The purpose of this blog site is to provide updates on the publication of the book that I have been involved in writing since January 2014. The book now entitled 'A Pithead Polar Bear From Brighton to Belsen 1940 to 1946' is an attempt to understand what my late Grandfather, L/Cpl James Kitchener Heath did during the Second World War.

'A Pithead Polar Bear' is the culmination of another internet blog project that I started, entitled 'A Fragmented Military History', the name being an acknowledgement of the limited information that I had to go on and just how much there was to learn. The original site can be accessed from this site and in many ways can be thought of as being complementary to the published book.

James, or Jim, Heath was an ordinary citizen soldier signed up for the duration of the war. His experiences over the six years of the conflict are similar to those of many thousands of infantry men whilst at the same time unique to him.

My sincere hope for this book is that it may in some part inspire like minded people to take up the challenge to explore a similar history for one of their own relatives. My message is that it can be done even seventy plus years after the events described. It is also hugely rewarding.

Somewhere down the line I wrote words to the following effect, 'in my dealings with our veterans it has become clear that it is not our thanks they seek for what they did but our understanding'. That for me is justification enough for such an undertaking as this.



Showing posts with label A Pithead Polar Bear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Pithead Polar Bear. Show all posts

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Joe Hoadley 49th (West Riding) Division Recce Regiment RIP


Last week it was with sadness that I was informed of the passing of Joe Hoadley of the 49th (West Riding) Division Recce Regiment. Joe was one of the first British soldiers to enter the town of Turnhout in Belgium on 24th September 1944. At the time my Grandfather with 'D' Company of the 11th Royal Scots Fusiliers was a little way over the Antwerp-Turnhout canal waiting to enter the town. The men of the 49th (West Riding) Division, The Polar Bears, are commemorated as liberators of the town each September. Joe was a regular attendee of the service held in the CWGC section of the Kwakkelstraat Communal Cemetery. Unfortunately, I never had the opportunity to meet and talk with Joe as for the last couple of years when I have attended, poor health prevented him from travelling. I know that within the Polar Bear Association community the man will be greatly missed.

Good on you Joe!


Bronze memorial to the men of the Royal Scots Fusiliers who fell in World War II


'Statuette based on the War Memorial at Ayr to personnel of the Royal Scots Fusiliers who fell in the Second World War'.

Royal Highland Fusiliers Museum, Glasgow 2018.

Lieutenant Colonel Willian Dewhurst Douglas


518 Sauchiehall Street, an impressive building designed by that much loved son of Glasgow, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, houses the museum of the Royal Highland Fusiliers. Now I have been travelling to Glasgow annually for 8 years or thereabouts for Scottish dates on UK Stranglers tours. However on each and every occasion to date the date in town has been on a Saturday night and the museum does not have the resource to open on the weekends. This year however the show in Glasgow was on a Thursday night, so I finally had my chance. 

Heading into the WWII section I was impressed by the amount of material that they had. I looked at each and every photograph and was thrilled to find a contemporary photo of William Douglas.

For those of you who kindly bought my book, 'A Pithead Polar Bear' will know that William or Bill was a very prominent figure, he being at one time my Grandfather's commanding officer. I had previously searched online for a picture of Colonel Douglas, thinking that as a recipient of the Military Cross he would appear, but alas no. It was therefore great to put a face to a voice (his IWM audio interview was my first jumping off point for my own research).

http://apitheadpolarbear.blogspot.co.uk/

After publication, Bill sent me a lovely letter which I have included below:

'5th July 2017.

Dear Adrian,

Many thanks for your letter of 10th June and your book about your Grandfather. Both only reached me yesterday as I had been away from home.

I have speed read your book today and congratulate you on your tribute to your Grandfather. He must be proud of you and grateful for your insight into his time in the Army.

I was only too pleased to be able to help you – particularly through Charlie Arrand (one of my star History pupils).

Your Chapter 1 (your Grandfather’s funeral) I rate brought tears to your eyes. It certainly caused a brief few tears to me as the memories came back.

Your account of the battle for NOYERS brought back a memory. Some days before I had done a recce patrol from south of Fontenay-le-Pesnel (page 146) to check German positions on the long slope leading down to Noyers station. I recall reporting that the area was full of German positions!

I think that you are correct in placing your Grandfather in 16 Pl ’D’ Coy because of his knowledge and concern for Sgt. Little.

What a good idea to send profits from the book to the Associations for the newly created museum and the 49th Newsletter.

I never had the opportunity to be much associated with the 49th Div. after the war. In July ’45, I was on a troop-ship bound for the Far-East when Japan surrendered. I spent four years in Rhodesia with the African Rifles, then Staff College, the Far-east (Malaya-Korea). In fact very rarely in the UK, with my loyalties to the 2nd Div., 3rd Div., and 1st Guards Brigade.

Once again, my congratulations on your book and many thanks for my copy.

All Good Wishes.

William Douglas.'

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

With The Back Tuesday Club Monknash 19th December 2017

The Plough & Harrow
Monknash, Vale of Glamorgan

As I posted sometime ago, back in October I travelled down to Southsea in Hampshire to attend the UK gathering of the 59th (Staffordshire) Division Association a.k.a. The Friends of Thury Harcourt. There it was my great pleasure to meet (for the first time with the exception of Michele Guillerm) other people with a shared interest in and/or history with the 59th Division.

One such chap was John James from Bridgend in South Wales. At a quiet moment in the evening’s proceedings, he took me to one side and asked what my diary looked like in December and would I be interested in travelling to Wales to be a guest speaker at the annual Christmas gathering of a group of friends that collectively go under the name of the ‘Back Tuesday Club’.

‘The Back Tuesday Club’ is I learned a collection of likeminded individuals who meet weekly in a local pub for general chat and discussion around issues military. Each year, their ranks are increased for a planned trip to a theatre of war or some other site of military significance. Their club shirts feature a roll call of manoeuvres completed to date (The Western Front, Normandy, Arnhem, Waterloo and the Tower of London).... with the exception of Waterloo these are all places where I too have spent time. The ‘Back Tuesday’ term relates to the duration of these annual long weekend excursions.

It was with not a little trepidation that I accepted the invitation. The trepidation stemmed from the subject matter. Whilst I am very familiar now with my Grandfather’s service history as related in ‘A Pithead Polar Bear’ I have never presented on the subject (to date Powerpoint presentations have been confined to dry topics such as pharmaceutical drug registration etc etc!). This was something entirely different.

Nevertheless, I think that I pulled it off and the group of 30 or so somewhat inebriated Welshmen (mostly from the Vale of Glamorgan farming community), with whom I shared the evening in one of the bars of the rather lovely Plough & Harrow pub in a place called Monknash, were very appreciative.

What was especially pleasing for me was to be able to speak at length about the 59th Division with John in the audience since his father was in killed in action fighting with the Division (2/6th South Staffordshire Regiment) on 8th July 1944 (two days before the birth of John). He lies in Cambes-en-Plaine CWGC Cemetery, Normandy.



It is making such connections and sharing such personal histories that I have found to be the most rewarding aspect of this project.

Yesterday I received a very nice email from the club:

 Dear Adrian,

I apologise for the delay in emailing, but I thought you would be pleased to learn of the universal appreciation given to your talk by the club members and the other attendees at the gathering in the Plough & Harrow pub on the 19th December 2017.

Everyone who attended felt the uniqueness and importance of what you were able to tell us. Most of those assembled were born after 1945, and have no direct experience of conditions during WW II. However, I think it is true to say that everyone present has a keen understanding of its huge significance, and its relevance to the well-being of those alive today.

As a group we make an annual excursion to some location that has some relevance in terms of military history, usually relating to one or other of the two world wars.

However, the relating of the experiences of a single individual who has endured the horrors of war always adds a different perspective.

Finally, may we wish you well, and long may you give others the benefit of your unique insights.

    Yours Very Sincerely

        Malcolm Lloyd
   
            Back Tuesday Club

I would like to thank all of the members of The Back Tuesday Club for the warm reception and kind words and to John for the initial invitation.

Cheers!


Adrian.

South Staffordshire Regiment headstone
Cambes-en-Plaine CWGC Cemetery.

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Feedback for 'A Pithead Polar Bear'

'Please accept my heartfelt congratulations on writing the book. I am very pleased for you and I was delighted to read it. It is a great achievement and I'm sure that your grandfather would be very proud of you and that the rest of your family are incredibly proud of you. I think it is a great and very personal book, a real act of affection, and a proper memorial to your grandfather, and also those who served alongside him in both battalions, just ordinary men wrenched from ordinary lives doing their best, no doubt despite being rightly terrified, in extraordinary circumstances.

I am still lost in awe of the sheer magnitude of the task which faced this extraordinary citizen army, all that it took to plan and the sustain the effort through all the years of the war, and the commitment which ultimately saw them victorious.

I have really enjoyed the book, and found a number of things in it relating to 11 RSF which I had not come across before, which was a real delight. Having devoured it first time round, I’ll probably read it again over the Summer and take a little more time to absorb it'.

Charlie Arrand (ex-pupil of Colonel William Douglas 11th Battalion Royal Scots Fusiliers).

'The book has a arrived and I was quite taken aback. I was expecting a slim xeroxed pamphlet wonkily stapled. Instead this is massive volume of your not inconsiderable talent in writing great prose. It must have taken you ages? Really really impressed Mr Andrews - I look forward to your next volume which I hope will see a wider audience and produced by a mainstream publishing house. You are a talent for writing - go for it!'

John Day.


'The book is excellent. I am about half way through already!'

Dennis Dimond (Secretary of The 49th (West Riding) Division Association.


'Enjoying the book immensely, I've learnt a lot of things about the 59th (Staffordshire) Division that I never knew'.

Ken West (WWII veteran, 11th Battalion Royal Scots Fusiliers).

Monday, June 26, 2017

Book Update


Good evening all! I just wanted to say a big thank you to all those who have purchased a copy of my book 'A Pithead Polar Bear' to date. I am really pleased with the way that the sales are going. So far, 108 books of the 150 print run are accounted for. It is quite something for me to think that this humble family history is to be found on the bookshelves of friends and colleagues in the UK, France, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, America, Canada and Australia. Thank you one and all!

Adrian x.

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Update on Publication Date

Hi,

I decided to postpone the publication date by one week in order to be in a position to include some additional photographs and information resulting from my most recent visit to Normandy in mid-May. I think that the poignancy and relevance of this additional information justifies this additional delay many times over.

I have been informed by the publisher that the books should be with me by 9th June at which point I can start sending them out.

As I have stated on the flyer and elsewhere, the book proceeds will be split between projects relevant to both the 59th (Staffordshire) Division and the 49th (West Riding) Division. Given the fact that my Grandfather transferred to the 11th RSF after the conclusion of the Battle of Normandy, my focus in this area has always been on the 59th Division. This fact took me back to Thury Harcourt, a significant Norman town on the west bank of the Orne that was liberated by the men of the 59th Division in August 1944.

Previously I had been here oblivious that I was in extremely close proximity to a recently opened permanent exhibition to the town's liberators.

The Old Fire Station, located within 10 meters of the main 59th Division memorial now houses the start of a permanent tribute to the men who fell (and indeed those that survived) in the Division's ultimately successful efforts to liberate the town.

It was on an early Friday morning the my travelling companion, Owen, and I met up with a lovely lady by the name of Micheline Guillerm, the  'French Connection' in terms of the 59th (Staffordshire) Division, a.k.a. 'The Friends of Thury Harcourt'. Micheline was a young witness to the liberation and the recollections of the events have stayed with her in the intervening years.

We discussed the meaning of the museum and plans for possible expansion into additional rooms of the old station. I told her of my proposal to make a donation to the project and at this she welled up. I hope that Micheline is the first and last French lady I make cry!


Adrian and Micheline Guillerm
Thury Harcourt May 2017.


Sunday, January 1, 2017

Artwork for the book


Well here's my first attempt at putting a cover together for 'A Pithead Polar Bear'. I opted for a collage of original documentation. The following items are featured.


  • Early photograph as a new recruit taken some time in the first half of 1940 when he was with the North Staffordshire Regiment
  • The 'pithead' insignia of the 59th (Staffordshire) Division
  • The 'polar bear' insignia of the 49th (West Riding) Division
  • Jim Heath's sign up papers from January 1940
  • His entry pass into Bergen-Belsen camp from July 1945
  • His certificate of release to the Army Reserve dated 24th December 1945
  • 'The Kings Badge', a silver lapel badge awarded to soldiers disabled during service
  • Medal ribbons (clockwise from top right):
The War Medal
1939-1945 Star
The Defence Medal
The France And Germany Star