T.A.N.K. Part 1 – Museum of Lincolnshire Life

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Last Wednesday afternoon a group of us ventured up to the Museum of Lincolnshire life to see what information and documents they had on the first tank. On discovering the museum and its interior, it struck me how little I knew about life in Lincolnshire and the history that surrounds Lincoln. The museum itself is a listed former barracks built in the 1857 for the Royal North Lincoln Militia, in its present form, it is a collection of social history that reflects on the culture of Lincolnshire, also featuring a large selection on the areas military history.

The section that intrigued me the most was the First World War and how Lincoln had played a major role in its duration. A small part of the area had been built up like a Trench and that as you walked through you would be stepping back in time witnessing horrors of what Trench warfare would have been like, mannequins lie on the tops of the trenches injured or trying to get to cover, barbed wire stringed across the tops, even a soundscape of a battle echoed through the passage and the sense that death could been only a footstep away.  Previous research that I had found indicated that the area of West Common, which is across from the Grandstand had been used to practise digging Trenches, handfuls of men craving their way through the earth, changing the landscape of the area, making their mark.

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The main aspect of what we had come to see was located in the Transport area, The Tank. During 1915 the Landship Committee had decided that a new weapon was needed for the war, to conquer trench warfare. They commission William Tritton, William Rigby and Major Wilson of the war cabinet to come up with a design and that Fosters of Lincoln (owned by William Tritton) where to build a ‘Landship’.

On September 22nd 1915, William Tritton sent this famous telegram to the Admiralty.

“New arrival by tritton out of pressed plate STOP

Light in weight but very strong STOP

All doing well Thank you STOP

Proud parents” ((http://www.friends-of-the-lincoln-tank.co.uk/4.html,accessed 5th March 2013))

Little Willie was born.

Little_Willie_early_design

Little Willie would change the face of warfare forever…….

Researching The Site – Part II

After discovering that the Common was used to test Military Aircraft, I decided to use the remainder of my time at the Lincolnshire Archives to further investigate the presence of the Military at the Lincolnshire Grandstand and in doing so, I discovered the following document at the Lincolnshire Archives.

Red Baron 1 Red Baron 2Red Baron 3

The above photographs are of a document which refers to the death of the Red Baron.

There was nothing written or printed on the document which suggested when it was written, nor who by, other than the words written on the front of the document which read:

THE END OF THE RED BARON

BARON VON RICHTHOFEN

Presented to the Workers in the Aircraft Works

AS A SOUVENIR OF THEIR PARTICIPATION IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE “CAMEL” B7270

BY

Clayton & Shuttleworth Ltd. Lincoln.

As stated in my previous post ‘Researching The Site – Part I’ Clayton & Shuttleworth built aircraft which were tested on the Common opposite the Lincoln Grandstand.

The following is a picture of the “Camel” which the front of the document refers to.

P13-02-13_11.51

 

The text in the document goes into small detail about an encounter between British pilots, the Red Baron and the aerial combat which followed. It also claims that a Sopwith “Camel” was responsible for the death of the Red Baron.

The account found in the document could become integrated into my performance because the aircraft allegedly responsible for destroying the Red Baron may have been one of the aircraft which Clayton & Shuttleworth tested at the Common. However, the Lincolnshire Archives had no more documentation regarding this claim, so I have no evidence other than the account found within the document in question, so for the moment this idea will be put on hold.

Researching The Site – Part I

In order for me to expand my knowledge of the Lincoln Grandstand I visited the Lincolnshire Archives. During my time there I discovered one of the roles the Lincoln Grandstand was used for – the Common opposite the Lincoln Grandstand was used to test Military aircraft during The First World War.

Aircraft Testing Book

The above photograph is a book found at the Lincolnshire Archives.

“Besides Ruston aircraft, the Common was also used to test Robey-built Sopwith Gunbus machines and, later, Bristol F2Bs built by Marshall of Gainsborough and Handley Page aircraft built by Clayton and Shuttleworth.” ((Walls, John (1974) Ruston Aircraft Production A Souvenir of Ruston’s 1,000th Aeroplane Lincoln: AERO LITHO COMPANY (Lincoln) LTD.))

This quote, taken from the book pictured above it, clearly presents evidence that the Common was used to test Military Aircraft. This link between the Lincoln Grandstand and the Military connects with one of the concepts I am pursuing for my performance and that is the concept of becoming one with those who came before you. I now have a potential theme for my performance – the Military.

One Muddy Day

Last week we were asked to go to the grandstand and create a performance in the second half of our lecture. However, Rachel, Emma, Kash, Charlie and I decided to go and explore the west common and to try and get a feel for what an actual horse looked like, felt like and smelled like. Mike Pearson states that ‘Performance can function as innotive mode of enquiry and as a research output,’ (Mike Pearson, 2011) and we asked ourselves how our performance could be considered a research output if we hadnt actually done any reasearch ourselves! With that in mind we trekked out to the area of the common where the horses all were gathered, we just didnt consider the terrain before we did! It had obviously been raining at some point in the past as the ground was soaked through and the noise our feet made as we walked through was horrible, kind of squelchy! However the thing that struck me the most was the smell of the who place. It was a mild day and you could almost smell spring bursting through the clouds. The sun was trying to break through – which made our journey slightly more enjoyable that in previous weeks when we were all cold through!- maybe making some of us more daring than others, and eventually we reached our destination after passing a large number of manure piles on the way that didnt smell too nice! I think by the end of the day Charlie had gone off the idea of bringing Horse manure into the grandstand as the amount we saw was enough to put anyone off!!

Works Cited:- Mike Pearson 2011, Why Performance?

Trench Art Work and Lincolnshire

Within the Book Regeneration by Pat Barker, Rivers describes what it is like to be in the trenches during World War I;

 

“Groping along the tunnel in the gloom

He winked his tiny torch with whitening glare,

And bumped his helmet, sniffing the hateful air.

Tins, boxes, bottles, shapes too vague to know,

And once, the foul, hunched mattress from a bed;

And he exploring, fifty feet below

The rosy dusk of battle overhead” ((Barker, P. (1991). Regeneration. New York, Plume))

As a form of escapism, many of the Lincolnshire soldiers created Trench Art work. I think the important thing to remember when considering the art is the wide spectrum of media it represents and the vast range of values and emotions it embodies. Trench art is not just the engraved shell cases which is what the majority consider it to be, but it is the full range of mementos that soldiers/servicemen/ locals, refugees or prisoners of war made as a memory of their experience. Trench art could also be considered as a keep sake for loved ones and often made from the materials easily to hand, sometimes the weapons of war, sometimes the rocks and wood they had for walking on – using their craft skills.  It is at that point that we consider it was for their loved ones and families or to make a living as refugees, injured soldiers or to express their frustration with the war and the emotions that went with it. The pieces are a value far exceeding that of the materials involved – that the true and often hidden value or significance of the pieces can be found, sadly it is this value that is most easily lost or that has failed to survive.

Trench Art can cover varied materials and pieces including cover sketches, paintings, religious items such as crosses made from bullets, bayonets and many other pieces of discarded military equipment. From manmade materials to carvings in stone, chalk, wood and bone, embroidery and engravings as well as shell cases and regimental buttons and even ink wells and candle stands.

If we take the carved piece of chalk which is on display in the gallery in the archives, it could be described as a form of scrimshaw or simple naive carving, however, in this case you have to ask, where did that individual sit when carving it?  How many hours did he spend with his pen knife? Did he do it to calm his nerves sat in a cold wet shell hole or muddy trench under enemy shell fire?  Was it done to calm pre attack nerves before going over the top – did he return?  Who was it made for and what did it represent for them, what value did it have?  For a mother and father, a sweet heart or a wife, a younger brother an injured friend or just something to decorate a locker in a barrack room or just something to waste a few hours before going on stag? So many questions and very few answers but it could have been for all or none of these, what memories did it hold for the maker or recipient in later life – what doors did it open for them or what comfort did it provide.  How many weeks did he spend carrying this rock around before finishing it , how many trenches or tunnels did it see?

“Examples of Lincolnshire Trench Artwork” ((Lincstothepast.com (1900) Search results | Lincs to the Past. [online] Available at: http://www.lincstothepast.com/SearchResults.aspx?cmd=type&val=img [Accessed: 10 May 2013))

Lincolnshire, World War One Artwork, sugar scoop in the form of a coal scuttle and shovel Lincolnshire, World War One Artwork, model peak caps made from old cartridges, made by a 6th Batallion, Lincolnshire Regiment soldier during WW1 Lincolnshire, World War One Artwork, Matchbox holder designed to resemble a book - Copy Lincolnshire, World War One Artwork - Copy

You can apply these discussions and arguments to almost any trench art object.  At another level it is opportunistic recycling, people taking an alternative spin on the objects they have, ingenuity and invention and the artist or engineer or craftsman seeing another use for an object.  The steel helmet turned upside down and used as a hanging basket for flowers, the mess tins turned upside down and joined together to make a child’s toy train or items made to maim and kill being mounted to form a cross or table decoration.  Weapons of war converted into a simple peacetime use.

Some trench art was commercially made as well, especially embroidered cards and a huge variety of very professionally mass made cards exist – in this it is the written messages on the back that add substance and significance.  Likewise certain shell case designs still remain and it was something that many injured servicemen did, selling to other servicemen, to make money to survive.

Lincolnshire, World War One Artwork, Souvenir Postcard

In essence every piece of trench art has its own story, it is individual, has its own poignancy, its own value to the people that made it, gave or received it, treasured or cared for it.  Some of it was anti-war, some of it very much celebrates the victories, and all of it is deeply rooted in the raw emotion of the time in which it was made. Taking this on board, for my piece, I have been given artwork and a poem by www.lincstopast.com The artwork is by general Lincolnshire Soldiers but the poem is By Private Charles Tear, 138th Brigade, M.G.C. Within the poem he discusses men from Lincolnshire including William Rainsforth, the 1st man 2nd row from the back – to the left in the Machine Gun Section of the 5th Lincolnshire Foreign Service Territorial Regiment – 13th October 1915 – before the battle to take Hohenzollern Redoubt. Here is a snippet of the poem;

Boys of the Old Brigade

The boys I’m going to write about,

Though not up to perfection,

I’m simply paying a tribute

To the veterans of our section. ((Online:http://www.wartimememoriesproject.com/greatwar/allied/lincolnshireregiment.php#sthash.6b6rL9Os.dpuf, accessed 4th March 2013 ))