The Museum has to remain closed
until further notice ... and we can offer no date
A Resumé of Recent Thoughts
In these autumnal weeks when
meaningful anniversaries come thick and fast, such
as today, Sept 3rd, and in another couple of weeks
we have 'Battle of Britain Week', it is hard not to
reflect that we should have been commemorating those
notable anniversaries on our weekly Friday
openings. With even the occasional extra
Saturday or so, as was originally planned for August
15th and VJ-Day.
Instead, your webmaster sits here at home, into
forced submission by a foreign virus, contemplating
his naval and wondering when, and even if, we will
ever open our little museum again. It will be a sad
loss to Sutton and Wawne villages if we don't, but
we have to face facts.
If and when we do re-open, we are most certainly
going to need a new influx of volunteers to do
it. The original volunteers that started the
place are, by and large, in their 80s and 90s, and
even some of the newer ones - including myself in
that having only been fully involved this past 10
years - are in their 60s and 70s. At the time of
lockdown, we did have a couple of newer staff come
aboard, who barely were able to start to know the
place when, Wallop, the virus struck ... and that
was that.
I paid a brief visit to the Old School during the
week, primarily to collect a copy of a book by
Andrew Suddaby that we had a mail order for, and to
take some items up not required by ourselves, such
as a replacement DVD player for the TV, (this time
with a remote that works), plus a few things for our
'sale' stalls when we do get going.
It
is very sad looking around the place, cold, unused,
and gathering dust at an alarming rate. A huge
amount of cleaning will be required when we do
re-open, mostly to sweep up and rid ourselves of the
inevitable cobwebs. Angela & Peter, our
veteran and indomitable caretakers - both ex-pupils
of St James' by the way - are looking after the
place, keeping an eye on things, checking security
etc, as well as their regular garden duties.
They are both well into their 70s too, and of
course, they have to be mindful of the restrictions
and why we have them, and of the risks to their own
health as they undertake their arduous and voluntary
duties.
Recent national news is that the virus is creeping
back, we are heading back to where we were in March
and April, and at an alarming rate. Never mind
the politics, medics are telling us we will as
likely as not have a second wave through the winter,
and more virulent than ever. The omens for a
spring re-opening are not good at all.
In short, the main obstacles against our re-opening
will be not enough volunteers, a good cleaning
regime required, all volunteers and visitors to be
required to wear masks, and have to keep 2m apart
into the bargain. If all those requirements
are still in place, we will be in a right old fix
and no mistake. Other museums have opened, in
most cases I suspect because they must, or die,
their dwindling finances being the driving
force. We are luckier than most, we don't pay
a rent as such, and have the Old School for our
exclusive use on Fridays. So we can all stay
safe, but only by not opening at all.
Frustrating is not the right word!
I say all that whilst bearing in
mind, yes, many thousands of folks
have already died, even more have lost their jobs
and incomes, and a
good many businesses have failed altogether. And
there will be a great deal more of all that before
this is over. In the wider realm of things, our
troubles are small beer, and we'll get no sympathy
from those who have already lost a great deal, nor
seek any.
So as we remember quietly in our
own ways the terrible sacrifices that were made to
keep this country free, today is very poignant, in
more ways than one. For instance, on this day,
the very day war against the Nazis was declared,
their reply was to sink a passenger liner, the
'Athenia' just a few miles short of the Clyde
estuary and kill 112 civilians just like that, no
warning. They started as they meant to go on,
as our forefathers were soon to find out. It
always was going to be a gigantic uphill struggle
right from the very start, and today was the start
of it. 28 of those passengers were American --
it does make one wonder now what took the US so long
to get involved?
The writing was on the wall from day one. If we move
the calendar forward to the first real victory that
turned the tide, we would mark loss on loss,
disaster after disaster, month in and month out, for
the next THREE YEARS ... it will be October 2022
before we will be able to ring our church bells to
commemorate the 80th anniversary of the victory of
Alemein. It was no small victory, it was a
game changer. From then on, we started to win,
but it would still take almost another three years
again before it was all done and the war
'won'. To put it in context, the 'Battle of
Britain' was an early victory yes, of course it was,
but it was only a holding operation - it did not in
itself win the war, but it did eventually
enable us to win it.
That was the six years out of the lives of our
parents and grandparents generation. It
started officially today, the day when their lives
were put on hold, and for so many, such as the
family who lived in this house where I write now,
would have their lives lives cut tragically short
nearly two years later - as did another 1,300 or so
Hull citizens. But they did not know that on that
fateful day in 1939.
This day will pass by most teenagers and students of
today, unnoticed and unmarked. But that
doesn't make it any less important in this country's
history, just as important as October 21st in
1805. It's a date that the naysayers,
deny-ers, history re-writers and others of their sad
ilk cannot deny. It's a firm date,
irrefutable, and embedded in the stones of our
history. It happened. Our parents know what is
true.
There were those that lost their lives ... and those
who had six years stolen out of their lives.
They survived, and were grateful for it, but it was
still a loss.
We will remember them .. ... all of them.

Stay safe
everyone, and until we meet again .. ..
All the best to Everyone, wherever in the world
you are, from all of us at the Sutton & Wawne
Museum.
LOCKDOWN
ECHOES
It is very
quiet in the Old School Museum
Even the mice have gone to sleep
Nothing moves, and all is still .. ..
No sounds, no laughter, not even a peep.
But hark, is that a creak .. ?
Of a squeaky floor or a wooden door ...
... a softly closing desk lid enhancing
the echos of children, long, long, past -
in gentle laughter and the joys of dancing.
For if we stand, and listen, so very quietly
We can hear in those very rafters
their joyful songs, and a glee that lasts
and will still be sensed by those
who come here in years long after ...
long after we all have long since passed.
© 2020 . . . Sutton & Wawne Museum
These images were taken
by Eric Johnson for the Dominoes series
of teaching books. Our own collection of the
series is incomplete, and so these have been
supplied from scans done by Amanda Denwood who now
lives in Cumbria. Amanda visited the museum
last year, and noted which books were missing, and
offered to scan the missing ones for us from her
own collection.

For folks longing for a semblance of the past,
even the distant past in that far off childhood
country
called Nostalgialand, we have a few copies of a
new
book to offer, by former Sutton resident and
long-time
friend of our museum, Andrew Suddaby.
More general to Britain, but with nods
to some
Hull memories that are not specific to
Sutton,
this
short book in a nice sized font for easy
reading
is a general tour of what we did, watched,
and listened to in the UK years ago.
Priced at £7.00 including UK
postage only
it will be on offer inside the museum for £5
when we re-open.
Sorry, overseas postage
cannot be offered right now,
and in anycase, the cost would probably exceed
the book.