Wednesday, January 25, 2012

From the Belgian Congo to Bedford - Tracking Down Donors of African Artefacts

The core of the Bedford Museum collection originally came from Bedford Modern School. They had their own museum when the school was still based in the heart of the town centre, behind the Edward Blore designed facade that now fronts the Harpur Shopping Centre. The museum was on the first floor, roughly where Boots now stands and displayed a collection of weird and wonderful curiosities, as well as collections of Natural History, Social History and Archaeology.

Being an amateur museum from 1886 until the early 1962, the museum's record keeping wasn't quite up to the standards of today's museums so we are sometimes a little short of facts. One area where the records were not only brief but downright confusing was with regards to a collection of material from Kalembelembe in the Belgian Congo (now Democratic Republic of Congo). The school's own Eagle magazine published an acknowledgement of the arrival  in July 1932 of the Robinson Collection of African objects, whilst the accession register (the book that infers official museum object status to artefacts) listed them under the title Richardson Collection. Either way, both are sufficiently common names to make research challenging. Going through the school records revealed nothing, so I resorted to the trial and error of internet searches. Initially nothing turned up, but I had a hunch that a collection of material from an African village with no known mining, trade or British Colonial connections must have been a likely destination for missionaries. From the 1840s-1860s the Bedford Academy was the London Missionary Society's training centre, and as a hot bed of non-conformism has also been home to Evangelicals and Pentecostals. The search terms 'Kalembelembe' and 'missionaries' proved fruitful. I was led to a pamphlet of the Pentecostal Missionary Union called Confidence, the issue for January to March 1921. Reading through led me to the following article:


Mr & Mrs Arthur W. Richardson before
they left for Kalembelembe.
Image: Confidence, (Sunderland, Jan-Mar 1921)
Spanning several pages, the article was an account of 'Brother' and 'Sister' Richardson's journey across Africa to Kalembelembe where they would set up a new mission station. They were a devout couple who clearly felt strongly about their faith, and saw every trial they faced as God's will in some way. They were dismayed by the ritualistic practices they found in the village that differed so greatly from their own beliefs and urged the readers of their letter to pray for them in their work. I felt I had found the source of the collection - these were the only British people in this Village at the right time, and their name matched one of the two possibilities provided by our records.

But why had their collection ended up in Bedford? Bedford was mentioned within the newsletter, but only as a donor of funds in a long list of subscription gifts from towns all over the country, certainly not a firm link. Even with the full name of Arthur William Richardson I could trace nothing to connect him to the town or school, and the newsletter had been published in Sunderland.

I recalled that our collection of Palestinian archaeology came from a man named William J.J.  Glassby, I didn't know much about him other that he had kept his fine collection, which included artefacts excavated by the famous pioneer achaeologist Flinders Petrie, in a Mission building in Costin Street, Bedford, before it was donated to Bedford Modern School Museum in 1932. Could this Mission Hall be the connection? I searched again, changing my terms to  'Pentecostal Missionary Union' and 'Bedford'. This hit the Google* jackpot. Numerous references came up mentioning both terms, and a man called Cecil Polhill-Turner. It seems that Polhill (he dropped the Turner as young man) was a Bedford man who had inherited the estate of Howbury Hall near Renhold along with a large sum of money. He was part of the 'Cambridge Seven', a group of born again Christians who joined the China Inland Mission and dedicated their lives to missionary work. He was also the president of the PMU, bankrolling many of the missionary journeys and partaking his of own in China and India. The Confidence pamphlet was the official voice of the organisation until founder member and editor of Confidence A.A, Boddy split with the PMU over differences of opinion. Confidence continued to promote their missionary work edited by Boddy but the official voice now came form Flames of Fire, a monthly newsletter published in Bedford and edited by Cecil Polhill's estate manager, none other than William Glassby.

Further research through the several years worth of issues of Confidence revealed that Arthur Richardson had died in 1925 of Blackwater fever, though his wife and child remained in Kalembelembe for a period afterwards. I then turned back to the Eagle magazine to see if there was anything I had missed in the article referring to the donation of the Richardson (though cited as Robinson) collection. There was: the first paragraph that introduces the school museum section said that the Palestinian antiquities collection had in fact been donated by Cecil Polhill and '94 subscribers' in memory of Glassby; then under a section titled 'Gifts' it listed  'The Glassby Collection' in detail, immediately followed by 'The Robinson Collection'. It seems very likely that the PMU had received collections from Richardson's wife and those may have been stored with Glassby's 'Missionary Museum' in Bedford. When Glassby died and it was decided to send his collection to the Bedford Modern School museum,it must have seemed a logical place for the Richardson collection to go too, as there was already a strong collection of ethnographic artefacts in the museum.

I'll continue researching the connections, while also looking at other donors, with the 'Hillman' collection of Chinese artefacts another similar conundrum. Any memories or information anyone might have of family members having donated ethnographic artefacts to the BMS museum between the 1890s and1940s would be very gratefully recieved!

Kristian Purcell
Curatorial Assistant

*Other search providers are also available.

UPDATE -18-10-2012
While browsing through photos in our social history collection a picture jumped out at me - a couple with a child who looked very familiar. Could it be Arthur Richardson? I compared it to the very grainy image from Confidence above an the man certainly looked similar, but  a moustache and short hair in the 1920s is a fairly common look. I was far more convinced when I compared the images of the woman. Now after looking at them for a while I am certain this is the Richardson's and their young boy. The picture had no details with it as it had been separated from the African material and had only been accessioned in 2000 with a number of other photos which had been in our archive. The Bedford Modern School Museum had many as yet unprocessed objects, some we are still identifying today. The work goes on.

The Richardson family in the early 1920s. BEDFM 2000.367




Thursday, January 19, 2012

Sinclair Executive Pocket Calculator - it all adds up!


We have recently been donated this original Sinclair Executive handheld calculator. This is one of the earliest electronic pocket calculators that can claim to actually be pocket sized - the New Scientist Journal reviewed it as 'the first calculator that can comfortably fit in the user's pocket along with his wallet and cheque book'. It was a third thinner than anything else on the market when it was launched in August 1972. 

Sinclair Executive Calculator with Texas Insturments GLS 1802 chip inside. Dimensions: 138mm(H), 56mm (W), 9mm (D).
The significance to Bedford is the fact that the tiny silicon chip, known as the 'Calculator On' chip, that operated the display and components for the calculator was invented and manufactured by Texas Instruments in Bedford. Texas Instruments had moved and expanded from Dallas, USA to Bedford, UK in 1957 to built one of the largest semi-conductor research and manufacturing facilities, to assist their expansion into the European markets.
The miniature silicon integrated circuit chips were developed for a range of applications, the pocket calculator being just one. I am sure many of our readers will have owned or come across Texas Instrument calculators, computers and other devices available during the 1970's and 1980's. Other products aside from the calculator that used the 'microcomputer' chip, invented in 1971 by Michael Cochran and Gary Boone, included microwave ovens, sewing machines, telephones, vending machines and of course early electronic computer games.

Texas Instruments Offices built at Dallas Road, Bedford in 1958 © Texas Instruments Ltd. 
Sinclair Radionics Ltd. was a firm based at Huntingdon and the inventor of the pocket calculator was Clive Sinclair. Clive wanted the calculator to be truly pocket sized and designed it to use button cell (watch type) batteries, rather than the standard AA size batteries to allow the calculator to be much thinner. He also experimented with the TI chip, using it in a new way that allowed the cell batteries to last much longer through pulsing the power to the chip.   

John, our donor, bought the calculator soon after it was launched while he was working at the Sunlife for Canada insurance company in Northampton. He remembers seeing it advertised in the Daily Telegraph on the train on his way down to London to the Ideal Home Exhibition at Olympia, where his company had a stand. The calculator was advertised from the recommended retail price of £84 at the discounted price of £59. He decided that he would purchase one for his work and thinks it was bought from a shop either in Oxford Street or Tottenham Court Road. John remembers that at first he would forget to turn off the calculator when not in use to preserve the batteries, which did not last long – only around 2 hours. John bought the calculator for use by himself and others in his team – who he trained to use the equipment. It requires 4 button cell batteries and these became expensive and difficult to get hold of, so John stopped using the calculator after about 4 or 5 years. The calculator still has its red velvet case, instructions for operation and manufacturers details. It is certainly a valued addition to our collection as a contemporary item connected with Bedfordshire's technological development and industry.

If you think that you have an iconic Texas Instrument's object that you know was made or developed in Bedford along these lines then feel free to share it with us in the comments, on facebook, twitter, or get in touch via chag@bedford.gov.uk. 

Lydia Saul
Keeper of Social History

Acknowledgements:
Thanks to our donor, John.
Thanks to Kenneth Sanders for the photograph of the Texas Instruments building.
For further information see Texas Instruments Timeline
For further information about Sinclair Executive Calculators see Vintage Calculators website