The courtship of John Creighton and Jean Cordingley revolved around life at "The Big House" built by her father Harold Havenden Cordingley on "Mihi", the sheep grazing station he established thirty kilometres ouside Armidale in the early twentieth century .
Adventures of a family historian. Compiled by John Michael Windsor Creighton
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Monday, April 25, 2011
Friday, April 22, 2011
Day Twenty
This photograph of Jean Cordingley was taken in Armidale in 1935 shortly after she met my father John Creighton.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Day Nineteen
John Leslie Fitzmaurice Creighton met my mother Jean Cordingley in Armidale some time in 1936. He was the newly arrived Manager of the new radio station 2AD, she was the daughter of a well known local grazing family living on family property "Mihi"
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Day Eighteen
A few weeks ago while searching online for references to my father, John Leslie Fitzmaurice Creighton, I came across a new website. It celebrates the 75th anniversary of the opening of Radio Station 2AD on February 5, 1936 in Armidale in the New England region of New South Wales, Australia.
My father was the first manager of 2AD. I already knew this of course, having been brought up on the radio tales he broadcast in Armidale where he met my mother Jean Cordingley of Mihi during those days many years before my birth in 1951. However I did not know the exact date of the launch.
How strange it is that I had begun compiling these Chronicles on the very day of this 75th anniversary. I had launched this blog and had written the introductory page about The Creighton Chronicles on February 5, 2011.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Day Seventeen
“The Story of Michael and Mary” a radio script
by John Leslie Fitzmaurice Creighton,
first broadcast in Sydney, June 20, 1935.
by John Leslie Fitzmaurice Creighton,
first broadcast in Sydney, June 20, 1935.
At about 5 o’clock on a certain evening in December, 1917, a fog hung heavily round a lovely old Georgian home in Norfolk on the East Coast of England. It swirled in ghostly eddies across neatly kept tennis courts and croquet lawns and it wreathed silvery shapes across the bare branches of elm trees. Moisture dripped incessantly from ivy covered walls and condensed upon window panes.
Cold. Dark. Dreary was that particular night, but from inside this Georgian home came sounds of revelry. The windows, in spite of the fog, threw out a blaze of soft golden light. Yes, a party was most certainly in progress. Screams of delight came from the big dining room. On its hands and knees was a curious object covered by a polar bear skin. The animal’s head, with half open mouth forming a most lifelike imitation of the real thing. On its back sat a little girl. Surrounding it were children of every age from three to ten and behind, and just beyond the flickering candlelight stood a group of grown ups. inntermingled with proud mamas (there were not many fathers there that night for they were away at the War) were a fair sprinkling of young Flying Corps officers of a Home Defence Night Flying Squadron. Flying was washed out for the night for the weather was too thick even for the Zeppelins – and besides it was Christmas Eve.
Suddenly the curious beast gave a heave. Off came the little girl, off came the polar bear skin and there emerged a young man of maybe nineteen, with laughing brown eyes and very ruffled, very black hair. He was wearing the uniform of the Royal Flying Corps and the wings on his tunic were very new indeed.
A few hours later a scene was enacted in the Great Hall of this old Georgian home – by chance it happened almost under the mistletoe. The players were this lad of nineteen and a girl called Mary. Mary was 18 and very beautiful. “Michael” she said “ here is your Christmas present from me. Will you promise to wear it always and whenever you look at it, think of me?” “Always, Mary” said Michael. "Always" The present was a gold wristwatch.
That one short night is the end of Scene One.
Scene Two is a few weeks later. The aerodrome of a night flying squadron in France. A group of pilots are standing in a hangar. Three twin engine bombers are ticking over in the darkness outside: the squadroin clock is also ticking over, its big hand approaching the hour of 8.30. “Is that clock right, Michael?” asked a certain chap who had witnessed the little scene in the Geoirgian home that foggy Christmas Eve.
“Well. Here’s the right time anyway.” said Michael, looking at his gold wrist watch and thinking of Mary.
A few moments later the first machine roared out into the darkness, followed by the second and the third. Circling round the aerodrome, they found each other and manouvred into flying formation then gaining height they flew eastward toward the Rhine valley. Patches of countryside beneath them showed almost white in the fitful moonlight. Here and there a dark splash told of a field or the gleam of a railway told that their course was right. Not many lights showed beneath. It did not do for a town to advertise itself in that way in those dark days.
On they went, flying at 8000 feet now, each with sixteen 112 pound bombs. The further they entered enemy territory the more careless did townspeople on the earth below seem to be in the matter of screening their lights, till finally away on the horizon appeared almost a blaze of light. As the three machines approached, warning must have been given ahead for, like brilliants dropping off the thread on which they hung, the illuminations of this city went out by whole streets and districts at a time. In the north east corner of the town the glow from factory chimneys could not be damped in time. Towards this glow Michael led his little party. Suddenly a dozen searchlights stabbed the sky, sweeping to and fro, hesiating a moment on a fragment of cloud, but always searching, searching, searching. One picked the little formation up and instantly others focused on their target. Came gunfire, came puffs of smoke. From the ground it seemed as if those lhree little silverfish must surely be hit. But slipping sliding, two dodged the searchlights. The third dropped a parachute flair and while the searchlights followed it down, made good his escape – driving lower and lower all the time.
The two machines first out of the searchlights glare dropped their bombs, which fell wide of the target and then beat it for home.
Michael in the third machine noticed this and dived lower still, the engines throttled back. Citizens of the town congratulated themselves that the hostile aircraft had been driven off: congratulated themselves until with a roar of engines Michael opened up only a few hundred feet above their rooftops. There was a shattering roar as his observer dropped a salvo of bombs into doomed factory in the northeast corner. Twice did Michael return and at his third coming, the city’s railway station was wrecked.
Back on their aerodrome, the crew of the other two machines waited anxiously for the well known throb of a twin engined machine returning to roost. And return it did, riddled bullets and scarcly able to fly. Out jumped Michael, pulled off his flying helmet and his brown eyes were laughing and his hair was ruffled just like the night he had played Polar Bears. He looked at gold watch. “”11.30. Anyone care for a drink, chaps?”, Mike said and then his face grew suddenly serious. Perhaps he was thinking of Mary.
For his actions on that night Michael Coombs was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the first of many awards he would receive during this War.
Here is the third scene of this little story. Two years have passed. Once more a group of men are talking, talking in hushed tones although the sun is shining bright and they are out in the open air. They are standing on the field of the Heliopolis Aerodrome. Just audible above their voices is the hum of an aeroplane in the distance, flying high above the Pyramids and the Sphinx. “What a mess.” Said one. “Did you know him?” asked another. “No, not well. Did well in the War I believe”
The mess referred to was a broken thing, flattened into the ground: the engines sunk two two feet into the hard Egyptian earth. Underneath one engine, had been a pilot, crushed by the very machine bore him aloft. Some weeks back in London I spoke to one of those who been there the day that Mike’s plane had fallen one thousand feet from the sky, for I was not there when my friend died. He told me that all they found was his left hand and part of an arm. On the wrist of that arm was a gold watch.
Back in England there is to this day a girl grown prematurely to middle-aged womanhood. On her wrist is a gold watch stopped at 11.15 stopped at the moment of Michael’s death. That was on 20th June 1920. She doesn’t realize it has stopped, because for her too, time stopped at that moment. Michael’s Mary has never married.
Some years later on my way to India, I returned to Egypt. It didn’t take long to find what I was looking for in the Military Cemetery at Heliopolis. They had mounted the propeller shaft that crushed him above the simple white cross that marked his grave and it stood glinting in the early morning desert sun. On the cross was a simple inscription “Flight Lieutenant Herbert Millhouse Coombs DFC. RFC. RAF. Greater love hath no man”
“Herbert?”, do I hear you ask. Yes my friend’s real name was Herbert, but to those of us who knew him well he was Michael or Mike and in our most private times together I would call him Kael, old Gaelic, so I am told, for “mighty warrior”. My Kael.
I remember standing there for a while. Then in the glaring sunlight I shrugged my shouldsers, turned and walked away. I paused just once to look back and if there were a few tears in my eyes – what of it? Perhaps it was the memory of a lad with laughing brown eyes and ruffled black hair, perhaps the memory of a Polar Bear skin, perhaps of searchlights and night flights and gunfire over Germany; or of cocktails and laughter and dancing in Paris, in Athens, Cairo, Constantinople, the Riviera and in Italy. Or perhaps it was the horror of what Mike and I had seen in South Russia; perhaps memories too of a small white dog, who died tired I think of waiting for his Master who never came home, and of the words on his grave - “He flies alone now in Shadowland, a shadow also, chasing shadows”. Or was it the memories of a woman to whom I had returned a gold wrist watch on the back of which was inscribed “Always”
But those days are over now. It is all just water under the bridge.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Day Sixteen
"The Story of Rip van Winkle" - an episode of a series for radio
by John Leslie Fitzmaurice Creighton,
first broadcast in Sydney, 1935
An event of some considerable importance took place in a certain country home about the summer of 1912. There was born into a world of aristocratic parents some four or five blue-blooded long pedigreed Sealyham puppies.
The event took place in the ancestral stables and it was decreed by their pedigree that each male puppy’s name should begin with an R. So arrived Rip van Winkle of Twyford, who we will now call Rip … and hurry along with the story.
The scene changes to a year later. Rip has become the adored possession of a school boy, and as the months slipped by, these two became inseparable. During school holidays, wherever the boy went, there, like a little white shadow flitting behind, went Rip. No nose was so black and wet as Rip’s: no nose so quick to detect the presence of a rat or rabbit on their innumerable ferreting expeditions; no brain and body so alert; no eyes so brownly faithful as those of Rip van Winkle.
Three times a year when term time came round and the school boxes were dragged out, it was a dismal business for Rip, for he knew the time of parting was at hand … two or three weary months to wait before the next school holidays brought this lad his Master back again from school, and opened the gate to more glorious adventures in the woods and fields. So until the very last minute, he would sit on the piled up boxes that always heralded this anguished parting, and if his chin dropped on his outstretched paws, and a wistful look came into those brown eyes, well it was but a reflection of his young Master’s feelings.
Came the War and still term time and holidays alternated in spasms of despair and exquisite joy, until one day at the end of 1917, his Master now grown to man of nearly 18, came home in most peculiar clothes. Gone were the grey flannel trousers and worn sports coat, the pockets of which had always carried a varied assortment from bits of string to dead rabbits. Gone was the homely smell of those clothes Rip knew and loved so well … in their place - polished field boots that squeaked a little and brightly shining buttons and a leather cap. All this was bewildering, so Rip sniffed them with caution - decided they were absurd, but accepted them anyway, for after all it was his Master wearing them.
Came more preparations for departure. Rip knew the signs only too well, so once more he hid amongst the luggage, hoping perhaps to be taken away with it, but this time his master picked him up and hugged hugged, kissed him on his black wet nose and gave him to the Missus of the house, saying “Look after the little chap, Mother, while I am away”
It was nice to be made a fuss of like that, if, Rip thought, a trifle undignified. So his Master went away again and as he disappeared down the long drive, Rip who was still in the arms of the Missus, looked up into her face and with a very pink, hot tongue kissed her on the cheek. “funny” he thought “The kiss tasted salty” The Missus of the house was crying, but that was only after his Master had gone.
Months dragged by - a year actually in a dog’s life and at length the great day came as it always had. Rip knew all about it - for had he heard them talking in the house and had they not said “Master is coming home”” He knew alright for he hadn’t lived near 7 years for nothing and 7 human years count as 50 in a dog’s life.
Yes, the day arrived, and he came home. For Rip, the dignity of 50 years was forgotten; like a mad thing he tore round the house - upstairs, downstairs, through the servants quarters, round the halls, into all the rooms; out into the tennis court he went, round and round in circles and if he paused for a split second in his mad rush back to the house, he was only behaving in the manner of his kind and all of us most answer nature’s call. Straight as an arrow he finally flung himself into his Master’s arms to lie there, shivering and crying with joy. Such is the love of a dog.
The next time Master went away Rip went too and lived with him in quarters on a certain aerodrome in Norfolk. Halcyon days were those … Rip had always liked motoring, but flying! Here was something different.
Whenever possible he would take to the air with his Master - sometimes in the big machine he would actually sit behind his master on someone else’s lap, and stick his head out over the side of the machine. Yes those were his greatest days and nights too, with the wind dragging the hair back from his head and blowing his lips away from his teeth … he presented a spectacle enough to scare even the biggest and most ferocious nightmare rat.
Sometimes he was not allowed to fly. On those occasions he would meet each machine as it taxied in, having watched it circle round the aerodrome. If it did not contain his Master, then he would meet the next. Rip became quite famous. He became the Squadron mascot.; he undertook long flights on missions into enemy territory; he even recognized certain types of machines. In fact he became quite air-minded, a pioneer in those early days of flight.
Finally, the war ended and the parting of the ways came again. Once again Rip, now a fairly elderly gentleman, went back to the scene of his youth. Somehow though he never settled down. The Missus of the house couldn’t even comfort him. He would sit out on the tennis court and listen for aeroplanes. If one flew low over the garden, he would get excited and crane his neck for a first view before it disappeared behind the trees.
Would his Master never come home? He wasn’t to know to know that his Master was far away in South Russia, fighting in the dark days of the Great Russian Revolution. His little cold black nose grew hot and dry, his soft brown eyes grew dim with age … but still he could hear aeroplanes and dream aeroplanes. Why wouldn’t his Master come home before it was too late?
When the pink May trees at the end of the garden was bursting into bud and the lilac was in bloom down by the stables where Rip was born, and the air was full of the smell of spring, this schoolboy , grown prematurely experienced to a man of 22 came home and he said to the Missus of the house “Where Mother is Rip? Rip van Winkle?”
“Come” she said “I will show you”. Taking his arm she led him up the path beside the tennis court where Rip had watched for aeroplanes, to the pink May tree and beneath that tree was a stone slab on which was written in black letters …
RIP
Here lies Rip van Winkle who died of a lonely heart.
Now flies alone in Shadowland, himself a shadow, chasing shadows.
“I understand”, said the Missus of the house .. “I’ll leave you two alone. Tea is to be served in half an hour” ‘
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Day Fifteen
On January 18, 1934, John Leslie Fitzmaurice Creighton, fleeing a painful divorce in London, arrived in Sydney, Australia, on board the SS Ormonde, disembarking at Circular Quay. In his immigration papers he described his profession simply as "Gentleman."
He rented a flat in "Manar" on Macleay Street, Kings Cross and commenced a new life as a writer and popular radio personality on Sydney stations 2GB, 2BL, 2FC and 2CH in those golden days of radio.
He told the tales of his time as a pilot in the First World War and of his travels into the last brutal days of the Russian Revolution, of pioneering the London to Cairo Aerial Route Number 1 and of his deep friendship with Michael Coombs after whom he named me so many years later.
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