Week One: First thoughts: by Caroline Auckland

The Belgian Refugees in Tunbridge Wells: A Weekly Diary by Caroline Auckland

The very first thing I decided to do after joining this community project was turn to the written past. We had been asked to think about what we might like to work on, research or how we might contribute.

I decided to scan the local newspaper, the Kent & Sussex Courier, of 1914, for references to Belgian refugees in the area. Firstly to see if there were any and secondly to isolate themes. Yes, there were references and now I have a file full of themes with columns of text waiting to be dissected.

But, unexpectedly the major item which jumped out of the editions I scanned digitally on British Newspaper Archives on-line was not an editorial piece, it was an advertisement.

An ephemeral filler, the search function had located the word ‘Belgian’ and provided me with the first challenge to my perception of this project.

 weekes                                      

Figure 1 Kent & Sussex Courier, Advertisement for Weekes Department Store, Friday 27 November 1914, p.4.

 

Full transcript:

Now Open

R.W. Weekes’

Grand Christmas Bazaar.

British Toys for British & Belgian Children.

Dolls! Dolls! Dolls!

British, French, Belgian, Russian and Indian Soldiers.

R.H. Artillery. Boy Scouts and Transport.

Naval Landing Parties. 4.7 Guns.

English Castles as Fort

British Squawk-a-Boo   Fur Animals

All Kinds of Games   Dean’s Books and Rag Toys.

‘Meccano’ for model construction, a splendid pastime for Boys.

Please enquire about the £200 ‘Meccano’ prize Competition.

Christmas cards and Calendars.

Tom Smith’s Crackers Lanterns and decorations.

R.W Weekes

Opposite S.E. & C.R. Station, Tunbridge Wells

 

 

An advertisement for Christmas toys is worded ‘British Toys for British & Belgian Children’.

This posed the following issues:

A respectable shop advertises its wares. Seasonally marketing products to increase its own profits.

By introducing a nationalistic title to ‘children’, defining them as either British or Belgian within the same sentence, both groups them as a collective – ‘children’ and separates them as different from each other within that definition. ‘British Toys for British & Belgian Children’ also promotes home produced items, but by prefixing the child with a country of origin suggests that the child from one country is different to another.

Do they need different toys?

Implicit is gender reference.

The advertisement suggests they need: ‘Dolls! Dolls! Dolls!

‘British, French, Belgian, Russian and Indian Soldiers.’ The miniature toys of war, but even they are defined by race.

Is this to appeal to the Belgian families to come and buy toys for their children?

Or is this an altruistic appeal to the local community to visit the store to buy toys to donate to the refugees who have arrived with very little and are being provided with clothing and homes by local committees, families and the church?

Have their children become objects of social curiosity, almost playthings, a counter celebrity status, and the children of war. They become the ‘other’ the outsiders, their needs defined by their place of birth or departure and slightly exotic in their differences.

Dolls are not listed by type but toy soldiers are- all from the same side of the war but still distinguished by nationality with no opposition mentioned- no Germans, Turks or Austrians?

Here is a postcard of Weekes– with it awnings. Its close proximity to the railway station is also interesting. This station is where many of the refugees arrived in Tunbridge Wells and it is also the main travel artery to London and the coast. Which, significantly, is even mentioned in the advertisement ‘R.W. Weekes Opposite S.E.& C.R. Station, Tunbridge Wells’ therefore it could be suggested positioning itself as a symbol of modernity, movement and connections.

 

mount-pleasant

Figure 2 1911 Postcard, Unknown Publisher. Weekes, Tunbridge Wells

It is also important to consider the rest of the page, what is this advertisement placed next to? What is the editorial content of the rest of the page? What other editorials also appear?

I would love to know if Tunbridge Wells Museums has a selection of dolls and toy soldiers from this period, plus the other toys mentioned. This could make an interesting small exhibition to run in conjunction with this project.

All questions to mull over during the next week.

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Introducing the Project

This project uses a variety of historical sources to reveal the largely forgotten history of the Belgian community in Tunbridge Wells, Kent and surrounding areas during the First World War.  Building on research mainly done by local resident Alison Sandford Mackenzie and working with volunteers from the Camden Road Education, Arts and Theatre Enterprise (CREATE) the project will recover the largely forgotten story of the Belgian refugees who sojourned in the area, the ‘colony’ that they built, and their interactions with the host community.  Volunteers will utilise digital and archival resources to make posts to this blog about the refugees and their hosts and to produce a local Belgian Community Heritage Trail, which will be available to local people, school students and visitors to use free of charge by the end of July 2017.  It is intended that versions of the Heritage Trail will be available not only in English but also (through this blog) in Belgium’s official languages, Dutch, French, and German.

The starting point for the project is the souvenir album which belonged to the Tunbridge Wells resident, feminist and social activist, Amelia Scott and her sister, Louisa, and is held in the Women’s Library at the London School of Economics, together with press reports listing those who – like the  Scotts – formed committees and/or subscribed to the relief of refugees.    Recent research published in a special issue of Immigrants and Minorities (2016), together with earlier publications (e.g. Cahalan, 1982) has identified and analysed substantial Belgian communities during the First World War in industrial areas, centres of munitions manufacture, outer London, Scotland, and rural Wales, but there is a research gap regarding the experiences of refugees in smaller, provincial towns.  Provisional investigation reveals that, as an established spa resort, Tunbridge Wells not only attracted some wealthy, self-supporting Belgian guests, but also played host to refugees from more diverse social backgrounds.

For more information about the project, please contact RTWBelgians1914@kent.ac.uk

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