Now sadly I doubt that the “The Tale” in the picture postcard refers to the short story written in 1916 by Joseph Conrad and published the following year.
Nor did the recipient live in Eltham.
She was a Miss Nell Goddard who lived in Wenhaston, which is a small village of 818 people in north west Suffolk.
The Domesday Book records that the village had a mill, a church and woodland sufficient to feed sixteen hogs.
Wenhaston, briefly had a railway station which was part of the Southwold Railway which opened in 1879 and closed in 1929 and today has a “thriving pig farm industry.” *
But it does have a pre-Reformation panel painting depicting the Last Day of Judgement, which Miss Nell would have known, because the panel was discovered during restoration work to the church in 1892.
All of which is a long way from Eltham and leaves me to think that this was one of those picture postcards produced in their thousands which were over printed with the names of different places.
That said I like it.
And given that we have the name of the manufacturer, who was a W & K Lonson along with a serial number, we might in the fullness of time find out more.
I hope so.
Location; 1917
Picture; postcard, courtesy of David Harrop
* Wenhaston, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wenhaston
Nor did the recipient live in Eltham.
She was a Miss Nell Goddard who lived in Wenhaston, which is a small village of 818 people in north west Suffolk.
The Domesday Book records that the village had a mill, a church and woodland sufficient to feed sixteen hogs.
Wenhaston, briefly had a railway station which was part of the Southwold Railway which opened in 1879 and closed in 1929 and today has a “thriving pig farm industry.” *
But it does have a pre-Reformation panel painting depicting the Last Day of Judgement, which Miss Nell would have known, because the panel was discovered during restoration work to the church in 1892.
All of which is a long way from Eltham and leaves me to think that this was one of those picture postcards produced in their thousands which were over printed with the names of different places.
That said I like it.
And given that we have the name of the manufacturer, who was a W & K Lonson along with a serial number, we might in the fullness of time find out more.
I hope so.
Location; 1917
Picture; postcard, courtesy of David Harrop
* Wenhaston, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wenhaston
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