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 rances Wiseman’s first six years were filled with fear and sleepless
nights. Halten, the mining village where she lived,
housed not just a working coalmine, but also an
armaments factory within its boundaries. The Wiseman
family’s greatest worries, however, were about their
father who was a rear gunner in a Wellington bomber.
ost evenings, sirens would sound at around seven
o’clock when the Luftwaffe came looking for their prey.
The family gathered together and fled into the hastily
built air raid shelter located in the garden next door.
Frances’ mam tried to keep everyone calm by telling stories about
her childhood—when her father was the local squire and
hunt leader and she had her own lady’s maid. Her mam
never mentioned gypsies in her stories. If the
neighbours had any idea that this former mine manager’s
family had gypsy blood in their veins, their lives would
have become a living hell. None of the miner’s wives
believed any of Sarah Wiseman’s stories, but Frances
quietly promised her mam that she would find the
girlhood home when she grew up and they could all live
there together in peace and happiness as a family.
he story opens in 1999 with a grown-up and successful Frances Wiseman
looking for Lambecote Grange and its land. The story
then flashes back to 1889 and the landowning gentry and
life seen through the eyes of Rosina, the grandmother of
Frances. We share a century of heartbreaking events with
Rosina and her daughter, Sarah. Sarah’s only solace as a
child is in speaking secretly to her dead father, George
Bingham (The Huntsman), through his silver hunting horn
which she had rescued from the family home, Lambecote
Grange, after his untimely death.
n much the same way that an impressionist artist portrays reality, this
book paints an impression of the 20th century. Each
decade is chronicled, and leaves a haunting impression
on the reader before it moves on to the next. The author
takes the reader on a trip through time, carefully
brushing in the intricate details of the Wiseman
family’s heritage. As we travel though the triumphs and
tragedies of this family we experience wealth, poverty,
Romany gypsies, and life in a Yorkshire Coal Mining
Village—at a time when the production of coal was
reckoned more precious than gold.
Sample Chapters: (Adobe PDF format)
Chapters 1-3 |
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