The
Descendants of Ella & Harry Twisleton
Dick Twisleton
Dick
Twisleton 2009 ISBN
978-0-473-15680-0 57pp
Twisletons spread across the globe
well before the internet. Today they belong together not just by blood but by
membership of the electronic global village. My first contact with the
indefatigable 84 year old
Henry Lea
(Harry) Twisleton’s poems are published with those of his father Tom and
namesake uncle Henry Lea, my grandfather’s cousins, in the 7th
Edition of Poems in the Craven Dialect (1953). In them Harry writes of
Dick
Twisleton is the ninth born of Ella and Harry’s ten children, five boys and
five girls. His book, published on the exact centenary of his parents’
emigration from
Family
memories recorded are impressed by the courage of pioneers Ella and Harry and family
life in the 1920s and 1930s at Motu farmstead. As a five year old Dick
remembers sitting on the butter churn as older family members turn the handle.
His sister Nell remembers sewing hand me downs, essential during the depression
when no clothes could be wasted. Another sister Sheila remembers foraging for
raspberries. There is excitement in 1933 when a second-hand seven seater car
arrives. In 1937 radio comes and with it the broadcast of international rugby
to the remote settlement.
Life in the
bush is much on horseback as the early pictures indicate. Harry’s final illness
derived from a fall in which his horse landed on top of him. Extricating himself and crawling 2 miles home he is left in bad shape to
be nursed by the close family until his death in 1946. He is predeceased by one
of his children, Tom who dies in the Second World War with brother Roly taking
over his farm.
The more
recent descendants of Ella and Harry serve information technology and web
design rather than sheep shearing and sewing. It is this new world that brings
Twisletons together. I write as host of www.twisleton.co.uk,
part of the new connecting up of families as dispersed as ours.
Shall I
belong but to the past muses Harry in one of his poems. His son’s fine volume would assure him
of the immortality of print at least, print promoted by the electronic media that
first brought me in touch with my distant cousin, author Dick Twisleton.
The