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Making History
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Tuesday 3.00-3.30 p.m
Nick Baker and the team answer listeners' historical queries and celebrate the way in which we all 'make' history.
Programme 2
24 October 2006

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1820 Settlers

Listener Joan Mason has an ancestor who emigrated to the Eastern Cape of Southern Africa in 1820. It was a government sponsored scheme to escape the poverty of post-Napoleonic Britain, but what Joan (and many others) didn't realise was that this was a underhand way of creating a human shield between British colonial forces and their African enemies.

Joan's ancestor, Hezekiah Sephton was one of 4,000 people who went to the eastern cape of South Africa as part of a government emigration scheme in 1820. They are known as the 1820 Settlers. They were promised a land of plenty and paid a deposit of £10 for a family with two children, repayable after three months in SA, and were given 100 acres which legally became theirs after a few years. Hezekiah led a party of 344 Methodists from London and they were allocated an area on the Assegai Bush River, with the settlement of Salem at its centre. They sailed on the ship Aurora on 15 Feb 1820 from Gravesend in Kent and landed in Algoa Bay, Port Elizabeth exactly three months later. They are said to have landed singing the hymn "Come Thee that Love the Lord".

Making History consulted Professor Saul Dubow at the and Fleur Way-Jones, Curator of the

The first few years in the new colony were tough. The settlers had essentially been dumped in a war zone as a human buffer between British territory and African tribes who fought to retain their land. Only the previous year in 1819 had seen the Fifth Frontier War. They were "sitting ducks" and there was a lot of fear and insecurity. What's more British gave them very little support - some grain and equipment but the settlers had to build their own houses, and fashion much of their own tools. They were left to fend for themselves. Despite the British government's promises of a land of opportunity, neither was the land very fertile for growing crops. Droughts, floods and invasions were the norm in the first years. Professor Dubow says the settlers felt betrayed by the British and that this was a traumatic colonization. Yet within 20 years the settlers had overcome the obstacles and had developed orderly civic culture in the area with all the trappings of a colonial society - museums, libraries, courts, churches etc, and many notable people came from this group, such as the notable liberal and founder of the Anti-Slavery Society in South Africa, Thomas Pringle. However, some historians have argued that other groups that part of this emigration were less tolerant and the white supremacist ideas that became prevalent in twentieth century South Africa owe their origins to them.

More useful links

and
London's Underground Rivers

Making History goes in search of the River Westbourne which, supposedly, passes over the District Line platforms of Sloane Square Underground station in London in a pipe.

Making History consulted Dr Stuart Downward at Kingston University http://www.kingston.ac.uk/esg/staff/downward.htm







Lodz Ghetto

In the spring of 1940, the German forces occupying Poland drove the Jews of Lodz into the Holocaust's second-largest and most hermetically-sealed ghetto. It functioned both as a sweatshop serving the German war effort, and a prison for Jews en route to the death camps of Chelmno and Auschwitz. Self-governed by its Council of Elders - with its own police force, currency and postage stamps - its leader was the notorious Chaim Rumkowski. He complied with Nazi orders, believing that the value of Lodz's labour might secure survival for the majority. History proved him decisively wrong: 95% of the ghetto's inmates perished. Those who survived starvation rations, disease and prior deportations were removed to the gas chambers of Auschwitz when the ghetto was liquidated in 1944.

Henryk Ross was a photographer employed by the ghetto's Department of Statistics who kept a clandestine diary of ghetto life in powerful and often brilliant images. When the ghetto's liquidation began, he buried them. A survivor, he dug them up after the war, releasing many that were to become icons of the Holocaust's atrocities. But he released only a minority of the pictures during his lifetime. After Ross's death in 1991, his archive - the most extensive collection of ghetto photographs by any single photographer - was acquired by the Archive of Modern Conflict in London.

Incredibly, at a Holocaust remembrance day in Nottingham in 2004, Making History listener Helena Aronson saw herself in one of Henryk Ross's photographs and a story that she had kept secret for over 50 years was finally told.

Useful links



Details of the photographic exhibition - part of the In

Information on the Lodz Ghetto can be found at





Thomas Mawe - Eighteenth century gardener and author

Listener Michael Stacey discovered he had an ancestor called Thomas Mawe who was a 'steward' on the Duke of Leeds estate at North Mymms in Hertfordshire. Recently, Michael discovered a book called Every Man His Own Gardener which became a best seller and was written by a John Abercrombie and Thomas Mawe - the latter also associated with the Duke of Leeds at North Mymms… Are these two Mawes the same person?

Book by Thomas Mawe :

Every Man his own Gardener. 8th ed, MAWE, Thomas and John ABERCROMBIE ABERCROMBIE, John (Publisher: S. Crowder, G. Robinson, and W. Goldsmith , 1779,)

Making History consulted:

Brent Elliott the Librarian at the

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Making History

Vanessa Collingridge
Vanessa CollingridgeVanessa has presentedÌýscience and current affairs programmes for ±«Óãtv, ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5 and Discovery and has presented for ±«Óãtv Radio 4 & Five Live and a regular contributor to the Daily Telegraph and the Mail on Sunday, Scotsman and Sunday Herald.Ìý

Contact Making History

Send your comments and questions for future programmes to:
Making History
±«Óãtv Radio 4
PO Box 3096 Brighton
BN1 1PL

Or email the programme

Or telephone the Audience Line 08700 100 400

Making HistoryÌýis a Pier Production for ±«Óãtv Radio 4 and is produced by Nick Patrick.

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Don't Miss

In Our Time

Melvyn Bragg

Thursday, 9.00 - 9.45am, rpt 9.30pm
Melvyn Bragg explores the history of ideas.
Listen again online or download the latest programme as an mp3 file.



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