Wednesday 16 February 2022

A photograph ..... a postcard ..... and the search for a sister ....Sidney Albert Taylor ......

This is Sidney Albert Taylor, sometime during the Great War.

Sidney Albert Taylor, 1916

The picture postcard was sent to his sister from the village of Woodbastwick in Norfolk, where he was recovering from an injury, and his message to Ann Isabella was upbeat.

Message home, 1916
And that is pretty much it, but like all young men from that conflict he deserved to come out of the shadows, and in the process the story became not him but the search for him and along the way presented a series of coincidences which brought him closer to me.

So, the starting point for the search was the name and address on the card.

I have to say I had no expectation that 23 Devon Gardens would still exist, but it does, or that it would be so easy to find Ann Isabella.

She was just a set of initials and a surname, which even for the most determined researcher can be a tad daunting.

But the historical records offered her up.  

She was born in Gateshead in 1889, her father was a “boiler man” and for at least the first decade after her birth the family lived on Papermill Square, and by 1911 just round the corner at 84 Victoria Road.

Miss I. A. Taylor, 1916
Sadly, the area has been extensively redeveloped and apart from the Independent Primitive Methodist Chapel there is little that she would have recognized, and today there is every indication that the chapel may not be with us for much longer.

As for their home, this was a 4 roomed property into which squeezed her parents, three siblings, and for a while another brother and sister.  And there amongst her siblings was our Sydney Albert, who had been born in 1894 and at the age of 16 was an apprentice at a paper mill.

I don’t know when he enlisted, but given that the postcard was dated 1916, he may have signed up shortly after the outbreak of war and was possibly one of the Durham Pals.*  Or he may have been a reservist called back to the Colours.

What I can be sure of is that he was not in France in 1914 or 1915, as his medal record show he was not awarded either the 1914 or 1914- 15 Star, and that in 1916 he was still in the Durham Light Infantry, although later in the war he appears to have been transferred to the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment.

He survived the war, and was discharged in 1919, with the classification of “Disabled”.

Recovering in Woodbastwick, 1916
The records show that he went back to his old occupation in a paper mill.  In 1922, he was at the Team Valley Paper Mill, and was still there fifteen years later when he gave his occupation as “Paper Bag Machinist”.  

There are at present few details on the Mill but the National Archives** records that company records for 1895 through to 1963 are lodged at the Durham County Record Office.***

For the curious, both his 1922 home at 27 Telford Street, and his 1939 house at 23 Brighton Road have survived. They are located just a short walk from where he had lived before the war. 

I have yet to discover when he married Violet Mabel, who was from Cornwall, and where and how they met may remain a mystery.

I do wonder what he made of his time at Woodbastwick in Norfolk. 

It is a small village which my Wikipedia tells me in the 2001 census had a population of 362 in 157 households,  in 2001, increasing to a population of 399 in 168 households at the 2011 Census.****

I will go looking for where in the village he spent his time recovering from his wounds, but I suspect it has gone.

Woodbastwick Village Green, 2005
Leaving me just to reflect on the way you can be drawn into the story.  

My father was born and grew up in Gateshead not far from where Mr. Taylor lived and remained in the area until the early 1930s, while my maternal grandfather was also in the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Regiment during the Great War.

Funny old world.

Location Gateshead, Norfolk

Pictures; Sydney Albert Taylor, and the picture postcard, 1916 from the collection of David Harrop, and Woodbastwick Village Green, Roy Douglas, 2005, This image was taken from the Geograph project collection. See this photograph's page on the Geograph website for the photographer's contact details. The copyright on this image is owned by Roy Douglas and is licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license.

* Durham Light Infantry, 18th Battalion (Durham Pals), Durham at War, Durham County Record Office, https://www.durhamatwar.org.uk/story/12528/

** Team Valley Paper Mill, National Archives, https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/c/F176058

*** Team Valley Paper Mill, D/TVP, NRA 35658 Team, Durham County Record Office http://www.durhamrecordoffice.org.uk/

**** Woodbastwick, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodbastwick

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