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Looking back ...1909 brought good and bad tidings

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  • Looking back ...1909 brought good and bad tidings

    Wales Online, United Kingdom
    Dec 30 2008



    Looking back ...1909 brought good and bad tidings

    Dec 30 2008 by Dan O'Neill, South Wales Echo

    NEW Year's Eve, 1908, Cardiff... part of a world as different and
    distant to ours as the world described by Dickens.

    And Dickens would have been pleased to see relief approaching at last
    for those children like his immortal Oliver Twist who suffered in the
    country's workhouses. MPs would agree in February that such
    institutions `were not fit places for children'.

    `I said that in Oliver 70 years ago,' his shade must have whispered to
    those MPs.

    Good news, too, for the nation's over-70s. On January 1, they got
    their first old age pensions ` five bob a week for single men, seven
    and sixpence for couples. One old boy overcome by this largesse
    dropped dead in the post office. I wonder if he collected his pension
    before departing.

    (Who could have guessed that exactly a century later pensioners would
    outnumber under-16s?)

    To pay for these pensions ` and rearmament as Germany flexed its
    muscles ` David Lloyd George, Liberal Chancellor, proposed his
    celebrated `People's Budget' in April. Just sixpence in the pound for
    the 10,000 people with incomes over £10,000 a year but there
    were howls of outrage from the usual suspects: `An attack on the
    propertied classes,' raged the Tory opposition. Predictably, the
    budget would be thrown out by the Lords in November.

    Meanwhile, that pension didn't buy much. One survey found that in 1909
    a family of five could barely exist on £1.0s 6d a week, and
    then only if they ate no eggs, butter, fresh meat and `very little
    tea'.

    So what lay ahead for them that year when Britannia ruled the waves,
    when Edward VII presided over the greatest empire ever known in what's
    so often called, by those with sepia-tinted specs, the last Golden
    Age, that period of peace and content before the Great War changed the
    world forever?

    Not much golden for those Cardiffians who existed, rather than lived,
    in the squalid little courts around the centre, in the terraced
    streets of Temperance Town and what was then called Tiger Bay. But a
    truly gilded life for our coal and shipping tycoons, 1909 promising
    yet another great year of profits as the coal cascaded down from the
    Valleys, nine million tons in Cardiff alone.

    Meanwhile, it might have come as a surprise to those thousands of
    coal-trimmers who kept the coal ships moving that a survey would tell
    them they were better off than workers in Germany and France. But
    there'd be plenty of money on offer in Germany's shipyards ` Kaiser
    Bill demanded 13 more `dreadnoughts' in March, convincing those who
    feared he wanted war that they were right. France joined the arms
    race, spending £120m on new warships.

    But on this New Year's Eve, there was no thought of war as they packed
    the pubs and drank to 1909 and what it would bring. Well, the Echo
    would report in January that a British team led by Lieutenant Edward
    Shackleton had got closer (111 miles) to the South Pole than any
    previous expedition. Captain Scott was 18 months in the future, while
    in April America's Robert Peary would be first to the North Pole.

    There were wonders to come, dramatic proof that we were entering a new
    era. Colour films were being shown for the first time in the little
    halls where flickering screens had shown Edward VII's 1907 visit to
    Cardiff and our own Peerless Jim beating the former world champion Joe
    Bowker ` with Jim himself in the audience. In 1909 Cardiff's first
    purpose-built cinema, the 668-seat Electra opened, the Echo reporting
    that America's motion picture industry was already employing 100,000
    people, among them Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, `the World's
    Sweetheart' who would give birth in December to Doug Jr. Headline
    news, but only his nearest and dearest celebrated the arrival in
    January of little George Thomas ` not in Tonypandy but Port Talbot.

    It was only six years since the Wright Brothers flew their
    heavier-than-air machine but in 1909 London would see the first
    international aircraft exhibition and you can bet that Ernest Willows,
    Cardiff's pioneer aviator (he built his first airship in 1905) would
    be there to see it.

    Yes, flying was here to stay: in July, 1909, Louis Bleriot would be
    the first man to fly across the English Channel.

    Ironically, in view of what was to come, President William Taft
    announced in November that a naval base would be built at Pearl
    Harbour ` `to protect America from Japanese attack'.

    For some the year would bring only horror. Halfway through January
    Europe's worst ever earthquake killed 200,000 in Sicily and southern
    Italy. In April we reported 300,000 Armenians massacred by Muslims. An
    anti-government revolt in Spain would leave thousands dead in August.

    But on the last night of 1908 all that was yet to come.

    Tomorrow, the last night of 2008...

    http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/cardiff -news/2008/12/30/looking-back-1909-brought-good-an d-bad-tidings-91466-22570637/
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