Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley (General)
by Localbird, Saturday, August 22, 2009, 11:04 (5646 days ago)
Good Morning,
I am Winifred Foley's Granddaughter and I have found some great information on here as my Mother is researching the family tree. However I am particularly interested in the photograph of Charlie Mason on the Drybrook page which I have never seen before. I know they were terribly poor and note that he is wearing a three piece suit and bowler hat. I am assuming he had borrowed this attire for some important reason but I was wondering if anyone knows where he was going and what his purpose was on that day. If you know any other information I would love to hear it as I am interested to find out more about him.
Many Thanks
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Added by admin
Mark Baker - Giles Meek - Charlie Mason
Charlie Mason was the father of Winifred Foley
The town is possibly Gloucester, the photo taken around 1930
Photo supplied by Gerry Meek
Charlie MASON - Winifred FOLEY prior thread / info
by slowhands , proud of his ancient Dean Forest roots, Saturday, August 22, 2009, 11:14 (5646 days ago) @ Localbird
http://www.forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=17842
My granda's suit was kept for Weddings and Sunday best - i.e. Chapel !
and marching in Cinderford :-)
in this picture, it looks like he is in Gloucester on Miner's rights/union business
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Ἀριστοτέλης A Gloster & Hereford Boy in the Forest of Dean ><((((*>
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley
by gerrym , Sunday, August 23, 2009, 21:34 (5645 days ago) @ Localbird
The Giles Meek in the photo was my uncle: Mark Baker and Charlie Mason were friends. I remember walking through Ruardean Hill woods from Drybrook to Brierley with Giles several times to see Charlie - they usually talked politics, which was not too interesting for a six-year old. What did stick in my mind was that near where Charlie lived was a man who had a hook replacing a hand he had lost. He cut hair for some of the locals and had the comb fixed in the strap holding the hook.
As for what Charlie was wearing - Giles' sister said that he was always a smart dresser when he was out, so no doubt he was wearing his "Sunday best".
Gerrym.
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley
by Localbird, Sunday, August 23, 2009, 23:29 (5645 days ago) @ gerrym
Hi,
Thanks for your reply. It is such a strange concept to hear from someone who had met Charlie Mason. My Nana Winnie idolised him and talked about him on regular occasions and over the years I have heard and read many things about him, all of them good. I was delighted to find the photo on this site as of all the photos we found in my Nans belongings this was not among them and only a handful of others have surfaced.
Thanks again as it was lovely to hear this first hand account.
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley
by mcdonald74, Tuesday, August 25, 2009, 18:41 (5643 days ago) @ Localbird
Hello there im just wondering if Winifred Foley would be anyway related to Noah,Benjamin,Jothan Mason etc? regards Duncan
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley
by Localbird, Monday, August 31, 2009, 17:12 (5637 days ago) @ mcdonald74
Hi Duncan,
Thanks for your reply, am I to assume that you too are a Mason descendant?
I think that there is a connection although I am not sure how as i don't manage to find enough time to look further, in this thread there is a link and it brings up a Benjamin Mason, although I am not sure where these people feature in the tree. http://www.forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=17841
I am afraid I am not the geneology expert in the family but my Mum is building the tree so if you are on ancestry or anything she could let you have what she has got. Please let me know if I can offer you further help (not that I have been much use.
Have a look at this which is on the same thread, it may clarify things further. I will carry on and try to decipher the link between the two as it appears that there is a link: http://www.forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=17852
Regards
Becky
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley
by davetuffley, Tuesday, January 06, 2015, 15:17 (3683 days ago) @ Localbird
if you can e-mail me on dave.tuffley@safranmbd.com then I will forward all my mining fatality research that I have done on Charles Mason. All the old miners that I spoke to when researching his fatal accident said what a genuine upright and honest chap he was. I have been researching mining accidents in the Forest of Dean coal and iron ore fields since 1988. My intention is to write a book on this subject and Charles Mason will definately feature in it. He was a real Forester and it was no wonder that Winifred loved him so much
Winifred Foley Obituary
by admin , Forest of Dean, Monday, August 24, 2009, 03:29 (5645 days ago) @ Localbird
April 11, 2009
Winifred Foley: writer
Timesonline
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article6073720.ece
It was not until she was in her sixties that Winifred Foley wrote her first book. A Child in the Forest, about her childhood in the Forest of Dean, went on to sell more than 500,000 copies, inspired radio and television adaptations, and became an important document for social historians.
Winifred was born in 1914 into a poor mining family from Brierly, near Cinderford, Gloucestershire. Food and money were scarce, but the community spirit was strong and everyone would pull together to offer tea or a crust of bread to those in need. The men worked gruelling shifts, and the women scrimped to make ends meet.
Foley's father, Charlie Mason, was a leader in the miners' strike in 1926. As a consequence he could not find employment for many years afterwards, and her family experienced great hardship. To feed the family Foley's mother, Margaret, would steal fruit from neighbouring farms, or the children would pick acorns to eat, which would make their stomachs ache.
Aged 14 Foley left for London to begin in domestic service. She was resentful but it was the only future for the girls of the Forest of Dean. In London she moved between houses. Her first job was in North London with a family who wanted "a strong, young fool -- one who could be housemaid from six to one . . . then parlour maid for waiting at the table, then nanny for the children's afternoon outings, then washerwoman in the evening". For this she earned six-and-eightpence a week, the equivalent of about £10 today.
She resigned after a few months, homesick and worn out, to return to the Forest of Dean. Afterwards she moved between jobs, observing other people's lives from the perspective of the maid, the waitress and the general skivvy. In the 1930s she met her husband-to-be, Syd Foley, a woodman, at a political rally in London opposing Mosley's Fascist Black Shirt movement. After they married and had four children, the young family moved to an isolated cottage in Huntley, Gloucestershire.
Foley had always told her children stories about her past, but it was not until she learnt of an appeal for unpublished personal histories in the 1970s that she was cajoled into putting her own recollections on paper. She filled several notebooks with her memories, which were carefully edited by her husband before she sent them to the BBC. Her story caught the interest of John Burnett, a social historian, and Pamela Howe, a talks producer at the BBC in Bristol. Howe sought Foley out, and in 1973 her story was serialised and broadcast on Woman's Hour.
A year later A Child in the Forest, the first book of what would become the "Forest Trilogy", was published through the BBC. A sequel, No Pipe Dreams for Father, and the concluding title in the trilogy, Back to the Forest, followed. Her time spent living and working for an elderly woman inspired the acclaimed television drama Abide with Me (1976), written by Julian Mitchell, with whom she remained in contact for many years afterwards.
Foley's husband and children were delighted by her success, but her work caused tensions elsewhere. The honesty of her descriptions, which included stories of fleas in the bed and poor sanitation, shamed some parts of her family. But Foley believed it was important that the rest of the world knew this side of the story as well, especially at a time when she felt people were becoming more materialistic and oblivious to the realities of the lives of others.
In public Foley was modest about her achievements but her books did enable her to retire and to buy a house -- she was the first person in her family to do so.
In 2001 a documentary on her life, Winifred Foley - A Child from the Forest, was broadcast on ITV. Her life story has been quoted in numerous texts studying the social history of the period she grew up in. In her eighties, Foley changed direction to write a series of romantic novels. In 2009 A Child in the Forest was reprinted as Full Hearts and Empty Bellies to celebrate the title's 30th anniversary, but Foley died just before its release. After her death, the Daily Mail published a serialised version of the book.
She is survived by three sons and one daughter. Her husband, Syd, died in 1998.
Winifred Foley, writer, was born on July 25, 1914, and died on March 21, 2009, aged 94
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley - Photos
by admin , Forest of Dean, Friday, September 04, 2009, 08:05 (5633 days ago) @ Localbird
http://www.forest-of-dean.net/gallery/mason_foley/
A Young Winifred Foley
A Young Winnie with parents & sister
Charlie Mason
Home Farm, Huntley
Winifred Last left on Second Row
Winifred, Sid & Family at Home Farm
Winnie & Sid Foley
Charlie Mason - Winifred Foley - Photos
by tuffers64, Cinderford, Thursday, April 27, 2017, 10:08 (2841 days ago) @ admin
Jim Hales verbal account to Dave Tuffley 13th January 1996:
The ground used to ‘puff-up’ in the roadways underground at Northern United, at about 1 inch in height per day, so it wasn’t long before the 9 to 10 feet high roadways were soon only high enough for the coal carts to pass under. Jim knew times when carts were left for a day or so it was impossible to push them out from the faces and back into the roadways.
Charles (Charlie) Mason and several others were trying to remove steel rings, set to support the roads. They dug down to expose all the steel work at the bottom. Then the sections of the rings were chained together before the bolts attaching the connecting plates were removed. This was done to prevent the heavy weight of the roof causing the ring sections to fly apart and striking the miners when the bolts were removed. The sections, if they did not fly apart them selves, were pulled apart with a ‘Sylvester’ chain puller. One end was attached to the ring section and the other end was attached to a steel or timber pole that was set into the ground and the other end was slanted towards the direction of pull and pushed up into the roof. The Sylvester was then used to pull the top end of the pole up into the roof and make it tight and solid and a thus a strong anchor to pull against.
Charles Mason and his workmates did not erect such a solid anchor and anchored the Sylvester against a roadway timber setting. In other words the two upright posts with a bracing post across the top. When the Sylvester was ratcheted to tighten up the slack in the hauling chain to pull out the ring, it pulled the timber setting anchor out instead and caused a roof fall of stone and earth to fall upon Charles Mason’s head and killed him.
Jim Hale said that he was waiting for empty coal carts to arrive and went to find out where they had gotten to. He went along the road to the haulage engine where other miners were stood around in a group. Jim asked ‘What’s up with the carts?’, and was told that Charles Mason was dead.
It was the practice that miners always left their work at a pit for the day when a man was killed, as a mark of respect. As the war had just finished and coal was at a premium, the miners worked on that day.
When Jim and others went to go to their workplace the next day they found the way on down the roadway blocked by cross pieces of timber, chalked with ‘No entry’. As no one was about they decided to carry on around rather than go back around a longer route. They soon came upon the scene of the fatality and Jim said it was obvious what had caused the accident as nothing had been removed or altered since the accident.