Here he is near the bottom of my dad's carefully-compiled family tree. I never met him but now wish that I could ask him some of the questions that one wants to ask after there's no longer anyone there to answer them. It looks as if he had no children.
Here he is again:
He sounds quite a character. His father deaved him and his siblings about cribbage - there's no adequate English word for "deaved" but it means something like "pestered" - but with a real feeling of weariness. It's from the same root as "deafened" - but metaphorically. It hasn't anything to do with being loud.
Here he is with various other cousins and their spouses at a golden wedding party. Luckily I know who most of them are because my dad left a key to the photo. My grandmother is on the far left in the second front row and my grandfather in the same row, but third from the right. I wonder why they didn't stand together.
This is Noble in the back row, middle, as a young man.
We used to visit my aunt, my dad's sister, in Norfolk, and one year I got her to dictate her family memories. This is what she said about Noble's parents:
Uncle Tom (Clarkston Tom) - (1872-1957)
We thought of
Uncle Tom as very posh – maybe he married above his station? He had a maid
called Jean Ross. One time, when my mother was staying, they went to visit some
friends who served dainty sandwiches and had finger bowls, which my sister Jean
had never seen before. My mother very seldom made derogatory comments but this
time she said that she thought they were showing off. Uncle Tom’s wife was
called Ann(ie) McKendrick (1869-1936) . He worked
as a traveller for suiting and gave my mother out-of-date books of pattern
samples, out of which she made patchwork bedcovers [two of which I now have]. He came to Edinburgh in the course of his work and
he had a car! He used to bring us a big box of chocolates. We children had
Sunday clothes, including coats, made by Uncle Tom’s firm. They were
beautifully cut. When we were older, Jean and I used to go to his house – which
seemed posh - for holidays. It was right by the River Cart. We used to climb
over the wall, scramble down the banks and explore the river.
And here are the quilts that my aunt gave me, made from Noble's father's out-of-date pattern samples about 100 years ago. Not fancy, but serviceable and warm.
Daughter 2 and Littlest Granddaughter are coming on Monday to stay for almost two weeks. Won't that be lovely?