Poor old Boris
Johnson has not been greeted well by the foreigners for whom he is supposed to
act as Foreign Secretary in our government.
It has long been the case that the reality of the Foreign Office is that
it is there for them to tell the Brit's what to do. They say he is unsuited to
this task.
But there just
might be something in the genes that may give him help. Normally, when posting on matters relating to
family history I like to be sure of the lines and basics but in the case of
Bojo, perhaps some speculation could go a long way. After all Bojo himself is not averse to a
little embroidery of his life story.
It arises from
that grand old English name Scattergood turning up. Really, you could not invent a better
one. If James Fawcett and Edith Annie
Scattergood are in there then it can be very interesting. Who needs aristocracy and the more doubtful
members of the Royals when you have a family like this?
Bojo, as we
know is and has been big on property.
Indeed, he has upset many by permitting swathes of central London to be
replaced by skyscrapers built and financed by his chums. All those lovely old brick built streets,
where did the bricks go or more to the point where did they come from?
Because we
have Scattergood brick makers.
Admittedly, the bricks of late 18th and early 19th Century London were
very likely to have come from the many south east sources and perhaps only
specialist types from elsewhere. But
Bojo's brick makers were West Midlands.
This history tells us about those
of Shropshire and is a full account of the industry and trade in those
parts. Down in West Bromwich the way
they were made and traded would be much the same. So were Bojo's people moulders or pushers? I think we should be told, you know a man by
his trade.
So if you are
tempted to chuck a brick at Bojo, at least try to source an antique one of the
period. He might be fussy about these
things. But to move on to the further
shores of speculation. What other
Scattergood men were at least in his family connections although not direct
ancestors?
Two of my
ports of call in such cases is to go to the Waterloo Medal Roll and the
Trafalgar Roll. It is my view that
during the wars against Napoleon the proportion of the male population who
served one way or another was comparable with the First and Second World
Wars. Also, the primary sources often
tell a different story from the later histories.
At Waterloo in 1815 an
Edward Scattergood was with the 52nd Regiment of Foot which was brigaded with
the 95th (see Sharpe's Rifles of TV) and put Boney's Middle Guard to the
bayonet. Then there were a John and a
Thomas in the 2nd Battalion of the 3rd Foot Guards who were at the Hougoumont
Farm defence, a critical phase of the battle.
If any men did for Bonaparte, they did.
Earlier there
was the William Scattergood at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Not just at the battle but a red coated Royal
Marine Private in the thick of it on deck or in the rigging of the flagship HMS
Victory. He survived, being discharged
in 1816. So in those portraits of the
death of Nelson, those in red coats are the Marines, could one have been
William?
When Ms May
discusses how to handle the French with Bojo, she might remind him that England
expects every man to do his duty.
The propagation of the Scattergoods is therefore a priority
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