Carpenter diary |
On showing a visitor the Archives earlier this week, I happened
to open the Carpenter diary on the page for Christmas Day 1922. I thought that
it would be interesting to share their experiences of Christmas in Uganda.
Geoffrey Hale Carpenter was a student at the School in
1910, he became the specialist officer for the control of sleeping sickness in
Uganda in 1920. This diary was written jointly by Carpenter and his wife Amy
Frances. As well as diary entries documenting their day to day activities,
there are photos, pressed flowers, press cuttings, concert programmes and their
wedding invitation. The diary gives a
good insight into the life of a scientist working in Africa and the experiences
he and his wife had while travelling to different regions, attending events
such as dances and cricket matches with the colonial community at Entebbe and
the various illnesses they contracted while abroad.
December 23rd
Geoffrey: Our dance at the club.
We had a busy day preparing – P (Geoffrey’s name for his
wife) with help from Mrs Neill, Mrs Lyall, Mrs Griffin and the hospital cook
did the food. Mrs Duke and Miss
Richardson (I won’t call her Hope) and Mrs Neill helped decorate and arrange
room while I did the greenery and garlands which P got at Kampala. I got lamps
from C and made a bandstand on the grass below the balcony for the K.A.R.
Amy: In the evening, we arranged the supper, dealt out
the crackers. Geoff and I had a hurried dinner and went down to the club, I was
later than G and only just arrived before the first guests!
The Carpenters |
We had an extra to start, but no supper extras. We had a
definite interval and the band had refreshments too.
We thoroughly enjoyed the evening and everyone else
seemed to as well, and they said very nice things about the dance – we had
great difficulty in getting people away at 10 o’clock.
Geoffrey: My love was not overtired as everything had
worked smoothly. She wore her apricot frock, I my black coat with silk revers!
(moth eaten!!!!)
December 24th
Amy: We went down to the club to clear everything up, and
found nothing had been broken. Mrs Neil came to help. We returned all the
borrowed spoons and forks etc.
Geoffrey (the point of this remark is that we might not
have done this until later! As any ass would know)
Amy: Yes but there are not any asses her to read this!
Christmas Day
Geoffrey: We went to Church at 8 and 10.30. That evening
we dined with the Grays, Whittles, Mr Turton, Mr Hayden and Capt. Walters. I
won a box of chocolates.
In the afternoon we read our mail, which we had had since
the 23rd.
December 26th
Amy: Dined at the Neill’s, also the C.J’s, Mrs Griffin,
Montgomery’s and Dr Aders of Zanzibar who was with the M’s, Braggs. Rather a
hot dinner party! Turkey from East Africa.
Merry Christmas to all from the Archives Team
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