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The Robert Tressell Society
(formerly "The Robert Tressell Centre")
Tressell Timeline Part 1 |
Click here for Part 2 |
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Robert Tressell
Name: Robert
Philip (possibly Phillipe) Noonan (Croker).
Born: 18 April 1870 in Dublin.
Putative Son of Samuel Croker, who
had two "wives": Jane Usher Croker (and children) and his "Liaison
Lady" Mary Noonan; her children apart from Robert were Adelaide, Ellie and Mary Jane.
Samuel Croker was an inspector in the Royal Irish Constabulary, and then a magistrate.
He was a well-educated Irishman, of Dublin. Died about 1875/6. RT's mother then remarried, making RT very unhappy. His education was uncompleted.
37 Wexford Street, Dublin. Tressell's birthplace.
Fred Ball's Picture
About 1890: It
is believed that Robert possibly left for South Africa from London; the family
probably having removed from Ireland some year previously.
15
October 1891: RT
marries Elizabeth Hartel, age 18, at a Protestant church in Cape Town. He is
a decorator. She dies (1895?) of typhoid fever. |
17 September 1892: Daughter Kathleen born in Cape Town. Baptized at a Protestant church in April
1895.
1895(?): Wife dies.
August
1896: RT and Kathleen move to Johannesburg.
RT is involved in pro-Irish groups there, and suggestions that he helped to
form the militant Irish Brigade, which fought with the Boers against the
British forces. The main founder of the Brigade, John McBride, was executed
in Ireland in 1916 by the British for his part in the Boer War. RT works as
a foreman and very good signwriter for a company. Very attached to his child,
who was at a residential school.
1898
or 9: His sister Adelaide
Rolleston and her son Arthur join him at Cape Town from Chile, via London. (her
husband had died). RT had invited them, to set up a home with him. He seemed
to be earning well enough to help pay for their trip. The start of the Boer
War at Joburg (11/10/99) means they leave the city and set up home in Cape Town.
Arthur died in First World War; his name is on the Alexandra Park war memorial.
Posed
in Cape Town 1896, with daughter Kathleen
(c) Joan Johnson |
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Early
September 1901: The four people sail to
England on the SS Galician.
Late
1901 or early 1902: The
four come to Hastings to join sister Mary Jane at 38 Western Road, St Leonards.
There is a gathering there with the two other sisters, but none of RT's brothers,
who he never seems to see again.
Late
1901 or early 1902: The four move
to 1 Plynlimmon Road. RT acquires a job at Bruce & Co, Electrical and Sanitary
Engineers and Builders, of 2 York Buildings. RT needs this job apparently because
his old good financial position seems to have gone. With Bruce he is a top-paid
interior decorator, very skilled - this gives him virtually a class of his own.
He had been a highly skilled self-employed man in South Africa, well- educated.
Many of the RTP incidents are based on RT's experience at Bruce apparently.
Daughter Kathleen is sent to school in Deal.
1 Plynlimmon Road, |
Late 1902 or early 1903: The four move to top flat in Grosvenor Mansion, 115 Milward Rd. Stay for four
years or so. It has three attics. Kathleen is sent to the Roman Catholic
school, the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Old London Rd. RT leaves Bruce and starts with
Burton & Co, Builders and Contractors, Funeral Directors, Decorators, of 88
Stonefield Rd. RT also writes coffin plates. The whole atmosphere of the RTP comes form
Hastings rather than St Leonards, even though he wrote most of it there. |
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This postcard, left, from around 1915
would have been similar to Tressell's view as he walked home uphill to 115 Milward
Road - just out of shot, centre left of the picture, It shows the Milward Road Post Office and, No 86a a boot repairer
both pictures - Ion Castro Collection |
88
Stonefield Road in April 1999. It would have taken Tressel a couple of minutes
to come down the steps (just visible to the left of 115 Milward Road) to work
here
Sept
1903-June 1904: RT and most of Burton's staff work at Val Mascal.
Easter
1905: RT completes
for Easter the high quality artistic renovation of the chancel of St Andrews
Church in Queens Rd - gift from Burton to the church. |
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The site is now occupied by a petrol filling
station |
Interior of St.Andrew's Church showing Tressell's
work (more pictures on main page) |
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15
January 1906: General election, the first
since RT arrived in Hastings. This brought him into direct contact with politicians in the town, including socialists. Liberals were expecting to win Hastings,
but it and Rye were the only Tory gains in the whole country. The national Labour
Party was formed 15/2/1906, with 29 MPs. In Hastings
individual socialists only began to organise after the election- but the town
went back 25 years far its models, and repeated the whole socialist process
locally. This throws light on the RTP. RT was a convinced socialist, being part
of his nature. But until 1906 he was in some isolation
in Hastings. "Only when the socialists finally began to organise independently
did he find the organisation and comradeship to meet his need,and it seems to
me no accident that this should have been the impulse needed to call out his
particular kind of talent and give it direction". (Ball, p81). |
September
1906: Initial meeting in the Cricketers
pub in South Terrace of people wanting to set up a branch of the Social Democratic
Federation; included RT, AIf Cobb and Edward Cruttenden (of 16 Wellington Sq).
Followed on 12 October by first public meeting to form the branch, in Pelham
St. Chairman there: F Owen. By the end of November the local papers Observer
and Weekly Mail had started violent anti-socialist propaganda, a new source
for RT's notebooks. |
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left "The Cricketers" South Terrace,
just off Queens Road approx. 1906 and, above,
the same view in June 2005 |
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Late 1906: By
then there were socialist and Labour groups all over the town. "I believe this
local situation played a part in determining how Robert was to portray the role of
socialism and socialists in the book". (Ball, p87).
Sometime in 1906: RT left working at Burton's (conflict and trouble?) and went to Adams and
Jarrett's in Norman Rd and Alfred St. The four also left 115 Milward Rd, going to unknown
addresses at Warrior Sq and St Johns Rd.
A superb example of Tressell's Work, Perth Road St.Leonards.
This may have been still visible in the 1940's. The two little girls are Nora
and Doris Bounds. On the right of the house, below the word "FITTERS"
are Henry Bounds, Robert Tressell and Mrs Bounds |
Warrior Square about the time that Tressell
lived there. St.John's Road is behind the top right of the square, out of view |
1907: RT
threw himself into SDF work. Tough action against socialists by police and employers meant
the SDF branch developed a hard core of militant socialists, among them RT |
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Click here for part 2
By Steve Peak, 1993. 36 Collier Road, Hastings TN34 3JR
Grateful thanks to Hastings Museum for all the non colour pictures on this
page, from the Fred Ball Archive at Hastings Museum and are (c) Joan Johnson or the estate of the late Fred Ball.
Colour pictures (c) copyright Ion Castro 1999 except where stated |
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