches, Old Portsmouth, Hampshire - £1.755m
  • ·        South West Coastal Path, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset and Somerset - £999,000
  • ·        Historic Fruit Market, Kingston upon Hull - £800,000
  • ·        Waldringfield Flood Defence, Suffolk - £633,000
  • ·        Maltings Building, Wells-next-the-Sea, near Cromer, Norfolk - £610,000
  • ·        Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, Spurn Point - £498,000
  • ·        RSPB Nature Reserve, Bempton Cliffs, Humberside - £452,000
  • ·        Youth Hostels in Brighton, East Sussex, and Robin Hoods Bay, North Yorkshire - £401,000
  • ·        Park View 4 U, near Lytham St Annes, Lancashire - £395,000
  • ·        Coastal Communities minister Penny Mordaunt said the money was set to make a "big difference" to towns affected by the winter storms.

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Parking cowboys hit cancer victims: Now scandal of 'disgraceful' fines spreads to NHS hospitals Daily Mail


A legitimate Penalty Charge Notice: Rogue parking firms hand out cynically similar 'Parking Charge Notices' which do not have the same standing as official fines, but are followed up with letters threatening court action
A legitimate Penalty Charge Notice: Rogue parking firms hand out cynically similar 'Parking Charge Notices' which do not have the same standing as official fines, but are followed up with letters threatening court action
  Rogue wardens have allegedly been told to focus efforts on cancer wards 
  Whistleblower claims he was told to 'give tickets regardless of any illness'
  Politicians and campaigners call for crackdown on rogue parking firms

Cancer patients undergoing life-saving chemotherapy are being targeted by ‘cowboy’ parking squads at NHS hospitals, it was claimed last night.

Rogue wardens working on hospital grounds have allegedly been ordered to focus on cancer wards because patients are likely to be distracted – and therefore late returning to their cars.

Hospitals were last night accused of encouraging the ‘disgraceful’ tactic, with some trusts even taking a cut of up to 10 per cent of the parking firms’ huge profits.


Saturday, 26 July 2014

Find a reason to go to war with Germany': Shocking letter documents how King George V urged his foreign secretary to justify conflict two days before outbreak of First World War

George V
King George V

  A letter documents a meeting between King George V and Edward Grey 

  The King urged his foreign secretary to find a reason for war with Germany 

  King George V, revealed what had taken place to Sir Cecil Graves in 1933

  The discovery sheds light on one decision behind the First World War

  Sir Edward’s great-great-nephew Adrian Graves uncovered the information

Lord Grey, Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, British Ambassador to the USA, seen here at Waterloo Station after arriving home from the USA
Sir Edward Grey
A secret letter which documents a private meeting between King George V urging his Foreign Secretary Edward Grey to go to war with Germany two days before the outbreak of the First World War has been unearthed.

The incredible note, sent during one of the most difficult times in British history has been made public for the first time, by Adrian Graves, Sir Edward’s great-great-nephew and grandson of Sir Cecil Graves.

King George V, who had stayed away from making public declarations about Europe as his hands were tied as a constitutional monarch, said it was ‘absolutely essential’ Britain go to war in order to prevent Germany from achieving ‘complete domination of this country’.

Further reading

Thursday, 24 July 2014

Commonwealth Games Opening Ceremony.


Mr Coogan (pictured giving the baton to Sir Chris Hoy) was a survivor of the Japanese prisoner of war camps


A
fter the fractious introspection and months of angry debate about what it means to be Scottish, the people of Scotland enjoyed a well-deserved break from it all last night – as they welcomed the world.

And by the end of an exuberant, good-humoured, periodically chaotic evening – starring everyone (and everything) from a giant haggis, cabers, golf clubs, a gay wedding, 41 Scottish terriers, Rod Stewart, rousing cheers for the Queen and lashings of self-deprecation – Scotland seemed to have answered her own question.

All of the above, we can safely say, encompass what it means to be Scottish. Quite what last night’s opening of the 20th Commonwealth Games in Glasgow means for that referendum campaign, on the other hand, is anyone’s guess.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2703216/Tunnocks-Tea-Cakes-Irn-Bru-Forth-Bridge-Gretna-Green-Glasgow-opens-Commonwealth-Games-world-Scottish-flavour.html

'THE BONDS THAT UNITE:' THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE TO THE COMMONWEALTH



After the commotion, the Queen finally managed to give her speech to the 40,000-strong crowd at Celtic Park

 

+58
The Queen spoke of the 'shared ideals and ambitions' of the Commonwealth when she delivered the message which has travelled the world in the Games' baton relay.

She highlighted the 'bonds that unite' the 71 nations and territories when she formally declared the 20th Commonwealth Games open.

In an address directed at all the athletes competing in the Games, she made special reference to the young people of the Commonwealth, saying they are entrusted with its values and future.

The message, which was kept secret until tonight, has circled the globed over the last nine months, since the Queen placed the paper inside the baton which then visited all 71 locations.

Reading the message, the Queen said: 'At Buckingham Palace last October I placed this message into the specially-crafted baton and passed it to the first of many thousands of baton-bearers. Over the past 288 days the baton has visited all the nations and territories of the Commonwealth, crossing every continent in a journey of more than 100,000 miles.

'The baton relay represents a calling together of people from every part of the Commonwealth and serves as a reminder of our shared ideals and ambitions as a diverse, resourceful and cohesive family.

'And now, that baton has arrived here in Glasgow, a city renowned for its dynamic cultural and sporting achievements and for the warmth of its people, for this opening ceremony of the Friendly Games.'

The Queen, in her role as head of the Commonwealth, sent her best wishes to the competing athletes when she addressed the opening ceremony at Glasgow's Celtic Park.

She said: 'To you, the Commonwealth athletes, I send my good wishes for success in your endeavours. Your accomplishments over the coming days will encourage us all to strengthen the bonds that unite us.

'You remind us that young people, those under 25 years of age, make up half of our Commonwealth citizens; and it is to you that we entrust our values and our future.

'I offer my sincere thanks to the many organisations and volunteers who have worked diligently to bring these Games to fruition, and indeed to the spectators here in the stadium and to the millions watching on television. Together, you all play a part in strengthening our friendships in this modern and vibrant association of nations.

'It now gives me the greatest pleasure to declare the 20th Commonwealth Games open.'

  

BARROWMAN'S GAY KISS



Scottish-American actor John Barrowman, right, kissed one of the performers during the ceremony

 

John Barrowman, the Scottish-American actor, singer, dancer and presenter, kissed one of the performers during the ceremony. 

In what was seen as a clear message to the 42 countries of the Commonwealth where it is still a crime to be gay, Glasgow-born Barrowman reached out to kiss the man before holding his hand during a sequence to celebrate Gretna Green.

Barrowman is openly gay and married.



Comment:


It’s a shame  that a wonderful celebration of the cultural variety that is the Commonwealth was hijacked by Gay Rights, although I believe that it shouldn’t be a crime to be gay,  there isn’t need to push Gay Rights into focus.  Hoping that someone’s Gay Kiss is going to pressure other countries to de-criminalise homosexually is a fallacy and foolishness. I believe that’s not okay to be gay.



Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Britain's most unpopular flight costs YOU £86 per passenger to subsidise, Daily Express

flights, Cardiff to Anglesey, least popular flight, plane, Britain's least popular fight, Cardiff Airport, taxpayers

The public pay £1.2m a year to subsidise the unpopular air service from Cardiff Airport to Anglesey in North Wales.


The Labour-run Welsh Government insisted on heavily subsidising the cost of running the route, with tickets starting at just £29.95.

But the flight has been a huge flop with around 100 people using it every week - costing the public £86 for each passenger.

Transport chiefs today called for a "comprehensive marketing programme" to boost passenger numbers.

Darren Millar AM, chair of the National Assembly's Public Accounts Committee, said: "We remain concerned that this service is underperforming when it comes to providing value for money for the Welsh taxpayer.

Tuesday, 22 July 2014

Curb EU benefit tourism, Whitehall told

: Report finds growing concern among Britons about access to the welfare state by migrants.


Daily Mail Story

Unemployed people at a Jobcentre Plus: A report says the public wants curbs on migrants' access to benefits


 major overhaul is needed to curb  migrants’ access to British benefits, a Government review has concluded.

The report finds growing concern among Britons about access to the welfare state by the hundreds of thousands of arrivals from Europe taking advantage of EU free movement rules.    

If the system is not urgently reformed it could ‘significantly undermine’ public support for freedom of movement, it concludes.


Please read the full story here

Sunday, 12 January 2014

She fought on the Somme disguised as a Tommy, so why did Dorothy die unloved and unlauded in a lunatic asylum? Incredible story of the only British woman to fight in the trenches, Daily Mail


Perfect cover: Dorothy in her military uniform
Perfect cover: Dorothy in her military uniform
In Paris, in the high summer of 1915, Dorothy Lawrence – a young Englishwoman with more by way of courage and ambition than wealth or  connections – turned herself into a Tommy.
She flattened her hourglass curves with a home-made  corset stuffed with cotton-wool, hacked off her long, brown hair and darkened her complexion with Condy’s Fluid, a disinfectant made from potassium permanganate. She even razored the pale skin of her cheeks in the hope of giving herself a shaving rash.
In a borrowed military uniform she disguised the last vestiges of her female shape and found two British soldiers to teach her to walk like a man. She completed her transformation by forging her own bona fides and travel permits for  war-ravaged France and caught a train to Amiens.
And then Dorothy Lawrence, a cub reporter who hungered to be a war correspondent, cycled to Albert, the village known  as the front of the Front, and joined the ranks of 179 Tunnelling Company, 51st Division, Royal Engineers, as they dug beneath no-man’s-land and across to German lines.
They kept her presence a secret. ‘You don’t know what danger you are in,’ Sapper Tommy Dunn warned her, meaning from the battle-hardened, woman-starved men of her own side, not the enemy mortars.
What he could not have known was the terrible secret which had driven Dorothy to take such risks. Ten years later she would reveal she had been raped as a child by the ‘highly respected’ church guardian who had raised her after she was orphaned.
For almost two weeks in August 1915, Dorothy toiled in the sniper-infested trenches of the Somme – which a year later were to erupt in the bloody hell immortalised by the Sebastian Faulks novel Birdsong – until, weakened by contaminated water and exhaustion, she revealed herself to be a female civilian to her ‘superiors’.
She knew she had the scoop of her life, a story which would set Fleet Street alight.
Even when the British military locked her in a convent to keep her quiet in the final days before the Battle of Loos the following month, she was confident it would make her name.
 
Emmeline Pankhurst, leader of the Suffragettes, agreed. After a chance encounter on the ferry home, she invited Dorothy to lecture the growing ranks of women desperate to contribute to Britain’s war effort. But Dorothy was banned by the War Office from telling her inspirational story either through newspaper articles or talks until after the Armistice in 1918. 
Dorothy braved dreadful conditions on the Front, joining British soldiers in trenches near Albert in 1916
Dorothy braved dreadful conditions on the Front, joining British soldiers in trenches near Albert in 1916
By the time her book, Sapper Dorothy Lawrence, The Only English Woman Soldier, appeared in 1919 it was well received in England, America and Australia, but remaindered within a year as a world exhausted by war looked ahead to the glamour of the Roaring Twenties.
It left Dorothy with neither reputation nor income, and by 1925 she was living in rented rooms in Islington, North London, her behaviour increasingly erratic. With no family to look after her, she was taken into care, and committed first to the London County Mental Hospital and then Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum.
It was here she revealed the tragedy of her broken childhood to doctors – but there is no evidence her allegations were taken seriously and investigated as they would be today.
Dorothy was in hospital for a shocking 39 years until her lonely death in the asylum in 1964
Dorothy was in hospital for a shocking 39 years until her lonely death in the asylum in 1964
It is even possible she was declared insane because she dared to air them publicly. A century ago the word of a man of the Church would have been believed over that of a woman capable of something The Spectator described in its September 1919 review of her book as a ‘girlish freak’.
Dorothy was in hospital for a shocking 39 years until her lonely death in the asylum in 1964. She was buried in a pauper’s grave in New Southgate Cemetery, where the site of her plot is no longer clear.
It was a tragic end to what could have been a brilliant life in the vanguard of women’s journalism. Today, however, as Britain prepares to mark the centenary of the First World War, her exploits are finally being applauded.
Military historian Simon Jones  stumbled across a copy of her long-forgotten book while working at  the Royal Engineers Museum in Chatham, Kent, ten years ago and is now writing her biography.
With his help, The Mail on Sunday has pieced together fragments of Dorothy’s personal and professional life – and can reveal for the first time that her rape allegations were sufficiently compelling to be included in her medical records, held in the London Metropolitan Archives.
‘At the time she was committed her account of the rape was seen as manic behaviour, delusional, but if it was true it might go some way to explaining why she did what she did,’ Simon says.
‘We know today that victims of sexual abuse do not value their own wellbeing – did Dorothy deliberately put herself in danger? If she understood the danger she was in, she did not seem to fear it. Albert in those days was somewhere soldiers tried to avoid – they would even deliberately injure themselves – yet she headed straight for it.’
Simon has, however, been frustrated by the mysteries of Dorothy’s early and later life.
Her adventures in 1915 are clearly told – although he believes they benefit from a bit of spin – but her early years remain an enigma and, as a mental patient, little is known about her from 1925 onwards.
Dorothy resolved to cover the fighting on the Western Front but was ridiculed by editors unable to secure access for seasoned foreign correspondents
Dorothy resolved to cover the fighting on the Western Front but was ridiculed by editors unable to secure access for seasoned foreign correspondents
He believes she was born in Hendon, North London, at the end of the 1880s to an unmarried mother who used several aliases.
When her mother died, Dorothy – then aged around 13 or 14 – was handed into the care of a churchman. Dorothy describes him as ‘highly respected’ and says she was raised in ‘one of England’s cathedral cities’. Simon has traced this to  South-West England.
By the outbreak of war she was scratching a living as a journalist in London.
She resolved to cover the fighting on the Western Front but was ridiculed by editors unable to secure access for seasoned foreign correspondents.
‘I’ll see what an ordinary English girl can accomplish,’ she wrote.
‘I’ll see whether I can go one better than these big men with their cars, credentials and money .  .  . I’ll be hanged if I don’t try.’
And so she did, befriending the soldiers in Paris – her ‘khaki accomplices’, as she nicknames them – who would enable her to pass herself off as a Tommy. 
After ten days on the front line Dorothy began to suffer fainting fits. She feared that if she were found unconscious her sex would immediately be revealed
After ten days on the front line Dorothy began to suffer fainting fits. She feared that if she were found unconscious her sex would immediately be revealed
Rebecca Nash, curator of the Royal Engineers Museum explains: ‘The sappers’ uniform would have given Dorothy some leeway to move around – tunnellers had a kind of right to roam. They were not subject to the same military strictures as infantry soldiers, for example, and would often turn up without the  commanding officer of an infantry regiment having been informed.  It was the perfect cover.’
What was also perfect was meeting Sapper Tommy Dunn on the road to Albert. Beguiled by Dorothy’s mad bravery, he resolved to protect her, hiding her in an abandoned cottage until 179 Company troop moved up and she was able to camouflage herself among his comrades. What happened next is open to academic debate. Simon Jones is Britain’s foremost expert on the Somme tunnels, and he is not convinced by Dorothy’s account. He reveals: ‘I am sceptical of the passages in the book in which Dorothy talks of tunnelling under the front line, but there is no doubt whatsoever that she was in the trenches and that she was disguised as a man.’
His conviction is backed by Rebecca Nash. It is further corroborated by letters in the Imperial War Museum archive from Sir Walter Kirke, of the British Expeditionary Force’s secret service, which speak of a young female journalist disguised as a man on the front line.
After ten days Dorothy began to suffer fainting  fits. She feared that if she were found unconscious her sex would immediately be revealed, compromising Sapper Dunn and  others harbouring her.
She gave herself up, only to have a fit of  the giggles while being interrogated by the colonel: ‘I really could not help it,’ she wrote. 
Dorothy, who hungered to be a war correspondent, cycled to Albert, the village known as the front of the Front, and joined the ranks of 179 Tunnelling Company, 51st Division, Royal Engineers
Dorothy, who hungered to be a war correspondent, cycled to Albert, the village known as the front of the Front, and joined the ranks of 179 Tunnelling Company, 51st Division, Royal Engineers
‘So utterly ludicrous appeared this betrousered little female, marshalled solemnly by three soldiers and deposited before 20 embarrassed men.’
She was sent down the line to Third Army headquarters and subject to  a quasi court martial by three generals, who had her locked in a local convent until she could be put on a ferry back across the Channel.
Correspondence held by the Harry Ransom Centre in the University of Texas in Austin includes a letter from Dorothy saying she had had to scrap her first book on the instructions of the War Office, which seems to have invoked the 1914 Defence of the Realm Act to silence her. The letter is on the headed notepaper of The Wide World Magazine, a London-based illustrated monthly where Dorothy appears to have worked.
But even with this journalistic break Dorothy was unable to  parlay her experiences and talent into a successful career.
Nor is there any record of her marrying, so when her mental health failed she was incarcerated without argument for the rest of  her life.
It’s only now, as Britain commemorates the centenary of the Great War, that her unique part in it is being officially recognised with a mention in the new gallery at the Imperial War Museum, which will open this summer.
Curator Laura Clouting said: ‘This was a time when there was no provision for women to join any branch of the Services and they weren’t even able to work in munitions factories. Mostly they were involved in charity fundraising or succumbed to knitting mania.
‘We’re including Dorothy Lawrence because she proved the exception to the rule.’
So although she left little trace – no family papers or albums of photographs, and of course, no descendants to celebrate her achievement – 100 years after Dorothy Lawrence became a Sapper on the Somme, her place in history is finally secured.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2537793/She-fought-Somme-disguised-Tommy-did-Dorothy-die-unloved-unlauded-lunatic-asylum-Incredible-story-British-woman-fight-trenches.html#ixzz2qCSFVR6n
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Saturday, 11 January 2014

Heroic ancestors of Blackadder stars who reveal truth about the Great War... And sorry, Baldrick, they prove Mr Gove was rightm Daily Mail

Heroic ancestors of  Blackadder stars who reveal truth about the Great War... And sorry, Baldrick, they prove Mr Gove was right

  • Michael Gove said the Left is encouraging us to view war 'through fictional prism of dramas such as Blackadder'
  • Said drama portrayed Great War as a 'misbegotten shambles'
  • However, many relatives of show's stars fought in the Great War
  • Hugh Laurie’s great-uncle served in Canadian Light Infantry
  • Ben Elton's grandfather bravely fought for the Central Powers

The conflict has been brutal and attritional. But neither side in the extraordinarily heated debate about how Britain is to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I shows any signs of being ready to surrender.
First to go over the top in this modern-day trench war was Education Secretary Michael Gove, who robustly argued in the Mail that the Left is encouraging us to view the war ‘through the fictional prism of dramas such as Oh! What A Lovely War, The Monocled Mutineer and Blackadder, as a misbegotten shambles — a series of catastrophic mistakes perpetrated by an out-of-touch elite’.  
Mr Gove’s targets were enraged — especially by his inclusion of Blackadder. 
Stars of the show: (Left to right) Rowan Atkinson, Stephen Fry, Tony Robinson and Hugh Laurie in Blackadder
Stars of the show: (Left to right) Rowan Atkinson, Stephen Fry, Tony Robinson and Hugh Laurie in Blackadder
Among those returning fire was none other than Sir Tony Robinson, the actor and Labour Party activist who played the hapless Baldrick in the hit BBC TV comedy series.
‘I think Mr Gove has just made a very silly mistake,’ he said. ‘It is not Blackadder that teaches children about World War I.
‘To make this mistake, to categorise teachers who would introduce something like Blackadder as Left-wing and introducing Left-wing propaganda, is particularly unhelpful and irresponsible from a minister of education.’
Mr Gove’s department immediately hit back. ‘Tony Robinson is wrong,’ said a spokesman. ‘Michael wasn’t attacking teachers, he was attacking the myths perpetuated in Blackadder and elsewhere.’
Whatever the result of the battle, there can be no doubt that Blackadder will remain for many, throughout this centenary year, one of TV’s most vivid depictions of the Great War.
First screened 25 years ago, Blackadder Goes Forth featured Rowan Atkinson as the scheming and risk-averse Captain Edmund Blackadder, who was surrounded by upper-class idiots in the form of Stephen Fry’s General Melchett and Hugh Laurie’s Lieutenant George, and lower-class cannon fodder such as Private S. Baldrick.
 
Although all six episodes of the show are very funny — and, ultimately, poignant — the series undoubtedly portrayed the British conduct of the war as utterly moronic. While most historians dismiss this simplistic view, the influence of Blackadder has been stronger on the young generation’s perception of the war than any academic could ever hope to achieve.
Many would agree that Mr Gove is right to be worried by the distorted perspective this has fostered.
However, there is a huge irony at the heart of Blackadder. For while its writers and lead actors depicted a hopeless shambles overseen by fools, the cast’s own grandfathers and great uncles all fought in the war — and far from being a bunch of incompetents, they were all brave and heroic men.
For example, there is Hugh Laurie’s great-uncle, Sergeant William Mundell, who served in Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry. Born in Scotland in 1879, Mundell had first seen action during the Second Boer War, when he served as a trooper in the Imperial Yeomanry.
Stephen Fry's grandfather Martin Neumann
A newspaper clipping showing William Mundell - Hugh Laurie's great-uncle
Historic: Stephen Fry's grandfather Martin Neumann (left) and a newspaper clipping showing William Mundell - Hugh Laurie's great-uncle (right)
Afterwards, Mundell emigrated to Canada with some of his brothers and sisters, where they established a farm near Brooks in Alberta, some 120 miles south east of Calgary.
However, with the outbreak of the Great War, Mundell was determined once more to fight for his country. On September 12, 1914, after a journey of some 2,500 miles, he arrived in Levis in Quebec, where he enlisted with the newly formed ‘Patricias’ (named after Princess Patricia of Connaught, the daughter of the Governor General at the time).
As the regiment’s Lieutenant-Colonel Farquhar observed, adventurous veterans such as Mundell were the ‘best of the breed’, and on September 27 the regiment sailed to Europe to join the 27th Division of the British Army in Flanders.
When its troops were inspected by Lord Kitchener himself, the Field-Marshal was impressed by the number of medals worn by members of the Patricias.
‘Well!’ he said. ‘Now I know where all my old soldiers went to!’
The regiment saw plenty of action, with some particularly brutal close-quarter fighting at St Eloi.
Unlike in Blackadder, death was no respecter of rank, and on March 20, 1915, Lieutenant-Colonel Farquhar himself was mortally wounded by  a sniper.
Mundell himself was often at the thickest of the fighting, and one report states he was so brave that his officers recommended him for the highest honour of all — a Victoria Cross.
At the beginning of April, Mundell and his fellow Patricias were moved to an area called Polygon Wood near Ypres, and positioned just 50 yards from the German trenches. The regiment was constantly mortared, and on April 12 it was bombed by a Zeppelin, but there were no casualties.
Tony Robinson's €grandfather Horace Edward Parrott
Rowan Atkinson¿s  great-uncle Albert Atkinson
Heroes: Tony Robinson's €grandfather Horace Edward Parrott (left) and Rowan Atkinson’s great-uncle Albert 
Five days later, just as the Patricias were about to be relieved, a shell exploded near Mundell and four others. All five men were instantly killed.
The news of his death soon reached home in Canada, where the Calgary News Telegram conveyed the sad news. ‘He was the first to bring distinction to this city,’ the report proclaimed. 
Although Mundell never won the Victoria Cross, it is clear he was immensely brave, and most unlike the gibbering twit portrayed by his great-nephew in Blackadder.
A similar gulf between forebear and fictional portrayal can be found in the case of actor Stephen Fry’s maternal grandfather, Martin Neumann, who was just as courageous as Sergeant Mundell — but fighting for the other side.
When the war broke out, Neumann was only 17 and living in Hungary. However, a year later, he travelled to Vienna, in the mighty Austro-Hungarian Empire, where he enlisted as a private to fight against Britain and her Allies.
Like Mundell, and most unlike Fry’s Blackadder character General Melchett, Neumann was no coward. He fought on the Eastern Front against the Russians in the battle for Romania, where the conditions were atrocious. Many suffered from frostbite because of the cold, and food and water were extremely scarce. Unsurprisingly, morale was low.
But despite it all, Neumann fought well. On the night of September 23, 1916, his actions saw him recommended for a medal. ‘Under the heaviest artillery fire, he supported his advancing troops,’ the report read.
Owing to his bravery and leadership, Neumann swiftly rose through the ranks, and by the end of the war he had become an officer. But more importantly, he had survived.
Stephen Fry’s grandfather is not the only member of the Blackadder team who fought ‘on the wrong side’ during World War I. The co-writer of the series, Ben Elton, also had a grandfather who bravely fought for the Central Powers.
Blackadder writer Ben Elton
Elton's German army ancestor Victor Ehrenberg
Family ties: Blackadder writer Ben Elton (left) and his German army ancestor Victor Ehrenberg 
His name was Victor Ehrenberg, and he was born in the Hamburg suburb of Altona in 1891. An architecture and a Classics student, Ehrenberg was drafted into the army as an NCO in 1914. His job was to keep watch on the French through a pair of periscopic binoculars that could be raised above the edge of the trench.
The role was a highly dangerous one, and Ehrenberg was awarded the 2nd Class Iron Cross in September 1914.
In a private memoir that I have unearthed, Ehrenberg recalled episodes of his service that were both comic and grim. ‘I remember the French running away in their red trousers,’ he wrote. ‘They still wore them at the beginning of the war.’
Ehrenberg saw many comrades die, but he found the death of horses particularly affecting, and almost worse than seeing men dying. ‘With their heads and legs lifted high, they seemed to be a symbol of the suffering and protesting of all innocent creatures,’ he observed.
By the spring of 1915, Ehrenberg was promoted to sergeant, and he would justify that honour throughout the rest of his war. During the Battle Of The Somme the following year, he led a column of ammunition trucks through heavy shelling, which was a ‘most dangerous and nerve-racking experience’.
At one point, Ehrenberg and his troops needed to cross a bridge that was under extremely heavy fire, but his men refused to continue.
In action: Stephen Fry and Rowan Atikinson in Blackadder Goes Forth 1989
In action: Stephen Fry and Rowan Atikinson in Blackadder Goes Forth 1989
‘I finally got them on the move again,’ Ehrenberg recalled. ‘We crossed the bridge, one vehicle at a time, and when I reported at the battery to the captain, who otherwise had shown a cold dislike of myself, he greeted me with  warm friendliness.’
However, in spring 1917, Ehrenberg’s luck finally ran out, when he was hit by a fragment of shell in his right heel. Hospitalised in Frankfurt, he was visited by a young woman called Eva Sommer, who would later become his wife, and therefore Ben Elton’s grandmother.
Eva was a voluntary war worker on the home front in Germany, and throughout the conflict, she conveyed her thoughts in poetry. As the conflict raged, her words grew more bitter.
In her 1917 poem, Fallen In The Motherland, she wrote: ‘We don’t die, like out there on the field of battle. Buried alive, or in combat, as a hero. The war takes our life and our happiness. Slowly we die, bit by bit. We can’t change it.’
By May 1918, Ehrenberg had recovered, and he returned to his regiment and was made a lieutenant. Once again, he was wounded, but only slightly, and said he felt more ill because of the tetanus injections.
After the Armistice, Ehrenberg returned home to find what he called a ‘sad and disillusioned’ Germany. He later wrote: ‘I had even then hardly realised what “war” meant. I certainly had no idea to what extent the world had changed.’
At least Ehrenberg was able to go back home.
Such a fate was not enjoyed by Rowan Atkinson’s great-uncle, Albert Henry Atkinson, who grew up in Consett in County Durham.
A ‘fruit hawker’ by trade, Albert had married his sweetheart Jennie Purves in Newcastle in December 1912, when he was just 18.
Three years later, he signed up to fight in the war, and by November 1916, he had joined the 20th  (Service) Battalion of the Durham Light Infantry.
Enlisted as a private, Atkinson spent that winter at the Ypres Salient (the area held by the Allies for two-and-a-half brutal years before being used as the jumping-off point for an offensive towards the Passchendaele Ridge, which was meant to break through to the Belgian coast and knock the Germans out of the war).
There was a huge loss of life there and the conditions were appalling, somewhat similar to those portrayed in Blackadder — one of the few accurate elements in the TV series.
As one fellow private later wrote: ‘The first night I spent in the trenches in the bitterly cold frosty weather, I half-fainted. You couldn’t keep your feet warm.’
When it wasn’t frosty, the trenches were so waterlogged that the soldiers’ feet were permanently wet.
'Fictional prism': Education Secretary Michael Gove said the Left were encouraging us to view the war through dramas such as Oh! What a Lovely War and Blackadder
'Fictional prism': Education Secretary Michael Gove said the Left were encouraging us to view the war through dramas such as Oh! What a Lovely War and Blackadder
Of course, the cold and wet were not the only enemy, and night after night, Atkinson and his comrades were shelled. Inevitably perhaps, he was wounded — in his right thigh, on January 31, 1917 — and had to be sent back to Britain.
He recovered, and on June 11, 1917, he returned to the Front.
Sadly, he had just three months to live. On September 20, Atkinson and the battalion participated in the start of the Battle Of Menin Road as part of the Third Battle  Of Ypres.
The day was a frustrating one, with the unit unable to reach its objective, owing to German shelling, although there had only been three fatal casualties. The next day would prove to be far more expensive in human life.
At around 9am, the battalion went over the top, and — supported only by a meagre artillery barrage — they were cut down by murderous machine-gun fire and forced to dig in. The Germans counter-attacked that afternoon.
Although the lads from Durham were able to hold them off, the unit lost two officers and 33 men. One of them was Albert Atkinson.
It is not clear exactly how he died. All we know is that he won no medals, and had no effects to send home. All his wife Jennie would receive would be a Memorial Scroll, which she later lost in a fire.
In Blackadder, the most lovable character is perhaps Tony Robinson’s Private Baldrick. He is often to be found concocting food and drink from whatever vile ingredients he can forage.
Strangely enough, the wartime career of Robinson’s grandfather, Horace Edward Parrott, was not
entirely dissimilar, since he was a Canteen Steward in what was then called the Merchant
Service (later known as the Merchant Navy).
Although it would be too easy to chortle at this coincidence, serving in any capacity on the high seas during the war was no easy matter.
Just as in World War II, getting supplies across the Atlantic was an essential — and extremely
hazardous — business.
From 1914 to 1918, some 7,759,090 tons of shipping was lost to German submarines, at the cost of the lives of 14,661 merchant seamen.
In recognition of their bravery, the sailors were decorated.
Horace himself was awarded the Mercantile Marine Medal and the British Medal.
And if that wasn’t enough, when war broke out again in 1939, the indefatigable Horace, at the age of 53, once more signed up to serve in the Merchant Navy. He would gain five further awards, which is a lot more than Baldrick ever won.
What the experiences of all these men — from different sides of the conflict, and on land and sea — show us is that the reality of the war and the characters of the men who fought it were very different from what is portrayed in Blackadder.
If William, Martin, Victor, Albert and Horace could still see how their descendants depicted the war, I fear they might feel their courage — and sacrifice — were now held cheap by a generation whose
qualities make a rather poor comparison to their own.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2537369/Heroic-ancestors-Blackadder-stars-reveal-truth-Great-War-And-sorry-Baldrick-prove-Mr-Gove-right.html#ixzz2q4Zqq0jT
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