ID: MIS_1991 / Kathleen Haines Editor

TitleMistral - journal of Mersea Island Society. 1991
AbstractMistral 1991 - 25th Anniversay Edition. Partial index:
  • Seaview Caravan Park residential development
  • At Coopers Beach by M. Parmenter
  • Yacht AVEL to be restored. The oldest surviving Camper and Nicholson boat.
  • Old Spiery. Mersea's Fighting Parson, by Mary Stevens.
  • One man's memories - another man's fortunes. By John Llewellyn-Jones.
  • Return to Dunkirk - RIIS I, by Leo Wylie.
    Post Boxes outside the Post Office.
  • Obituaries
    • Dennis Chatters by D. Cudmore and Frank Osborn.
    • Ralph Luckham
  • Mersea's Oyster Merchant. A tribute to Marie Stammers Mussett, by Marjorie Livermore.
  • The Houseboat L'ESPERANCE.
  • The Cornelius Family of the Cycle Stores, Kingsland Road, by David E. Weston.
  • Some old Mersea Homes. East Mersea Hall by J.H.G. Sunnocks.
  • The Grand Mersea Time Machine Tour by Elsie Karbacz.
  • Lions Talking Magazine by Frank Osborn.
  • The Packing Shed Project by David Cardy.

Museum copy Accession No. 2011-09-007G. All pages scanned from a borrowed copy.

Mistral 1990
Mistral 1992
Mistral - list of editions

AuthorKathleen Haines Editor
Published1991
SourceMersea Museum / Ron Green
IDMIS_1991
Related Images:
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Front Cover.
 25th Anniversary Edition.  MIS_1991_001
ImageID:   MIS_1991_001
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Front Cover.
25th Anniversary Edition.
Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 27.
 At Cooper's Beach, by M. Parmenter.  MIS_1991_035
ImageID:   MIS_1991_035
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 27.
At Cooper's Beach, by M. Parmenter.
Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 28.
 At Cooper's Beach contd.  MIS_1991_036
ImageID:   MIS_1991_036
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 28.
At Cooper's Beach contd.
Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 29.
 At Cooper's Beach contd. 
 The Front Row chalets at Cooper's Beach - sketch by Don Butlin.  MIS_1991_037
ImageID:   MIS_1991_037
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 29.
At Cooper's Beach contd.
"The Front Row" chalets at Cooper's Beach - sketch by Don Butlin.
Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 30.
 The AVEL.
 The oldest surviving Camper and Nicholson boat has been lying on Mersea waterfront since 1932.
 The AVEL - being prized from the Mud. Sketch by Don Butlin.  MIS_1991_038
ImageID:   MIS_1991_038
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 30.
The AVEL.
The oldest surviving Camper and Nicholson boat has been lying on Mersea waterfront since 1932.
The AVEL - being prized from the Mud. Sketch by Don Butlin.
Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 57.
 A Recollection of 1939. H.M.S.
 Evacuees.
</p><p>
War had been declared. I had experienced something of an anti-climax because there was so little evidence of a state of war. We had, it's true, seen a dogfight high up in the sky over the coast; but war has up to now meant to me terror, noise, eclat. I suppose I must have got that idea from history books or tales from my old aunt, or my father who'd taken part in the Great War.
</p><p>
But now a climax seemed to be coming. The first batch of evacuees from East and West Ham were arriving on the island off the Essex coast where we lived. I had recently passed my first driving test, and was to be a Billeting Officer, collecting children from the Chapel Hall and conveying them to their new homes. I had been instructed to choose two nice children for our own home. This extraordinary commission, and the talk and relative excitement in a normally phlegmatic village, fills me now with wonder. To speak of 'batches' of children, and of 'choosing' some, immediately suggests that the children were, not frightened, lonely, homesick beings, but things, articles for sale. Even the most unwilling and unsuitable householders on the island had been informed that they were to make room for as many children as their living space permitted, so, instead of arguments as to whether or not they would take children, it was now an unseemly scramble for the best-looking ones. I wonder how may householders who had come to view the arrival had this uppermost in their minds, or had room for the feelings of pity and sympathy that the sight of the children must have aroused. I remember them now - lines of pathetic little humans, dressed in clothes that were too hot for the late summer weather; each with a name label, and a gas mask hanging round his neck - children mostly under eleven years, some crying, some bewildered, some interested in their new surroundings, some protesting that they wanted to go home again, some old and wise enough to know that that was futile; clutching the hands of younger sisters and brothers, hoping perhaps to find a kindly, or familiar, face.
</p><p>
Delivering them to hitherto unknown people I found moving, too. Some received them suspiciously, anticipating trouble from the East End of London; some, on the contrary, smiled and welcomed them kindly, and I left them with an easier mind. It was a new experience for me, the daughter of the Baptist Chapel minister,
brought up apart from the world, as it was known in chapel language, deliberately kept away from others of my age and from families that were worldly, to be knocking on the doors of numbers of such people and talking to them now, when otherwise I should never have spoken to them in a lifetime.
</p>
War, then, was overriding, like some great emotion not to be denied, and my allegiance to a narrow religion, devoted and extremely conscientious as I was, paled before it.
</p><p>[ The last paragraph was from the following page. ]
</p><p>H.M.S. was Helen Searle - see <a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&bid=MIS_2002_010>MIS_2002_010 </a> 
</p>  MIS_1991_067
ImageID:   MIS_1991_067
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 57.
A Recollection of 1939. H.M.S.
Evacuees.

War had been declared. I had experienced something of an anti-climax because there was so little evidence of a state of war. We had, it's true, seen a dogfight high up in the sky over the coast; but war has up to now meant to me terror, noise, eclat. I suppose I must have got that idea from history books or tales from my old aunt, or my father who'd taken part in the "Great War".

But now a climax seemed to be coming. The first batch of evacuees from East and West Ham were arriving on the island off the Essex coast where we lived. I had recently passed my first driving test, and was to be a Billeting Officer, collecting children from the Chapel Hall and conveying them to their new homes. I had been instructed to choose two "nice children" for our own home. This extraordinary commission, and the talk and relative excitement in a normally phlegmatic village, fills me now with wonder. To speak of 'batches' of children, and of 'choosing' some, immediately suggests that the children were, not frightened, lonely, homesick beings, but things, articles for sale. Even the most unwilling and unsuitable householders on the island had been informed that they were to make room for as many children as their living space permitted, so, instead of arguments as to whether or not they would take children, it was now an unseemly scramble for the best-looking ones. I wonder how may householders who had come to view the arrival had this uppermost in their minds, or had room for the feelings of pity and sympathy that the sight of the children must have aroused. I remember them now - lines of pathetic little humans, dressed in clothes that were too hot for the late summer weather; each with a name label, and a gas mask hanging round his neck - children mostly under eleven years, some crying, some bewildered, some interested in their new surroundings, some protesting that they wanted to go home again, some old and wise enough to know that that was futile; clutching the hands of younger sisters and brothers, hoping perhaps to find a kindly, or familiar, face.

Delivering them to hitherto unknown people I found moving, too. Some received them suspiciously, anticipating trouble from the East End of London; some, on the contrary, smiled and welcomed them kindly, and I left them with an easier mind. It was a new experience for me, the daughter of the Baptist Chapel minister, brought up apart from "the world", as it was known in chapel language, deliberately kept away from others of my age and from families that were "worldly", to be knocking on the doors of numbers of such people and talking to them now, when otherwise I should never have spoken to them in a lifetime.

War, then, was overriding, like some great emotion not to be denied, and my allegiance to a narrow religion, devoted and extremely conscientious as I was, paled before it.

[ The last paragraph was from the following page. ]

H.M.S. was Helen Searle - see MIS_2002_010

Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 58.
 A Recollection of 1939 continuted - transcribed with previous page.
 Hazel's Books, 17 High Street.  MIS_1991_068
ImageID:   MIS_1991_068
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 58.
A Recollection of 1939 continuted - transcribed with previous page.
Hazel's Books, 17 High Street.
Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 79.
 The Packing Shed Project by David Cardy.
</p><p><a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&rhit=1&bid=MIS_1991_092 ID=1>Next Page </a></p>  MIS_1991_091
ImageID:   MIS_1991_091
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 79.
The Packing Shed Project by David Cardy.

Next Page

Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 80.
 The Packing Shed Project contd.
 1912 sketch by Don Butlin
</p><p><a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&rhit=1&bid=MIS_1991_091 ID=1>Previous Page </a>
 <a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&rhit=2&bid=MIS_1991_093 ID=2>Next Page </a>
</p>  MIS_1991_092
ImageID:   MIS_1991_092
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 80.
The Packing Shed Project contd.
1912 sketch by Don Butlin

Previous Page
Next Page

Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 81.
 The Packing Shed Project contd.
 Sketch by Don Butlin.
</p><p><a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&rhit=1&bid=MIS_1991_092 ID=1>Previous Page </a>
 <a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&rhit=2&bid=MIS_1991_094 ID=2>Next Page </a>
</p>  MIS_1991_093
ImageID:   MIS_1991_093
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 81.
The Packing Shed Project contd.
Sketch by Don Butlin.

Previous Page
Next Page

Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum
 Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 82.
 The Packing Shed Project contd.
 Answers to Twenty Questions
 Cresta Stores and Francis Hoole.
</p><p><a href=mmphoto.php?typ=ID&hit=1&tot=1&ba=cke&rhit=1&bid=MIS_1991_091 ID=1>Previous Page </a>
</p>  MIS_1991_094
ImageID:   MIS_1991_094
Title: Mistral. Journal of the Mersea Island Society. January 1991. Page 82.
The Packing Shed Project contd.
Answers to Twenty Questions
Cresta Stores and Francis Hoole.

Previous Page

Date:January 1991
Source:Mersea Museum