Purbeck Memories

Purbeck Seamen

by Belinda Norman - edited by Sue Mills


Percy Wallace had some funny little ways. Dad was always amused by his superstitions and constant worrying about all sorts, but Dad loved him, and they became very close. Percy and Dora had a daughter, Barbara, but they didn’t have a son. The closest that Percy had to sons, were his nephews Alan Lander who was his brother in-law Sid’s son, and Mike Lear and Bryan Wallace who both lived in Bristol. Mike, Percy’s sister’s son had been evacuated from Bristol to live with Dora and Percy in 1939. He was supposed to have gone to Langton St George’s, but he recalls that he rarely attended, as Percy used to take him down to Winspit, where Percy launched his fishing boat and they’d spend the days fishing there, which didn’t please Dora, but she put up with it.

Percy’s boat was registered with the ‘WH’ registration, and at one time there were four boats that were kept down at Winspit. One of those was Billy Winspit’s of course. Chapmans Pool had some restrictions during the war, with anti- submarine steel nets around the bay. Frank and Sid Lander were eventually given permission to fish at Chapmans Pool, and they had to navigate the anti-submarine defences with great caution.
 

St Albans and St Aldhelms
 

Percy helped his father in-law Frank sometimes, but he was often on duty at the Coast Guard Lookout at St Albans head, which incidentally was called that by HMS Navy when they set up the Nautical Navigation Charts and Maps. It was often confusing for me as a child, as St Albans, ‘z’orbinz’ and St Aldhelms ‘sin ald’m’z’ were interchangeable and many men would call them either of those two names at different times.

The Head, or I suppose I should call it a neck, was originally a Nautical marker, and was not always noticeable to the mariners. It was just a little bit too short, so the local quarrymen were asked to sort it out. They plonked the 'head' on top of the pillar/neck, and it became part of a series of legends as to whose fault it was that St Aldhelm’s Head, named after a Saint, associated with Wessex, or St Alban, an earlier Saint, a Roman Catholic Christian Martyr from the Roman period, who was beheaded on a hill, St Albans, Hertfordshire.

The Legend was that the Worth Matravers locals were very disgruntled about the headland being noted as St Alban’s Head, and not St Aldhelm’s. So much so that they plonked the ‘head’ on top of the column and said something that inferred that St Alban lost his head in Hertfordshire, and it “rolled all the way to Purbeck and now, ‘Yer Tiz’, on the Purbeck Headland at Worth Matravers”.

I have come across so much literature that mentions the subject on why it was known as St Albans by the Naval men. Some state it was the thick, illiterate locals’ fault, who couldn’t pronounce the complicated ‘St Aldhelms’. Others say it was the fault of the Captains, Admirals and ultimately the men who drew up the nautical charts, who were also a bit thick, as well as the clergy who wrote in the register, and the Census enumerators who followed suit. The HMS Coastguard, including the auxiliary teams, were under the title of ‘St Albans’ and their uniform insignia always had it down as St Albans. Personally, I prefer ‘Zorbinz’, as ‘Sin Ald’m’zz’ sounds like someone is cursing and cussing.

The marker at St Aldhelm’s Head was twinned with a very similar one (a straight up column without a head) at Winspit.
 

Registration
 

To continue, regarding Sid Lander eventually having permission to fish at Chapmans Pool (under supervision). That was due to the need of the extra food required by the Tre/Radar RAF personnel stationed at RAF Renscombe and the country in general. The fishermen’s boats around Winspit and Chapmans Pool were generally registered under Weymouth back then, and Swanage Boats were generally registered under Poole.

BY the early 1970s, all of the local boats were beginning to be registered under the new system of having to be registered to Poole including all of the former WH registered boats getting their new replacement P registration numbers sorted. But a lot of the fishermen were reluctant to get rid of their old and original Weymouth ‘WH’ registered numbers from the side of their boats. An inspector came down to Chapmans Pool and explained to them that they’d be fined and lose their rights to fish and to be legally able to sell their fish to the merchants, so a few tried keeping their old number and placing the new number below them. However, the inspector turned up again and told them off; there were a few new cursey words that I learned that day, ones that I’d never heard before. Nothing bad, but they mostly used words that begin with D and B, including damn and bloody.