The Sentinel

Author Vera Brittain ‘should be remembered as a flag bearer for equality’

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World War when she served as a nurse in France.

“Women had a pivotal role to play during the Great War, and she was heavily involved in that. No wonder that she grew to be a pacifist and wrote extensivel­y on the subject.”

Margaret, who was born at the Higherland, in Newcastle, 68 years ago – and whose mother was coincident­ally named Vera – was the daughter of a Newcastle burgess, Jesse Clarke, and this indirectly fired her interest in feminism.

She explains: “When my brothers reached the age of 21, they became burgesses too, but I couldn’t on account of my gender – and I resented that.

“So I’ve fought for women’s rights and equality ever since, which is why I was delighted to hear Baroness Shirley Williams – Vera Brittain’s daughter – speak on the author and feminist’s life from the stage of the Hartshill Medical Institute a few years ago.”

Margaret tells me that she left the event with an even greater insight into the life of Vera Brittain: “What touched me deeply was the personal tragedy she endured – losing her fiancé and brother and friends, all killed at war. This had a big effect on Vera’s life.

“In fact, it motivated her in becoming more active in her fight for peace and feminism.”

Vera was born in Sidmouth Avenue, Newcastle, and I’ve spoken to local history groups outside the house, always semi-expecting the nervous owners’ curtains to rustle at any time.

In the first chapter of Testament of Youth, Vera writes about her family history, informing us that an ancestor, Richard Brittain, was the town mayor in 1741, whilst her great grandfathe­r had worked in a private bank in Newcastle in the 1850s. In later times, the family came to run a paper mill in the town.

As a young woman, Vera faced challenges and heartache that would have broken many weaker individual­s. The man she loved – Roland Leighton – was shot in the head in the trenches at the age of 19, during Christmas, 1915.

She also lost her brother Edward and two close friends during the carnage.

She appears to have felt that she had a debt of honour to play an active part in the war effort, and so became a VAD (voluntary aid detachment) nurse, caring for mutilated and sometimes maddened soldiers in London, Malta and France.

She now led a bullet-dodging, heart-racing, head-cracking existence that was a far cry from the leafy tranquilli­ty of the Brampton or her former genteel, middle-class life in oh-so convention­al Buxton, where ‘getting on in life’ meant finding a husband and settling down to unchalleng­ing domestic life.

Make no mistake, Testament of Youth is a weighty, harrowing read, graphicall­y describing – as Margaret says - the demise of healthy young men dear to Vera, and her profound sense of loss.

Neverthele­ss, there is the odd snippet of family informatio­n that raises a smile. For example, we read that Vera’s father was not present at her birth. It was Christmas, and he was watching a pantomime in Hanley.

Incidental­ly, Mr Brittain was once told by a publisher’s traveller that the pottery towns held the lowest record for book-buying in England.

Vera left Newcastle about 18 months after she was born, moving to Macclesfie­ld and later to Buxton – however, she occasional­ly returned to Newcastle on business or to collect material for her books. She was guest of honour at a prize distributi­on at Orme Girls’ School in 1935.

What did she think of her native town? As a young woman, she was of the opinion that such a typically provincial place could never produce a man or woman of the smallest eminence – though she was ultimately to meet one local man who made good, to wit, Sir Joseph Cook, the Silverdale pit boy who became Australian Prime Minister and High Commission­er.

There’s an element of middle-class snobbery that permeates Vera’s book that reminds me a little of Arnold Bennett at his most supercilio­us –

 ??  ?? Vera Brittain in her later years, and inset, Alan and Linda Massey, of Burslem History Club, outside Vera’s old house, Melrose, in Buxton.
Vera Brittain in her later years, and inset, Alan and Linda Massey, of Burslem History Club, outside Vera’s old house, Melrose, in Buxton.

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