• Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    ...The Gazette Newspaper 1856 onwards.

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  • Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    ...The Gazette Newspaper 1856 onwards.

    Read More
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  • 1 Steep street of old Bideford

  • 2 Bideford loses training ship

  • 3 Yeo vale road ruin provides a mystery

  • 4 By pony and trap to market

  • 5 Loads of black and white

  • 6 Cement-clad boats being built at Northam

  • 7 Four sisters' nostalgic reunion

  • 8 'Les Girls' of Hartland

  • 9 Panto time at Westward Ho!

  • 10 Safety-first dipomas awarded to Torrington drivers

  • 11 Bideford inquest on French trawlermen opens

  • 12 What is future of railway goods yard?

  • 13 Launching the 'Golden Hinde'

  • 14 Saving money, wear and tear

  • 15 Pet squirrels at Monkleigh

  • 16 Puppet characters introduced

  • 17 Wilfred and Mabel visit schools and hospital

  • 18

    Youth Clubs Join Together For Entertainment
  • 19 Just over a year old

  • 20 Appledore boy is youngest recipient of RNLI vellun

  • 21 Appledore skill brings 'Hispaniola' to life

  • 22 Bideford's gift to Sir Francis

  • 23 Alwington School closing after 120 years

  • 24 They never miss a game at Torrington

  • 25 Tide sweeps under and over the old bridge

  • 26 Burnard family reunion

  • 27 Torrington acclaims 400th anniversary of granting of charter

  • 28 Ten year old scrambler

  • 29 Hartland Dancers
  • 30 Calligrapher extraordinary

  • 31 Champagne send-off for Torrington new factory

  • 32 Bideford schoolboy's courage recognised

  • 33 Bideford Liberal club new lounge bar opened

  • 34 Alverdiscott is proud of its new parish hall

  • 35 Thriving 'orphan of the storm'

  • 36 Rowing triumphs at Bideford

  • 37 Little 'Big Ben'

  • 38 Royal prince visits Torridge-side

  • 39 Designed and made in Bideford

  • 40 At Bideford Arts Ball>
  • 41 Lady Churchill congratulates Bideford artists at nursing exhibition

  • 42 End of the line

  • 43 Vessel built 300 feet above sea level

  • 44 Torrington's enterprise's new extensions

  • 45

    10-year-old scrambler practices
  • 46

    Bidefordians
  • 47 Clovelly donkey film star

  • 48 Capers on the cobbles

  • 49 Dustmen of the days of yore>
  • 50 Mural in the whimsical fashion

  • 51 Jumble sale fever

  • 52 Appledore's largest

  • 53 Meredith's ironmongers

  • 54 Appledore schooner broadcast

  • 55 North Devon author featured in TV documentary

  • 56 Royal prince visits Torridge-side

  • 57 Landmark at Bradworthy

  • 58 Donkey and horses enjoy carnival drink

  • 59 Service with a smile

  • 60 Quads at Thornhillhead

  • 61 New look in the hayfields

  • 62 Birds' convalescent home at Instow

  • 63 Train returns to Westleigh straight

  • 64 A Weare Giffard speciality - delicious strawberries

  • 65 No ancient Grecian temple this

  • 66 Artisans' Club

  • 67 America's tribute to 'J.H.'

  • 68 All aboard the ark

  • 69 Meredith and Son ad.>
  • 70 When horses score over the tractor

  • 71

    Wynne Olley's styles impress International Hair Fashion Designer
  • 72 In the tortoise nursery - eight hatched at Bideford

  • 73 New civic medallions

  • 74 Found the answer waiting for him>
  • 75 Beach search for mines takes longer

  • 76 An early 'special' to Bideford

  • 77 Gift plaque on Clovelly council houses

  • 78 Hartland postman retires

  • 79 Down at the dump something stirs

  • 80 Over the bank together>
  • 81 Wine and beer merchants for 150 years

  • 82 Bideford blacksmith wins English championship

  • 83 Council agree to demolition of Chanter's Folly

  • 84 Golden Bay Hotel ad.>
  • 85 Olympic riders to compete at Bideford Horse Show

  • 86 Speeding communications: Bideford firm's new installation

  • 87 Torrington in 1967

  • 88 Housing progress at East-the-Water>
  • 89 Alderman Anstey's dream comes tru

  • 90 Two kinds of hovercraft at Bideford

  • 91 Can spring be far away?

  • 92 Inscribed Bibles and silver spoons for babies

  • 93

    Building works
  • 94 School's link with cargo ship

  • 95 Bicycle now does donkey work

  • 96 Mobile missionary

  • 97 A lost Bideford 'island'

  • 98 First tankers arrive at new depot

  • 99 Bideford's first triplets for 12 years

  • 100

    Toasted with musical honours
  • 101 Passing of a Torrington landmark

  • 102 Picking the pops

  • 103 Bideford skifflers, they're no squares

  • 104 New shipyard on schedule

  • 105 Fleet of foot and fair of face

  • 106 Charter granted by Philip and Mary

  • 107 Escaped crane moves into Kenwith Valley

  • 108

    Inter-school Road Safety Quiz Cup Winners
  • 109 Lady Godiva comes to Torrington

  • 110 Recognise this resort?

  • 111 Bideford stock car racing entry comes in second

  • 112 The art of the thatcher

  • 113 Grenville House for Bideford R.D.C.

  • 114 Penny for the guy

  • 115 Northam loses thatched cottage landmark

  • 116 New art gallery opened

  • 117 East-the-Water's call for new school

  • 118 Weare Giffard potato

  • 119 Children's procession with foxgloves

  • 120 Peter poses for TV film

  • 121

    Andre Veillett and Quentin Reed in Judo Demonstration
  • 122 Floral dancing at Appledore

  • 123

    Was a missionary
  • 124 Calf thinks of mare as mum

  • 125

    First Girls at Bideford Grammar School take part in Play
  • 126 Sixty-two year old Picarooner makes ready for season

  • 127

    Hamburger is part of modern life
  • 128 Eight to strike and a race to win

  • 129 Bideford's new market opens next week

  • 130 Four hundred residents leave Bideford!

  • 131 What the television camera saw at Abbotsham

  • 132 What's the time?

  • 133 One thousand visit zoo at Whitsun

  • 134 Devil sent packing

  • 135 For South Africa from Westward Ho!

  • 136

    Appledore boys beat mums at football
  • 137 Teenager Peter Jackson Makes Horror Film
  • 138 Filming at Hartland

  • 139 First ship in 8 years

  • 140 Tibbles home again - and fish supper

  • 141 Five generations link Woolsery, Clovelly and Bideford

  • 142 Ship-in-bottle world record

  • 143 Torridge wins on time schedule

  • 144 School crossing patrol begins

  • 145 New fire and ambulance stations

  • 146 Salmon netting at Bideford

  • 147 Largest salmon caught in Torridge

  • 148 Cruising down the river

  • 149 Panel sprint for Bideford broadcast

  • 150 Westward Ho! public conveniences get go ahead
  • 151 Bideford country dancers on TV

  • 152 Head Barman appointed Torrington Town Crier
  • 153 Centenary of Gazette

  • 154 Twenty-one yachts

  • 155 Bideford childrens' cinema opens

  • 156 Eleven million pound scheme's official opening

  • 157 Northam footballers of the future

  • 158 Bideford Zoo's first baby is big draw

  • 159 New choral society's growing response

  • 160 Shoes certainly not made for walking

  • 161 Yeoi Vale House finally demolished

  • 162 Westward Ho! combined op

  • 163 Bringing shopping home by goat

  • 164 Broomhayes children will keep their winter pet

  • 165 Future of Torrington almshouses

  • 166 All for the love of a lady!

  • 167

    Womens Skittles Competition in Buckland Brewer
  • 168 Daisy's pride and joy

  • 169 Thorn-apple found in Littleham conservatory

  • 170 Signed scroll momento of Queen Mother's visit

  • 171 Jalopy joy for children of Shamwickshire

  • 172 Weare Giffard Hall sold for £11,300

  • 173 Bideford triplets' first birthday party

  • 174 Fishermen of Greencliff

  • 175 Holiday traffic in Bideford High Street

  • 176 Spring-cleaning the Ridge

  • 177 The creative urge on Saturday morning

  • 178 Shipbuilding hobby at Hartland

  • 179 Photo mural in Bideford bank

  • 180 Clovelly nightmare

  • 181 No ancient Grecian temple this

  • 182

    Close associations with North Devon
  • 183 Centuries old but today busier than ever

  • 184 Torrington's new amenity

  • 185

    Double Baptism on Torridge
  • 186 Clovelly custom

  • 187 Gloves fit for a king!

  • 188 Lots drawn to prevent dog fight

  • 189 Do recall the old windmill at Northam?

  • 190 Ships at Bideford

  • 191

    Cadets are given certificates
  • 192 Homage to a well-loved sovereign

  • 193 Holiday scene near Sandymere

  • 194 Braddicks furniture ad.>
  • 195 Torrington Church's new organ

  • 196 Buckland goes to County Show

  • 197 Emergency ferry services

  • 198 North Devon Driving School

  • 199 Space dominates Hartland carnival

  • 200 Allhalland Street - then and now

  • 201 Sweets derationing

  • 202

    Jinxed School Trip
  • 203 Westward Ho! Tennis Club Winners
  • 204 Picking the pops

  • 205 Appledore Juniors Football
  • 206 New look for Torrington Lane

  • 207 Donkey work made easier at Clovelly

  • 208 Torrington children build igloo
  • 209 Mayor becomes engine driver>
  • 210 X-ray shoe fitting

  • 211 New addition to Quay front

  • 212

    Birgitta Whittaker
  • 213 New Post Office

  • 214 Open-air art exhibition by 'under 40' group

  • 215 Bideford computer stars

  • 216 It really was the 'last time'

  • 217 Joe the ginger tabby is 21

  • 218 Diamond Jubilee of St Peter's Church, East-the-Water

  • 219 Can-carrying over cobbles has disappeared

  • 220 Picture bought for shillings may be worth thousands

  • 221 Championship Trophy for Hartland
  • 222 Sunshine and shade at Appledore

  • 223 Battle of the gap at Westward Ho!

  • 224 Circus comes to town

  • 225 Police station view of Bideford

  • 226 Move for oldest boatyard on Torridge

  • 227 Childrens' model of Torrington

  • 228 Out of puff!

  • 229 Centenary of Landcross Methodist Chapel

  • 230

    Mrs Whapham finds ferret in Bridgeland Street while shopping
  • 231 Big develolpment at Calveford

  • 232 Record player of 80 years ago

  • 233 Watch the dicky bird!

  • 234 'Out of Appledore' sailing memories

  • 235 Happy Days!

  • 236

    Lenwood Squash Club
  • 237 The Geneva marionettes

  • 238 Television comes to Torridge District

  • 239 Students help model St Sidwell

  • 240 Riverside mystery

  • 241 Torrington Youth Club rewarded by party
  • 242 So this is the mainland!

  • 243 Death - and birth - of a telephone exchange

  • 244

    Successful motor cycling team
  • 245

    Gift from Bideford Town Council
  • 246 Bideford's first woman councillor

  • 247 Colour TV salesman at eight

  • 248 Old Girls revisit Edgehill

  • 249 Light reading for the lighthouse

  • 250 Ancestral home nestling in lovely combe

  • 251 Wasps' nest in sewing machine

  • 252 Fish nearly pulled him in

  • 253 A roof-top view - where?

  • 254 Off on a great adventure

  • 255 Town's second woman mayor in 392 years

  • 256 Yelland potter's exhibition at Bideford

  • 257 New gateway to King George's Fields

  • 258 Thirty bridges cross Torridge

  • 259 Photo of town's first car wins prize

  • 260 They set out for Bideford and became lost

  • 261 Life begins at 80

  • 262 Repair work on Long Bridge
  • 263 Bideford regatta

  • 264 One of the luckier farmers in getting in the problem harvest

  • 265 Reed threshing 'putting the clock back' at Weare Giffard

  • 266 Hartland's invitation

  • 267 Bideford Bridge re-opens

  • 268

    Mums protest in Coronation Road
  • 269 Success to Festival of the Arts

  • 270 Preparations for new Clovelly Court

  • 271 Symbol of Lundy independence

  • 272 Bideford Liberals' fashion show

  • 273 Tramps camp by riverside throughout arctic weather

  • 274 Pannier Market's future?

  • 275 New life for Hartland organ

  • 276 Torrington school's sundial - fashioned by Headmaster

  • 277

    New gateway
  • 278 Tomorrow' night's skittles broadcast from Bideford

  • 279 Some 240 exhibits

  • 280 Broomhayes £1,000 Surprise
  • 281 Puzzle corner at Bideford!

  • 282 Community centre opened at Westward Ho!

  • 283 Making way for the double-deckers

  • 284 Sailing to victory at Appledore

  • 285 Caught in the act>
  • 286 Church renovation rejoicing at Northam

  • 287

    Reds Womens Team Are First To Compete Throughout Season
  • 288 Liked holidays here - so starts business

  • 289 Simple Item 138
  • 290 No laughing matter

  • 291 Revenge in style

  • 292 Eleventh hour bid to save last sailing barge

  • 293 Brothers reunion 1947
  • 294 For crying out loud!

  • 295 Lundy memorial to John Pennington Harman V.C.

  • 296 Thunderstorm destruction of 25 years ago

  • 297 Blanchards ad.>
  • 298 A sense of humour in advertising

  • 299 Safe door weighing two tons

  • 300 Appledore's new lifeboat

  • 301 Meeting at 10 Downing Street

  • 302 Baby Kate goes home to Lundy

  • 303 Torrington to have first woman mayor

  • 304 Amsterdam to Bideford double success

  • 305 Prizewinning babies at Torrington

  • 306 Cavaliers join the Hunt
  • 307 Record pebble-throwing day

  • 308 On her 'maiden' trip from Bideford

  • 309 Sight of a lifetime

  • 310 A bird of their own!

  • 311 Designed all furnishing of new chapel

  • 312 Fishing light goes out at close of poor season

  • 313 Buckland farm workers to receive long-service awards

  • 314 Celebrations for 103rd birthday

  • 315 Waldon Triplets
  • 316 Quads join a Langtree happy family

  • 317 Afternoon tea in the park

  • 318 Clovelly's 91 year old horseman

  • 319 River scenes that enchant the visitors

  • 320 Bideford A.F.C annual dinner
  • 321 First steel ship built at Bideford

  • 322 Westward Ho! sand yacht to challenge speed record

  • 323 Farewell to passenger trains

  • 324 Bridging the stream

  • 325 Revived market off to splendid start

  • 326

    Holidaying in north Devon
  • 327 They are parted pro-tem

  • 328 TV features Bideford's New Year bread ceremony

  • 329 Hartland Abbey outdoor staff 60 years ago

  • 330 New Lundy stamps

  • 331 He beat the floods

  • 332 To build racing cars in former blacksmith's shop

  • 333 Pretty pennies at Beaford

  • 334 Dismantling of wireless mast

  • 335 Sooty is quick on the draw

  • 336 In their new robes and hats

  • 337 TV contest means big job for Bideford Guides

  • 338

    Relatives all over the world
  • 339 Littleham cow tops 70 tons mark in milk production

  • 340 Boys from Bideford school complete Ten Tors

  • 341 Six footed lamb

  • 342

    School of Dancing's Annual Display
  • 343 Torridge graveyard of wooden hulks

  • 344

    First prize
  • 345 Northam's almshouse

  • 346 Second Monte Carlo Rally

  • 347 Parkham plan realised

  • 348

    Married in 1908
  • 349 Wishing well is pixielated

  • 350 Where Bideford rope-makers walked>
  • 351 Gateways with rhymes>
  • 352 Practical sympathy at Northam

  • 353 East-the-Water sets town an example

  • 354 Barley from Bideford to Bonnie Scotland

  • 355 Bideford has built over 500 post-war homes

  • 356 Disastrous dock fire at Appledore>
  • 357 Spray dodging - the new pastime

  • 358 Bideford-Torrington road gets 'carpet coat'

  • 359 Smiling welcome to Hartland visitors

  • 360 Bideford School Junior Choir Sing in France at Twinning Ceremony in Landivisiau
  • 361 Bideford - as Rowlandson saw it about 1810-15

  • 362 Last of Bideford factory chimney

  • 363 Variety in summer weather

  • 364 No sale of Springfield House

  • 365 Christmas tree on Bideford Quay>
  • 366

    Gus Honeybun meets local children
  • 367 Unique holiday adventure!

  • 368 Warmington's garage ad

  • 369 Malibou boys are all-the-year-round surfers

  • 370 Last train from Torrington

  • 371 A man and his wheel

  • 372 Still hunting aged 80 and a Field Master

  • 373 Getting up steam for tomorrow

  • 374 113 years at Instow

  • 375 Works at craft he learned over 65 years ago

  • 376 A story to tell!

  • 377 Modern living at Bideford

  • 378 Doing time - over 300 years of it - at Hartland

  • 379

    Exhibition of school work
  • 380 Finished in 1876

  • 381 The young smith of Abbotsham>
  • 382 Instow local art show was 'tremendous success'

  • 383 Huntshaw TV mast

  • 384 Traditions and skills still there

  • 385 Private home for public pump

  • 386 Bank Holiday weather was beach weather

  • 387 Larkworthy Family play in Shebbear's Football Team
  • 388 Eight and a half million pound Taw development scheme

  • 389 Bideford's private wharves busier

  • 390 The cab at the corner>
  • 391 Torrington's shelter for the aged

  • 392 Bideford shipyard workers cheer new minesweeper

  • 393 Chess - their bridge over the years

  • 394 New Lundy air-mail stamps

  • 395 Faints as she wins national competition

  • 396 From Bobby to Brian

  • 397 John Andrew Bread Charity
  • 398 Sweet success at Langtree School

  • 399

    FA Cup Match for the Robins
  • 400 Not Bideford's answer to the moon rocket!

  • 401 Decontrol of meat

  • 402 Polish custom on Pancake Day

  • 403 New Estate's view of estuary activities

  • 404 Thrush builds nest in cauliflower

  • 405 Littleham family's five generations

  • 406 Northam wants to continue pumping from river

  • 407 Water Board mains spread through villages

  • 408 A craftsman's 'potted' history

  • 409 Down at the 'Donkey House'

  • 410 Up-to-date Bideford!

  • 411 Bideford firm develops new non-spill paint

  • 412 Entente cordiale in Bideford

  • 413 Bravery against bull at Shebbear rewarded

  • 414 Some mushroom!

  • 415 Boys win hockey on the sands challenge

  • 416 Harvest service in Bideford 'pub' bar

  • 417 Bideford electricity window display qualifies for area competition

  • 418 Fundraising trip for RNLI

  • 419 Local glove-making factory advertising for staff

  • 420 Bideford 'What's my line?' challenger

  • 421 Born 1883 - still going strong

  • 422 Appledore tugs fete London Tower

3.5.1957 Robins win Hansen Cup

Robins Win The Hansen Cup

May 3rd, 1957

Bideford AFC pictured with the Hansen Cup after they had defeated Bude 2-1 in the final

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and suddenly it's spring

Cadds Down Farm

1 March 1974

Joined by Trixie, the pony

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  • Seafield House - the "Spooky House" of Westward Ho!

    The house on the cliff edge known locally as ‘Spooky House’ or even ‘Haunted House’ , was built about 1885.

    The road was especially built to enable access to the house and was initially known as Seafield Road; later it became Merley Road.

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  • Christmas Eve at the Front

    An interesting letter has just been received by Mrs Packer, of Broadclyst, from her husband, Corpl Packer of A Company, 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment, who is serving with the Expeditionary Force in Northern France. In the course of a letter he describes a remarkable incident which occurred on Christmas Eve between the British and German trenches.

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  • Torrington May Fair Queen and Her Attendants

    Names from left to right:Joan Ricketts; Joan Newcombe; Jean Wernhem; Margaret Sweet; Enid Ovenden; Rona Elsworthy; Doris Short; (back row);
    Eileen Short; Miss Margery Bennett (Queen); Joyce Downman; David Fiddian (Page); Peggie Sussex;

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1911 Coronation Medal

Coronation Medal Presented on June 22nd 1911   Learn More

The Hoops Inn

The Hoops Inn close to Peppercombe Beach

The Quay at Appledore

Appledore Quay where Taw and Torridge Rivers meet 

 
Wynne Olley

Crowning Glory

12 October 1962

Their finest achievement to date...

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Shipyard goes into liquidation 1963

Liquidator appointed

4 January 1963

Difficulty in retaining labour...

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Sir Richard Acland's Gift to Nation - 1943

Sir Richard Acland's Gift to Nation - 1943

Sir Richard Acland's Gift to Nation - 1943
 

Estates in Devon and Somerset - Keeping them safe and unspoiled

Sir Richard Acland, M.P. for North-West Devon, is presenting to the National Trust the largest single acquisition in its history - some 17,000 acres of his estates in Devon and Somerset, which have been estimated to be worth £250,000. The land consists of the Killerton estate in Devon and the Holnicote estate in Somerset. In addition, the National Trust is buying 1,000 acres of adjoining land. Of the estates, 6,000 acres are already leased to the Trust. Sufficient income will be derived by the Trust from the whole transaction to allow for the full maintenance of the property, including the development of its amenities, for the enjoyment of the public: it will also provide a considerable fund for the Trust's own general purposes. The Holnicote estate, which goes down to the sea north of Porlock, lies between Dunkery Beacon and North Hill. It includes the attractive villages of Selworthy, Allerford, Bossington and Luccombe.

Apart from the 6,120 acres of moorland and woodlands already leased to the Trust, the estate contains some 4,000 acres of agricultural land and woodlands. Holnicote House, recently damaged by fire, is now being repaired for use as a nursery home under the Ministry of Health. The Killerton estate consists of about 4,500 acres of farm land and 1,500 acres of forest. It lies around the village of Broadclyst about seven miles north-east of Exeter. Killerton House stands at the foot of a sharp, distinctive hill formed by a small volcanic outcrop in the midst of the red Devon soil. On the southern slopes of this hill Sir Richard's father and grandfather assembled in an attractive garden an interesting collection of trees and flowering shrubs.

There is a smaller house on the estate, Sprydon, in which Sir Richard Acland's family will continue to live until the end of the war. After the war, the National Trust will seek to use all three houses on the two estates for public or quasi-public purposes. The Trust already owns 1,800 acres of Dunkery Hill, which adjoins Holnicote. With the Holnicote and Killerton estates, Sir Richard inherited the Acland estates at Bude and a few outlying farms. These he is now seeking to sell to reduce to the minimum the death duties still payable on the property before it is handed over.

Sir Richard has stated there were two main reasons why he had given the estates to the Trust. 'The first,' said Sir Richard, 'is that is has now become impossible to reconcile the political views I hold so strongly with my position as owner of large agricultural estates. The other is that these two estates have existed as a unity for many generations and we are now within sight of the time when, inevitably, first one and then the other would have to be sold and broken up. The only way of ensuring that the estates remain safe and unspoiled for all time is to hand them over to the National Archive. Furthermore, in the immediate present, the Trust will have available not only the income which we would be drawing from the estates, but also the sum which we now have to pay in income-tax and surtax. The Trust will, therefore, be able to keep the estates in better order and to employ more people than we could ever hope to do.


'Lady Acland wishes me to say that we have been considering this step for a considerable time, and we both believe it is the right decision to have made.'

After the war, the family intend to move to eight rooms in another property owned by Sir Richard's father, which is now being used as a girls' school. Sir Richard says 'Our income will depend solely on what I earn as an M.P. and a writer. I shall be a working man and nothing else." He has promised the farmers and their tenants on his estates that he will still be in the district to look after their interests. He and his wife will still fill the traditional jobs of his family such as visiting the workers at Christmas and supplying them with annual benefits like food and Christmas trees.

Sir Richard, who is 36, is vice-chairman of the new Commons Wealth party. Elected for N.W.Devon as a Liberal, he now sits as an Independent member. He is the fifteenth baronet, suceeding his father, Sir Francis Acland, in 1939. The whole of the Somerset estate of the Aclands was made a gift to Sir Richard in 1931 by his father. The second largest gift to the Trust was the 13,000 acre estate of Sir Charles Trevelyan at Wallington, Northumberland. In its annual report last year the Trust stated: 'Owners of large houses are becoming more and more convinced that many of them may have no future
whatever as private residences.'

 

Prophet in Battledress - 1942

Prophet in Battledress - 1942

Richard Acland 1942
 

Sir Richard Acland, M.P. for North-West Devon and now serving as a lance-bombardier in the Royal Artillery, is featured in a Christmastide interview by a special correspondent appearing in a current issue of the 'Methodist Recorder'. The article describes Sir Richard as a 'prophet of goodwill in battledress... bold enought to echo in the House of Commons the claim of the pulpit through many a year that only Christianity fearlessly and honestly applied can bring us peace and goodwill." Sir Richard is stated to be becoming known far beyond his native Westcountry. His books 'Unser Kampf' and its later development, 'The Forward March' are being widely read and discussed. England may yet have to listen to this politician, adds the writer, who classes Sir Richard as a fighter - a man who knows what he fights for and loves what he knows.

Three Hundred Years

For 300 years the Aclands have counted in the Westcountry, continues the writer. Sir Richard, the 15th holder of a baronetcy created in 1642 for services in the Royalist cause, is the ninth head of the family to sit in Parliament. His ancestors originally landlords of the old school, moved in their political faith in successive generations only one direction, to the Left. 'In the middle of the eighteenth century my family were good old Tories," Sir Richard said, 'but they came over to Liberalism in the nineteenth via Peel. Since then we have always been on the side of the people.' Sir Richard's
grandfather in Mr Gladstone's last Administration was President of the Board of Education, 'The Recorder' continues. His own entry into politics came in 1929, when he was the unsuccessful Liberal candidate for Torquay and Barnstaple. In 1931 he again contested, and again failed, but four years later was returned to Parliament. Sir Richard wanted a 'Popular front,' not as a political universale remedy but as the only effective form of fighting what he believed to be an utterly immoral foreign policy. He held the foreign policy immoral because it did not express what he insists is the heart of the Christian ethic - to love your neighbour as yourself.

The Core

Having found his bearings in modern politics, Sir Richard, from the time of the crisis which began at Munich and ended in the outbreak of war, realised the destination for which he had set out. The core of the matter - the really vital thing - was the private ownership of our great resources, he decided. He did not mean by this to challenge the right to 'property' but the right to own share certificates or other documents of title to the great mass of our national resources. 'Our cardinal error lies in creating an environment which inevitably brings the self-seeking element to the top,' he declared. Offering no guarantee of success if his ideas were adopted, Sir Richard said that if the nation decided to make the change in its economic structure they might or might not succeed. 'It would merely break the present guarantee of failure,' he added, 'a great deal will depend upon those who have been the leaders of the new movement. If it has been led by self-seeking and self-centred men it is likely to fail, but if we have been led upward by Christian ministers and layment of high character there will be some real hope of success.'

 

'Eighth Army News' Tackles Sir Richard

'Eighth Army News' Tackles Sir Richard - 1943

'Eighth Army News' Tackles Sir Richard
 

'Think Again, Acland'

Under the heading 'Think again, Acland,' a recent edition of 'Eighth Army News' has been hitting out at the Member of Parliament for North-West Devon, Sir Richard Acland's knowledge of what the Army thinks. The article, an editorial, stated: 'Sir Richard Acland, a Member of Parliament, has been complaining in the Commons. He has been complaining that the forces - that's us - were not given the faintest idea of the subjects exercising the minds of the people at home. The Honourable Member for Barnstaple may be taking a popular line that indicates he has not the faintest idea of the subjects exercising the minds of the soldier abroard.
'With our newspapers and with the wireless we are reasonably well informed. Our letter-boxes in both papers are the platforms for the free expression of opinions by their owner - the British soldier. This is not only the way with Eighth Army. Back in '41 news and information for the fighting man were pioneered in the Eighth, but today there is no Command abroad which has not its own journals and its own news services.

Seeing the Wood from the Trees

'We suggest to Sir Richard Acland that he goes through the copies of 'Eighth Army News' he will find in the Commons Library. He will find that the British soldier abroad has a very lively interest in world affairs and the political present and future of his own country. He will find that the British soldier has a remarkable aptitude for seeing the wood from the trees - and there are plenty of overhanging branches these days. The British soldier has had the opportunity of meeting people of other countries. The British soldier has come pretty close to the German, too. He knows how Fascism works. He knows at first hand. He holds debates. He writes to his newspapers. He seeks out knowledge. He fights, he lives, and he learns. When a British soldier is in the line and engaged in battle it is naturally not always possible to see that he gets his news and information daily. There are times when he is too fully occupied to be pondering on the subject exercising the minds of the people at home.

The article goes on to list some half a dozen Army newspapers, and wonders if the Member of N.W. Devon has heard of them. While not suggesting that the British soldier's information services are perfect, the writer stated that they are probably the best in any Army in the world, and the authorities are trying to improve them all the time. 'Eighth Army News; bears an announcement that the issue is one to ten men, and that the troops are 'entitled to demand it.'

 

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