maandag 12 mei 2008

Unexpected Find II: a letter from Cairo to Dublin in 1947

Dublin, February 7, 2006

Walking into Greene's Bookshop on 16 Clare Street, Dublin, I immediately felt at home. The smell of old books surrounded me and I started nosing through the endless rows... where my eye suddenly fell on a red cover.

The hardback with a red cloth cover had the Nelson's Library logo stamped on it. The title, author and publishers name were 'gold'stamped on the spine. It was Kipps: The Story of a Simple Soul, by H.G. Wellss, published by Nelson's Library, year unknown. For my Book & Publishing Degree thesis I had done some research into Nelson's Library, so I decided to buy it, just for good old times sake. Besides, it was a Wells, so it could be a good read for just 1 Euro.

In the next row of books, another nicely stamped spine caught my eye, and when I took it out of the the line, the front cover was even more elaborately decorated with a stamped flowerscene.

I have this inclination to like books just for their format or design... and just for the feel of it, it was worth the 1 Euro that the bookseller asked for it. After spending some more time exploring the wonderful bookshop and just enjoying all the books from - and on - Irish writers, I paid and walked out of the book shop, onwards on Clare Street.

At the end of Clare Street I ended up on a bench in Merrion Square Park and decided to take a closer look at the second book, as I hadn't even looked at the author or the title when I made my decision to buy it. The book was Bella Donna, by Robert Hichens. While leafing through the book, suddenly a piece of paper fell out. It was an Air Letter, sent from Cairo to Dublin in March 1947! The words 'Air Letter' were written in English and in Arabic.


I was hesitant... I coulnd't read this letter, even though it was so old. It was a personal letter to someone in Dublin and I was in Dublin, so I decided not to read it, but to have a look at the address first. Maybe I could deliver the letter a second time to someone related to the receiver of it in 1947? Feeling excited, as this could be a small adventure, I got up from the bench and went to look for a map of Dublin. And yes, the address was a still existing address in Dublin!

Immediately I decided to go there at once, as I had no other plans for the afternoon, besides enjoying the city. I took a bus up to Donnybrook, Dublin and walked to '61 Marlborough Road', the address on the front of the Air Letter. My excitement grew, as I might be meeting a descendant of someone who received this letter in the 1940's. How would they react? When I arrived at the house and rang the bell, someone answered through the intercom. I told the story of the find in short, but the current inhabitant was not interested... He didn't even come to the front door to have a look at it. So much for my excitement...

Walking back to the bus stop I thought, "What else can I do besides an internet search"? and I decided to postpone other actions until I was back home. I continued exploring Dublin and its surroundings until I had to go home on the 8th.

After trying to deliver it to it's rightful owner, reading the letter did'nt seem a problem anymore. So I did. It was a letter to "dear Vera", written on St Patricks Day, 17 March 1947 (or maybe 1942?) by a certain Rosemary traveling through Egypt, Lebanon, Palestine and Syria.

I showed it to some friends and I did an internet search, but I didn't find no hits for a "miss Vera Cowell" on the internet at that time. So I put the book on my bookshelves, with the letter in it. And I forgot about it.

Leiden, May 11, 2008
On the 29th of April this year, when I did another 'historical find' coming from a second hand book, I suddenly remembered this beautiful handwritten Air Mail letter that I'd found in a second hand book from Dublin. So I decided to blog about this letter too...

It still is an interesting letter. And it tells about a period in the Middle East just before 1948, before the state of Israel was introduced. I'm thinking about publishing the letter full text in my next blog, but I'm still a bit hesitant because I think about privacy issues. So what do you think? Can I publish the full text of letter written in 1947 on the internet?

By the way, in 1909, on Saturday 30 October the New York Times wrote the following about Hichens Bella Donna: "a Novel with a Poison Motif, Typical of Egypt and the Mysterious East". Interesting, as the letter that fell from this book came from Cairo. Could there be a connection?

Update February 2016

Unfortunately, while cleaning the house, the abovementionded letter fell into a bucket of water. The paper survived... but the beautifully written letter was written with ink, that now has completely dissolved... I'm sorry that I did not transcribe the letter ... it could have been very nice historical material....

dinsdag 29 april 2008

Unexpected Find: a Lunopinion from 1946

My bookshelves harbour interesting stories.... Today I was moving one of my bookcases to another space in my living room (holidays are a perfect time to do stuff like that). As I can be quite clumsy, I dropped a stack of books while moving them.

While gathering the books, I suddenly saw a paper that I didn't recognize and had never seen before. As I have a habit of buying books in second hand shops, preferably in Britain or Ireland, I supposed it had fallen from one of the books. It was a Lunopinion, No 4, dated Saturday February 16th 1946. A small historical find!?

I immediately started searching the internet.... A Google search on "Lunopinion" gave no results (apart from L' Opinion, which definitely wasn't what I was looking for...), so I decided to read the old paper carefully to find more information about it's purpose and relevance...

The terms "Luneburg Airfield", "squadron" and RAF, the header of the front page - see above, the triangle with 'wings' - and the pictures and cartoons in the four page paper, gave me the impression that it had something to do with a RAF squadron, that had been stationed at Luneburg Airfield in Germany. Another thing I noticed was, that the whole paper was in English, but it said "Price 1/2 mark"... so it was sold in Germany.

My sense of adventurousness awoke. Wouldn't it be nice if I could give this paper to someone who is doing research on this period in Germany, or about the British RAF, or to someone who had been stationed at this Luneburg Airfield?

To share my enthusiasm about my find, I wrote a short message about this on Twitter, to see if any other Twitterers had any suggestions. And especially @rotjong started searching with me (thanx!). I searched for "RAF squadron" "151" or "5". But @rotjong found a page from the 51st squadron that mentioned Luneburg. I'm not sure yet which one it is, but I hope I'll find out by placing this blog item. I also took some more pictures of the paper and of some of the cartoons in it and put them on Flickr. Who knows, maybe someone will search for Lunopinion one day and find this blog or these pics?

Another suggestion from a Dutch Twitterazi was to get in touch with the NIOD, the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation. So I also wrote them an email. Not expecting anything, but it might be nice to hand this paper over to someone interested in this subject.

One other thing that "hit me" was the interesting information in the "Editorial" about the way this paper had been set:

  • "The bloke who does his sits at a sort of typewriter attached to a cloddy great chunk of machinery which does every thing except answer him back. He just touches the letter keys and hey presto moulds of letters dash along go up, down and in, metal is heated poured in, taken out, the moulds disappear again into the bowels of this monster and finally whole lines of type appear. Lines make columns and columns make pages. There is our page of print."
A smile appeared on my face, as I've graduated in Book and Publishing Studies (in 1996) and it has been ages ago that I did something with these studies... It's a nice reminder of the good times I had in the Printing Room of Academic Press Leiden organizing lead type on rulers and handprinting book covers :-)

It also reminded me of another 'historical find' that I'd done during a trip to Dublin in 2006. I'll tell more about that in my next blog item. Let's see if this can generate any interesting experiences :-)