Posted by: Blog Administrator
on Dec 1, 2009
Tagged in:
tended ,
Swindon soldier ,
Swindon and Wiltshire History Centre ,
solved ,
school trip ,
research ,
records ,
Northern France ,
never going to be forgotten ,
neither famous ,
History Centre ,
GWR works ,
graves ,
First World War ,
expert staff ,
Europe ,
computers ,
Clyffe Pypard ,
Belgium ,
battle fields ,
ancestry.co.uk ,
Albert Cook
For a school trip to the First World War battle fields in Northern France and Belgium, we had to research a Swindon soldier from the war. We visited the History Centre with the school on a Monday; they kindly opened it for us so we could have the place to ourselves with the full attention of their expert staff who were extremely helpful (we would have found it very difficult if not for them!). Our soldier, Albert Cook, was a worker in the GWR works. His parents were from a small village called Clyffe Pypard and his mother died when he was six. Although he is no relation to us, neither famous nor very important, from all the hours of hard work and visiting his grave we now feel like we’ve known him all our lives.

Using original archival material at the History Centre
Since we didn’t get enough information on the first visit to the centre and we were too tight to pay for an account on ancestry.co.uk, we decided to go back to the centre where it’s free and more fun. We took the train down and were surprised the staff could remember us and our problems with our research we had the first time we visited. They showed us round again and helped us with the computers. The other people visiting that day were also very helpful and friendly; they showed us some great websites and how to get around on them.
From this visit we solved most of our previous mysteries but aroused some others, we found he had a sister who had disappeared when he was in his toddler years and we still didn’t know how his mother died. We decided to go again the next day; it’s so fun and interesting. We cleared all but a few of our problems, these few were not solvable because no records existed that would have held the data we wanted.
The trip was amazing, it seemed the soldiers of the First World War are the most remembered in Europe and they are never going to be forgotten. Their graves are still tended to like they died yesterday and schools from many different countries visit the cemeteries. When we sat by Albert’s grave we both had tears in our eyes. This was the reason why we came, to sit by the grave side of a person we felt we knew so well. If not for the centre and its bursting information of the past we wouldn’t have felt anywhere near like we did. Thank you Swindon and Wiltshire History Centre!
Emily Kellett and Charlotte Manser
Commonweal School, Swindon
Posted by: Blog Administrator
on May 12, 2009
Tagged in:
Wylye valley ,
Wiltshire and Swindon Archives ,
Wiltshire ,
vicar ,
The Registrar General ,
Swindon ,
Sutton Veny churchyard ,
Sutton Veny ,
Spanish Flu ,
soldiers ,
Seend ,
school log books ,
Salisbury Municipal Borough ,
parish register of burials ,
pandemic ,
nurses ,
Niall Johnson ,
NHS Direct ,
memorial service ,
La Grippe ,
influenza ,
Imperial War Graves Commission ,
Health Protection Agency ,
head teachers ,
graves ,
Flu ,
First World War ,
buried ,
Australian ,
army camps ,
Anzac Day ,
anti-viral drugs ,
1968 ,
1918
The current concerns over swine flu call to mind the famous influenza pandemic of 1918. It has been estimated that the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 killed more people than the First World War, at somewhere between 20 and 30 million people world-wide. The flu, which was known as "Spanish Flu" or "La Grippe”, was most deadly for people aged 20 to 40. This age range was unusual for influenza which is usually a killer of the elderly and young children.
Sutton Veny burial register 1918
Wiltshire was not hit as badly as more densely populated areas, but nevertheless the impact was still felt strongly.