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EPISODE 498 EYWOOD…EDWARD FREEMAN DESIGNED PICTURE FRAMES AS IF FORMAL GARDENS
EPISODE 498 EYWOOD …EDWARD FREEMAN DESIGNED PICTURE FRAME AS IF FORMAL GARDENS(Note: Head gardeners designed formal gardens on paper, then in soil. In 1915 Edward Freemandesigned his picture frames the same way…a pattern then flowers were carved in wood rather than soil.I knew there was a link..took me 60 years to see it. This episode took a lot of time)) -
episode 497 EYWOOD GARDENS SURVIVE THE DEMOLITION
EPSPDE 497 EYWOOD GARDENS SURVIVE THE DEMOLITIONalan skeochDec. 29,2021
EYWOOD GARDN GREENHOUSE CIRCA 1965…SURPRISINGLY INTACTWhat remained of Eywood after the demolition? Over many visits to Eywood I was able tocapture many pictures of the Estate as it still stands to this day. While the grand mansion wasdemolished and its’ carcase remains as a downer to anyone visiting Eywood….while this is true,so much of the Estate remains intact which is remarkable and likely not true for the hundreds ofsimilar Country Estate mansions demolished ine 20th century.I have no pictures of the mansion interior except for the picture below which gives a clearindication of the fine living conditions of Lord and Lady Oxford and subsequent owners ofEywood.Just for fun see how many things you would want in your house and make an imaginary bid.On one of our visits to Eywood, Cyril Griffiths took us to a nearby farm owned by the Edwardswho were loosely connected to our family. Inside their home were very grand pieces of furniturebought at auction from Eywood. Particularly I remember a huge dining room table that wouldtake four people to lift and sideboard cupboard to match. Memory could be wrong though.“What am i bid for these fireplace ANDIRONS?”“What am I bid for this FINE ANTLERED DEER HEAD?”“What am i bid for this SIDE BOARD CUPBOURD AND CONTENTS OF FINE CHINA?”“What am I bid for these PERIOD SIDE CHAIRS?”“What am I bid for THE STAIR RAILINGS?“What am I bid for these TWO DECORATIVE URNS?“What am I bid for THE FINE CARVED FIREPLACE MANTLE?“What am I bid for the HARDWOOD FLOOR BOARDS?
THE EYWOOD GARDENSSURVIVING BUILDINGS STILL PRESENT ON THE EYWOOD ESTATE, THISEPISODE WILL FEATURE THE EYWOOD GARDENS WHICH ARE INTACTTO THIS DAY.It should come as no surprise to readers that our family were more interestedin the Eywood gardens that the ruin of the mansion. These gardens werewhere granddad and his ten gardeners provided fresh food for the estate owners…counted the two horses as gardeners also.Granddad Edward Freeman could build anything. Trained initially as a carpenterhe decided to change careers and became a landscape gardener. He admiredand emulated Capability Brown who designed much of the landscapes associatedwith grand Country Estates like Eywood Court.Granddad was a smart man. He built his own ‘pin hole camera’ and used itto capture himself along with his 8 gardeners the youngest of which maywell be the future owner of the gardens.The men are holding the tools of their trade and even included the garden workhorses. Mom always said that granddad grew a beard to make himself lookolder as you can see in his picture below (full suit with watch chain and fob)Another striking feature of this picture if how nicely dressed are the gardeners.There is something intangible in the picture….pride.
As head gardener granddad received this house which is described as the gardeners ‘cottage. Really quite a grand home.Mom, (Elsie Freeman) was born here in 1901. The earlier pin hole photo seems to have been taken beside the cottage which wassurrounded by the high brick walls in the Victorian tradition of estate gardens. Note my wife Marjorie at right bottom.
Large hand painted photograph of mom, Elsie Freeman, taken at Eywood using Granddad’s may have been taken withpin hole camera. Curly haired doll matches her curly hair. Horse included.More about this photo at the end of this Episode.
Head Gardener Edward Freeman at Eywood around 1900 . he seems to be laying outan ornamental hedge characteristuc of formal plantings beyond the brick walled garden proper.
There were many surprises for us at Eywood. Perhaps the biggest and most beautiful were the large rhotodendron plantings which Percy Millsattributed to granddad. These flowering shrubs are located so they could be seen from the estate mansion. The small lake at Eywood is nowsurrounded by these. It was easy to believe granddad had started them but that may or may not be true.
THIS photo of Eywood Court was professionally done I assume. Guessing 1920’s. Note the plantings. Today the ornamentalpool is gone but the small lake remains a little distant from the house. The lake is hidden by masses of rhododendrons .Grandad’s pin hole photo of Eywood is almost as good as this picture…taken from same angle. So close is the phototo the professional that I noticed Granddad’s has been used often over the century.
The footpath and cart path from Eywood Court (mansion) to the Eyward Gardens (circa 1965)….path not used much in 1965 but in 1900this path would have been used often by Edward Freeman and his gardeners. And also by many of the household staff who weregood friends with Edward and Louisa Freeman. So much so that their daughter Elsie Freeman had the Eywood cook, Mrs. Sears, as hergodmother.
There is no longer a team of 8 gardeners to tend Eywood but Percy made a valiant effort to keep the flower garden in continuous bloom.Garden home of Mom and family is top left. It is possible to see the formal nature of this part of the gardens with paths leading to a formalstone decorative piece as centre point. In 1900 these flower plantings would have been weeded constantly and the pathways may well havebeen brick lined.
North wall of Eywood gardens with Head gardener;s cottage and greenhouse for nectarines and peaches.
MY brother Eric admiring the nectarine trees planted by granddad around 1900 and still providing fruit in 1965….witha wooden tag saying “E. Freeman”/
Percy took Eric, Marjorie and I into this glassed greenhouse built so it would have southern exposure and therefore lostsof sunshine. Peaches and nectarines were still grown here on our 1965 visit.“Look at this boys!” Percy touched a little stick of flat wood.“What is written here, boys?”“Says kind of nectarines I guess.”“Says more than the boys.”“What?”“Your grandfathers name. He built this espaliered home for these nectarines whichnormally cannot live in Herefordshire”And sure enough his name was there.
Not all the greenhouses were in perfect condition as is obvious above. Just to provide the hundreds of glass panes would bankrupta banker. This ruin, however, made us feel we were stepping deep into the past. And the rhotodendron softens the shards of broken glass.
A century of greenhouse moisture made this greenhouse untenable except for wild plants. But it has its own mystique.
I would like to close this presentation of Eywood gardens and our grandfather Edward Freemanwith this photo of his daughter Else (Freeman) Skeoch. Not just the photo however.But look at the frame. Granddad carved this frame from a piece of oak by first making a patternusing brown paper and then working on the fine decorative touches as he sat beside thewood stove in his Canadian farm hose on the Fifth Line, Erin Township, Wellington County, Ontario,Canada. This is the largest he carved but there were such carved frames containing photographicimages of many of his dear friends ‘in service’ at Eywood circa 1900.alan skeochDec. 30, 2021POST SCRIPT
FREEMAN FAMILY OF LYONSHALL, HEREFORDSHIRE
This picture may be backwards. Unsure which is Edward Freeman. pic circa 1890 (guess) -
EPISODE 496: TEMPORARY DOG HOUSE (caregivers to Failla and Norman…and our dog Woody) Dec. 2021
EPISODE 496 TEMPORARY DOG HOUSEalan skeochDec. 29,2021“Alan, let me take a picture of you and the dogs.” said Marjorie this morning.
I know my office is cluttered. Now with added presence of three dogs. If you wantsomething Spartan then there will be no stories. This is Episode 496 which I findhard to believe. Flattered that some of you actually read the stories while othersjust seem to enjoy the pictures. And others must just press delete.A long time ago I read a book titled ” While Memory Serves”,,,which is what I amdoing with these stories. Some of the stories touch the memory of some of youand that makes me feel good. Some even believe I am writing a book which isnot true. Writing books is a tough game with little spin off. I think more people readthese short stories than would ever read a full book of them.Do not rush to judgment about my office. When we were absent a year ago, the kids moved me up fromthe basement where things were much worse. Now I am close to the kitchen andour games room (front room) where we play Scrabble twice a day. Currently weare tied after playing hundreds of games.alan

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EPISODE 490 EYWOOD COURT compared to DOWNTON ABBEY..(one is real, the other is good historical fiction)
NOTE TO READERS: Over these Episodes i have made several references to Eywood Court; Lately Marjorie and i havebeen watching the Downton Abbey stories on Netflix and were struck with the similarities to Eywood Court where mygrandfather was once the head gardener. So here is the story in a little depth with comparisons to the Downton Abbey series.EPISODE 490 EYWOOD COURT compared to DOWNTON ABBEY..(one is real, the other is good historical fiction)
alan skeochDec. 23, 2091
THE RUINS OF EYWOOD COURT (demolished in 1954)
How do I start a story that has more twists and turns than a maze in a British Country House garden?The story of Eywood is just that. Twisted. Confusing. Heart warming. Profane. Do I start in 1812 with LordOxford going for long walks while Lord Byron is having sex with his wife Lady Lamb…sex over and over for weeks on end…Octoberand November 1812. Sex can be a big motivator.No. ” Keep it simple in the beginning Alan or you will lose your audience.” Good advice given to me decades agoby Doug Koupar who was my producer on CBC Radio. “If you don’t get attention in first few words, you will neverget attention because for most people their attention span is 1 minute…60 seconds.Test: What got your attention in the first paragraph?Unfortunately Lord Byron’s many love affairs with other men’s wives was unknown to me when I decided to searchfor Eywood Court. A picture of that grand English country house hung in the kitchen of my grandparents farmin Erin Township, Wellington County, Ontario.By chance I was wrapping up a job in Ireland. Wednesday September 7, 1960. just completed asurvey job on an ancient mine site on the south coast of Ireland. No doubt my boss Dr. Paterson expectedme to fly back to Canada with our equipment straightaway. I had other plans..Why would I do that when one of the great mysteries of our family was near at hand. Could I find Eywood?“Eywood? Did you say Eywood, Alan?”“yes, Eywood…not Heywood or Haywood…but Eywood.”“Odd name for an English Country Estate?”‘“Very odd. Even researchers get it confused.”“Difficult.”“Made even more difficult after the huge Eywood mansion hadbeen demolished….some say the last standing walls were blownup after all the contents were sold at auction. Tragic.”NOTE TO READERS: EYWOOD AND DOWNTON ABBEY HAD MANY THINGS INCOMMON.ON WED. SEPTEMBER 7, 1960, I DID NOT EVEN KNOW WHATTHE TERM COUNTRY HOUSE MEANT. ALL I KNEW WAS THAT EYWOOD COURTEXISTED SOMEHWERE IN HEREFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND. AND I HAD A FEW DAYSTO SEARCH FOR IT BEFORE FLYING BACK TO CANADA. WAS THIS SEARCHA WILD GOOSE CHASE?Irish Diary, Dublin, Ireland, Wed. September 7, 1960“Arose late and had hell of time to get to the Ferry on time.Persuaded taxi to scream through the streets of Dublin to makeconnection with Irish Daily Mail boat. Caught train to Herefordshire…travelling blind. May as well get off train in city of Hereford.But what then.? Where am I going? The platform emptied and I juststood there. I did have one clue. Polly Griffiths had written to grandmaall her life. She lived with her son Cyril Griffiths on Lower Wooton Farm.Big deal. Where the hell is that Farm? Then a kind of miracle happened.One man wakling by noticed my confusion and asked:“Can I help?”“Yes, I am looking for Lower Wooton Farm.”“That would be Cyril Griffiths, I suspect?”Yes, I know the family…I am their bank manager.?“Where is the Farm?”“Some distance from here near Almely and Kington, canI give you a lift?”(By pure chance I had found the needle in the haystack…the banker droveme to Lower Wooton Farm which was hidden away on a country roada long distance from Hereford.)
Left to right: Unknown person, Cyril Griffiths, Nancy Griffiths, David Griffiths, with :”aunt Polly” seated at front.
LOWER WOOTON FARM (A designated historical 16th century farm house where the Griffiths lived in 1960)
CYRIL AND NANCY GRIFFITHS…tenant farmers on Eywood at Oatcroft FarmCyril, Nancy, Polly Griffiths and their son David greeted me withopen arms. They knew me from grandma’s letters. David wasa few years younger than me but we bonded immediately. Nancybedded me down in a grand bed in their large 16th century farmhouse…a heritage farm designated to be saved.Thursday, September 8, 1960:I was first up. What a beautiful sunshiny day? David took me aroundthe farm and then we helped his father Cyril de-beak turkeys so theywould not peck each other to death. Then we drove to Eardisley a quaintlittle 16th century village with ancient houses featuring frames of timbersand then bricked in and painted white…called black and white village…hardto describe. Then drove on to an auction in Leominster. Back to LpwerWooton for country farm dinner.Seemed like a full day but not so as Cyril drove me to Eywood Courtin the evening. I should say the ruins of Eywood Court because the mansionhouse had been demolished in 1954 after anything saleable was sold at auctionAll that remained standing was the Greek pillared entranceway. Verysad. Demolitions were happening all over England in the 1950’s and 1960’s. Most owners could notafford the maintenance and the taxes.The strangest thing about this visit was that all the other buildings on theEstate remained untouched. The heart had been removed but thebody remained.This was underscored when we walked up a shaded laneway…unusedfor a long time…to Eywood Garden where Granddad had been headgardener sixty years ago. Henry Mills bought the walled gardens at theauction. He had been a young boy working for granddad years back.Remembered granddad well. “He planted these trees and espaliered thenectarines in the north wall green house.” We even toured the ‘cottage’where mom (Elsie Freeman) was born. Called a cottage but it was biggerthan the farm house in Canada. many glass green houses most of whichwere derelict. Lots of broken windows.There was something touching about the way Henry Mills rememberedgranddad and grandma…as if they were family. He inferred the same aboutCyril and Nancy Griffiths who were tenant farmers on Eywood beforethe auction sale. Kindred spirits. The Griffiths were tenants at Eywood while Granddad EdwardFreeman was an employee in charge of a crew of gardeners. Part of thelarge complicated humanity of an English country estate. Exactly the sameas Downton Abbey with one difference. Eywood Court was real. DowntonAbbey is fiction…good, accurate historical fiction.We have visited the tumbledown ruin of Eywood many times since my 1960 visit.There is much more to the story. I have struggled with this story. Where shouldI start? Deep in the past when Eywood was created? Perhaps a chronology ofthe owners of Eywood? Maybe I should extricate the personal connections anduse a third person voice…i.e. drop the use of “I” and replace it with a more dispassionatevoice?In the end, I felt most comfortable telling the story of Eywood as I experienced thestory. Using the thread that is my personal journey in life to lead readersdeep into a very disturbing yet emancipating event thathad been happening all over England and Scotland from the end of World War Ito that Wednesday evening, September 7, 1960, when I stood among thebricks and rubble of what was once a grand country mansion. Eywood Court.The Demolition of a way of life.This is Part One of that story, Episode 490.“Give me the numbers!” That demand was made years ago when I had a small role asco-author with John Ricker and John Saywell creating a text book for Ontarioschools. “Give me the numbers!”, Cut the crap. Get to the kernel of the matter.I got the numbers for Eywood. Found the needle in the haystack. Found a documentonce held by a person at the Eywood auction. A scribe who noted the price Eywoodsold for a public auction.“Give me the numbers1”“Eywood sold for 5,400 British pounds serling.”“What does that number mean?”“In 1954 the 60 acre centre of the Eywood Estate went to the highest bidder for 5,400 pounds.”“How much is that in today’s terms”“Today the British pound is worth #1.73 Canadian.”“How much is a 1954 British point worth today?“1 pound in 1954 is worth 33.45 pounds today.”“Then how much did the Eywood Estate sell for in today’s figures?”“Give me the numbers!”“You could buy the estate for $356,400 Canadian dollars.”“What does that mean?”“It means the whole heart of the Eywood Estate sold for a pittance…the price ofone of the cheapest houses in Toronto…less than $400,000 dollars.BUT WHAT DID BUYER GET?

WHAT THE BUYER GOT FOR $356,400 (value of his 5,400 pounds in today’s currency)1) The huge manor house2) All the interior fittings, much in mahogany3) Gardener’ House4) 3 staff cottages5) Extensive farm buildings6) 60 acres of land…the grand park7) Woodlands8) Rotodendron gardens9) Two small lakes, the Titley and Garden Pools
NEXT EPISODE…SEE WHAT THE BUYER GOT FOR MUCH OF THE EYWOODESTATE IS STILL STANDING. -
EPISODE 493 TOMATO ASPIC
EPISODE 493 TOMATO ASPICalan skeochDec. 26, 2021
“Today I am making tomato aspic”Recipe seemed simple enough..tomato juice, chopped onions, chopped celery,
bay leaf, 2 cloves, bit of Worcester sauce, some weird stuff called gelatin
But there were many problems
-finding room in kitchen
-some ingredients missing…actually most ingredients were missing..cloves, gelatin …perhaps celery-pot on stove with bay leaf, tomato juice and Worcester sauce
-onions cut up…tears on my glasses
-celery a little limp…and few stalks…will make do
problem..how to start the stove
problem…gelatin too old…like a decade or so
problem…marjorie interfering…thinks she
knows more about cooking than I do
problem…finding Marjorie’s purse with car keys
solution..just opened can of beer while Marjorie flees to store
for gelatin ,etc.
solution…let marjorie take over but do it grudgingly so she
thinks i want to make the tomato aspic…all I really want is to eat it.alanP.S. That stuff called gellatin is tricky like fast drying cement.Tomato aspic bowl is a bit messy because I had to pour theaspic from pot to bowl … and missed.










