100 Years of Cox Frances
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- History
I am telling the story of ten siblings from the Machell Cox family, through the letters they wrote to each other. They were born in England between 1868 and 1884; seven of them lived in England and three lived abroad, in the Colonies. One of the siblings was my great grandfather.
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S4E6: International hockey at Richmond & the Brooklyn Nursing Home
Frances reads some letters written in April 1910 by the Machell Cox siblings.
Edmund is yet again a delinquent, he is late writing his letter and thinks he should resign from the Budget.
Avice is in Torquay with Bernard where he is recuperating after removal of his appendix and they tell their landlady all about booby traps.
Enid describes Vera playing in an exciting hockey match at Richmond, Scotland v. England on 16 March 1910, and she also describes the sectarian riots in Liverpool.
Bernard describes what it was like being ill at the Brooklyn nursing home and comments on everyone else's letters.
You can contact Frances by email - machellcoxletters@gmail.com
or Twitter - @CoxLetters
All content is subject to copyright and belongs to Frances Thompson and the Bodleian Library. -
S4E5: Katayeni - Throw him away
Frances reads two letters, written by Aldwyn in Nyasaland in Feb and April of 1910.
Aldwyn drew a sketch map of the mission station at Kota Kota (now Nkhotakota), showing the church, school & hospital buildings. I found his sketch, including the many buildings. The kitchen is separate to the dining room building (due to the risk of fire), and Aldwyn even drew the mud huts where the teachers lived.
All Saints Cathedral is still there, running east-west, as in Aldwyn's sketch, with the vestry still on the south-eastern corner. St Anne's Mission hospital is also still sited on the former slave trading site, near the David Livingstone tree (which Aldwyn doesn't mention.)
Miss Thompson, one of the UMCA nurses, frets that Aldwyn may have another fever. Meanwhile Mr Manning tells stories of Winston Churchill at Ladysmith.
Aldwyn is off 'on ulendo' again, and if he doesn't take a tent the doctor tells him off, as he risks getting tick fever again.
And Katayeni is a small boy whose name means 'throw him away' (he was weak and sickly at birth). Katayeni is a word from the Chinyanja language, which Aldwyn could speak and write. It is now known as Nyanja or Chewa, and is one of the languages of the Bantu people of southern Africa
0:00 Intro
04:10 Aldwyn's letter, 20th February 1910
08:07 Notes on Aldwyn's letter
15:32 Aldwyn's letter, 24th April 1910
21:14 Notes on Aldwyn's letter
You can contact Frances by email - machellcoxletters@gmail.com
or Twitter - @CoxLetters
All content is subject to copyright and belongs to Frances Thompson and the Bodleian Library. -
S4E4: Build a school? Need a rifle!
Frances reads two letters, written by Aldwyn in Nyasaland in January 1910.
A village school is being built, with mud walls and a thatched roof, but it is only completed when Aldwyn uses his rifle to shoot game, so the villagers will get some dinner as payment.
The 'CJ' steamer does not arrive, so Aldwyn does a lot of walking between villages, in the mud.
300 come to church on Christmas morning, bringing offerings of live chickens, firewood, flour, bananas, eggs, rice and even a square of soap.
0:00 Intro
3:10 Aldwyn's letter, 5th January 1910
09:02 Kota Kota (Nkhotakota)
12:12 Notes on Aldwyn's letter
20:24 Aldwyn's letter, 29th January
22:56 Notes on Aldwyn's letter
28:38 Sibling comments
You can contact Frances by email - machellcoxletters@gmail.com
or Twitter - @CoxLetters
All content is subject to copyright and belongs to Frances Thompson and the Bodleian Library. -
S4E3: Arguing convincingly about arguing
Frances reads five letters, written by Bernard, Cuthbert, Arthur, Wilfred and Vera in February and March 1910.
There is a great deal of polite arguing about whether the siblings should discuss (argue about) politics in the Budget.
Bernard has appendicitis and is at the Brooklyn Nursing Home.
Avice and Cecil are engaged.
Cuthbert has been to a lecture and is fascinated with Shackleton and Scott, the Antarctic explorers.
Arthur describes a Boy Scout visit by Robert Baden Powell.
Wilfred is home from Canada unexpectedly, and no one recognises him.
Vera has also been in the Nursing Home but recovers enough to play international hockey at Richmond.
0:00 Intro
3:04 Bernard's letter, 20th February 1910
18:53 Cuthbert's letter, 27th February
29:41 Arthur's letter, 6th March
39:45 Wilfred's letter, 10th March
48:03 Vera's letter, 17th March
You can contact Frances by email - machellcoxletters@gmail.com
or Twitter - @CoxLetters
All content is subject to copyright and belongs to Frances Thompson and the Bodleian Library. -
S4E2: Vera's account of Edward VII's funeral procession - May 1910
This episode is all about the funeral procession of Edward VII in May 1910, as winessed by the Machell Cox siblings, through handwritten family letters, read by Frances.
Vera again demonstrates how she is a great letter writer, and Bernard's annotations, on the funeral programme, after WW1, were unexpected.
Does anyone know any more about the King's little dog Caesar? How much of the procession did he walk in? Frances would love to know.
If you have enjoyed this podcast, would you write Frances a review or give her a rating? Many thanks.
0:00 Intro
7:35 Kings and Queens
11:50 Vera's letter, 21st May 1910
26:02 Notes on Vera's letter
37:10 Other sibling accounts
You can contact Frances by email - machellcoxletters@gmail.com
or Twitter - @CoxLetters
All content is subject to copyright and belongs to Frances Thompson and the Bodleian Library. -
S4E1: What to choose next
Frances has been in the northern hemisphere for a few months, visiting family and undertaking a great deal of Machell Cox research.
Coming up in the podcast will be more stories from 1910, more hockey and Vera and Great Comp and more crossed letters, as Frances continues to unpick the story of these ten interesting siblings, born from 1868 to 1884.
In May 2022 Frances gave a talk at The Hockey Museum, in Woking, about Vera, hockey and budget letters. If you visit Youtube and The Hockey Museum you will be able to watch.
You can contact Frances by email - machellcoxletters@gmail.com
or Twitter - @CoxLetters
All content is subject to copyright and belongs to Frances Thompson and the Bodleian Library.