WW1 Creative Writing Competition
WW1 Creative Writing Competition
WW1 Creative Writing Competition
The prize is an archive experience for the winner and their school class, (or
guides/scouts/youth group). This experience will include:
the Indenture Game: learn about the Norfolk Record Office and the
documents it holds.
A Behind-the-Scenes tour of the archive taking you around our impressive
strongrooms which hold over 12 million documents. With their rolling shelves,
cold temperature and huge size, many visiting students have commented that
it reminds them of a James Bond film!
Learning how to handle documents safely and seeing some of the things we
have found in among the documents when we are given them (including
spiders!).
Finally, you will see some of our gem documents.
The winning entry will also be published on our blog.
How to Enter
You can send your entry by post or by email.
If sending by post the address is:
Norfolk Record Office: The Archive Centre
Martineau Lane
Norwich
NR1 2DQ
If entering by email the email address is: norfrec@norfolk.gov.uk
Please put Creative Writing Competition as the subject of the email.
Along with your entry, please provide your name, age, school, contact telephone and
email (and how you would prefer to be contacted)
Beatrice Gurney went to Belgium after the war with the Church Army. Her diary
describes life in a formerly-occupied country: in this extract she organises a party for
Belgian children made orphans by the war.
The childrens party was a great success. Someone suggested flags and in one
minute our garden, which has no flowers and is only a yard with cinders rolled as
pavement, was gay with any number. Fred the head storesman, a delightful person
who has 3 little girls and adores children, did most of the preparation and put up a
long table for 40, which was made very gay with endless crackers found in the store,
and heaps to eat, and before 4 the party arrived, 40 kids in black. Pinafores green
and black, stiff Eton collars, and black and white washing hats. They looked so
solemn, with 2 attendant sisters, one a charming and quite gay soeur superiere. The
funny thing was they filed in 3 abreast and walked straight to the tea table and sat
down. They never said how-do-you-do or looked our way. They were asked to tea
and meant to have it. They were painfully silent at first and well behaved, and tried
to stand up every time they were given food. We loaded the table with pistolets,
buttered buns, open tarts, plums and cocoanut cakes, sent specially by the lady
pattissier. They eat enormously and we had to get more and more supplies. The
sister said they usually had a tartine and caf au lait, so she did not think she
would give them any supper! They looked all fat and well and happy tho the tragedy
of their being in the orphanage was so terrible. Many were orphans of civilians shot
by the Germans. Many no-one knew anything about at all. Children, babies found in
the devastated areas, the youngest, a really darling little thing of about 4 was found
as a tiny baby by its dead mother who had been killed by a bomb when fleeing from
some ruined town.
clinging to an oar and piece of rope. At first I felt very frightened and believe I was
calling out. Francis is also washed out and I still find I am next to him. He said hold
on Sister dont be frightened. All around we see boats. Will no one pick us up? Hold
on Hold tight is the general cry. I can see some of those agonized faces now.
After a time I felt calmer, but my arms were aching so I felt I must give in. Will they
never come? Jacks says hold on Sister a 2nd boat is coming to pick us up. The
waves seem so big, quite over my head, the salt water makes me feel so sick. I
thought of home and all my very dear ones. Life is sweet. It seems hours we were in
the water, some one tried to get me back into the boat but I could not. I could see
and feel little now. A cheer! from the distance it seemed and then some one said the
destroyer was alongside. I thought my head was going to be knocked and it was a
pity to be killed after all the holding on. Two hands came down and I was pulled up
first. My hair seemed caught, the rope ladder was there and I got one foot on. I felt
the ships boards under my feet and crowds of men all around me. All went black! I
knew I was lying down and some one was [?] my hands and face. A doctors was
calling for brandy, it all seemed so far away. Sit up you are all right Drink this wine
out of a bottle. take her down below to the Storeroom. I was led down somehow,
and how nice to feel the warmth.
MC 2127/1
MC 2127/1
MC 2127/1