I intend to post draft copies of my work here for my fans to comment, and will remove all but the first chapter when I publish.
All rights reserved, no copying of any portion of my writing without permission. Copyright Sarah J Waldock.
Thursday, August 8, 2019
Brandon family tree
As I just published the first book of the second lot of Brandon Scandals, Col. Brandon's Quest, I have been asked to re-post the family tree of the first series.
Thanks for publishing the first tale of the American branch of the family. I’m looking forward to reading it through from the beginning again and reacquainting myself with the early American railway system.
On a different topic, you were wondering about a ‘Lady Molly on the Western Front’ spin off. I wondered if you had seen in ‘The Times’ of last Monday 5th August a reprinted article in the ‘From the archive’ section of 5 Aug 1919 entitled ‘Englishwomen With the French Army’ which names a Lieutenant Toupie Lowther (sister of Col Claude Lowther MP) who led a female unit in the front line with the French Army for some two and a half years. From what I could glean they evacuated wounded but also seemed to be a fighting force under arms later on. There was also mention of a Miss Hackett and a Miss Donnisthorpe. Hope this is of some use.
Thanks for publishing the first tale of the American branch of the family. I’m looking forward to reading it through from the beginning again and reacquainting myself with the early American railway system.
ReplyDeleteOn a different topic, you were wondering about a ‘Lady Molly on the Western Front’ spin off. I wondered if you had seen in ‘The Times’ of last Monday 5th August a reprinted article in the ‘From the archive’ section of 5 Aug 1919 entitled ‘Englishwomen With the French Army’ which names a Lieutenant Toupie Lowther (sister of Col Claude Lowther MP) who led a female unit in the front line with the French Army for some two and a half years. From what I could glean they evacuated wounded but also seemed to be a fighting force under arms later on. There was also mention of a Miss Hackett and a Miss Donnisthorpe. Hope this is of some use.
it grew a bit and acquired more description and explanation. That was fun to research!
Deleteoooh! thank you, I had missed that, I will look it up.
do you think you could copy and paste the article for me? sjwaldock@yahoo.co.uk
DeleteHope it has arrived, safely!
Deletethank you, yes it did!
DeleteThank you.
ReplyDeleteDave Penney
welcome. If you copy it, it should unwrap to the full size
Delete