f
The Weald of Kent, Surrey and Sussex
Minnie Louise Haskins, daughter of Joseph Haskins and Louisa Haskins [Bridges]
Printer friendly version

On Christmas Day 1939, soon after the outbreak of World War Two, King George V1 made a historic wireless broadcast to the peoples of Britain and its Empire. Ahead of his closing lines, in which he paid tribute to the fighting services of Britain and its allies, he spoke of the uncertainty of the year ahead - would it bring peace, or continued struggle?

Offering a message of encouragement, the king concluded his speech with the following lines. "I said to the man who stood at the Gate of the Year, 'Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown.' And he replied, 'Go out into the darkness, and put your hand into the Hand of God. That shalt be to you better than light, and safer than a known way.'" He added, "May that Almighty Hand guide and uphold us all."

Response to the broadcast was extraordinary. At home, thousands immediately contacted the BBC to ask the authorship of the lines that had so poignantly matched their mood and feelings. Newspapers here and abroad, having advance copies of the speech, were already attempting to track down the author. But no one, academic or otherwise, including Buckingham Palace, knew the answer to the question: who wrote it?

On the 9pm Boxing Day news, the BBC was obliged to announce that the author had not been traced and was assumed dead. Later, a man phoned the Corporation to say he had permission from his sister to reveal that she was the author. Then, on its midnight news bulletin, the BBC stated that the sought for writer was a Miss M. L. Haskins of Crowborough, in Sussex, who had written her now renowned lines some years earlier as an introduction to some verses. News of Miss Haskins and her whereabouts spread rapidly. Early next morning, with the arrival of snow, so descended the world's press to await the first signs of life from a house called Brooklands in Ghyll Road, Crowborough.

To global surprise, the king's unknown poetess turned out to be a shy, softly-spoken retired university lecturer with greying hair and steel-rimmed spectacles. Aged 64, she lived with two younger sisters, also unmarried, in a large house which they ran as a School for young children. Minnie Louise Haskins, made famous the world over in one minute of a king's speech, had led a remarkable and dedicated earlier life as a teacher, missionary worker, academic and factory welfare pioneer, as well as a poet and novelist. She was born at Warmley, Gloucestershire, in 1875, and died in the Kent & Sussex Hospital, Tunbridge Wells, in 1957.

Author John Hackworth


Date
Type
Information
Source
 
12th May 1875
Born
At Warmley, Kingswood in the City of Bristol, Gloucester
John Hackworth's records
 
3rd February 1957
Died
At Kent & Sussex Hospital in the Parish of Tunbridge Wells, Kent
John Hackworth's records


See also Minnie Louise Haskins by John Hackworth.
Ancestor's report
No descendent's report
Haskins, Haskings individual records
The ancestral pedigree of Minnie Louise Haskins
  
 William Haskinsm: c 1838Almena 
 b: 1813 Bitton, Gloucestershire  b: 1818 Siston, Gloucestershire 
  
      
 George Joseph Matilda Sarah Ann William Salter James
 b: 1840 Bitton, Gloucestershire
ch: 27th Sep 1840 Bitton
 b: 1842 Siston, Gloucestershire
ch: 8th Jul 1842 Siston, Bitton Parish
d: 1891
 b: 1843 Siston, Gloucestershire b: 1846 Siston, Gloucestershire
ch: 5th Sep 1846 Bitton
 b: 1854 Siston, Gloucestershire
ch: 4th Jun 1854 Warmley
 b: 1858 Siston, Gloucestershire
        
Grandfather
record
  
  
   
 Joseph Haskinsm: 3rd Sep 1872 Whitfields Tabernacle Independent Chapel, Kingswood, Bristol, GloucesterLouisa Bridges 
 b: 1842 Siston, Gloucestershire
ch: 8th Jul 1842 Siston, Bitton Parish
d: 1891
  b: 1850 St George, Gloucestershire
d: 1914
 
  
         
Herbert  Ethel Wilfred Margaret Daisy Besse Edith Harold
b: 1874 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester  b: 1877 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester b: 1879 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester b: 1880 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester b: 1882 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester b: 1884 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester
d: 1955
 b: 1885 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester
d: 1970
 b: 1888 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester
 Minnie Louise       
 b: 12th May 1875 Warmley, Kingswood, Bristol, Gloucester
d: 3rd Feb 1957 Kent & Sussex Hospital, Tunbridge Wells, Kent
       
                
Parental
record

The Weald is at  Database version 14.05 which has ongoing updates to the 395,000 people; 9,000 places; 613 maps; 3,308 pictures, engravings and photographs; and 248 books loaded in the previous version

ODNB  
British Libarary  
High Weald  
Sussex Record Society  
Sussex Archaeological Society  
Kent Archaeological Society  
Mid Kent Marriages  
Ancestry  
Genes Reunited  
International Genealogical Index  
National Archives  

Top
of the
page