from Franco
Above is a postcard dated November 9, 1911, sent from
St Peter Port, the English capital of the Island of Guernsey in front of the
French coast.
The sender is named Bocolaud (ed. note - checking the U’s and the N’s that may well be Bowland) and the recipient is Adolphe Weber, Tour de Garde, Convers [Canton], Berne, Suisse.
The sender is named Bocolaud (ed. note - checking the U’s and the N’s that may well be Bowland) and the recipient is Adolphe Weber, Tour de Garde, Convers [Canton], Berne, Suisse.
The writer had been circulating copies of the volumes
(Studies) in Guernsey.
In 1986 the "Awake" magazine had an article about the Channel Islands. It stated:
Seeds of Bible truth were sown here back in 1925 when
Zephaniah and Ethel Widdell arrived from England with their bicycles to
organize a regular program of Bible studies. As a direct result of their work,
congregations of Jehovah’s Witnesses were soon formed in both Jersey and
Guernsey.
This is not exactly so, because according to the postcard
"Seeds of Bible truth" in Guernsey island were already sown
in 1911, if not before…
Editorial notes from Jerome
This is of
interest, not just because Weber was a very well-known figure in the
continental Bible Student community, but also because it takes a little bit of
history back a further 14 years from what has previously been known. The
postcard shows there was a Bible Student presence of some sort back in 1911,
and probably before that. It speaks
of "still selling a good number of volumes," which could well be
pre-1911. And it is noted that the writer used English rather than French when
writing to Weber.
I
could only find one male named Bowland (the variant Boland) in Guernsey in the
1911 census, which was taken in April 1911, living in a street quite near Union
Street in St Peter Port, from whence the postcard was later sent that year. This
Bowland/Boland is a labourer working in the stone industry, aged 31, with a
wife and two children. Of course, there is no guarantee that this is the right
person, and the initials don’t seem to match. There is no-one with a name
approaching anything like Bocolaud.
As for the Awake magazine (Awake April 22, 1986, page 19) detailing the start of “seeds of truth” for 1925, one must remember that there was never any official attempt to document the growth of interest in places like the Channel Islands at the time. We have to rely on people looking back long after the event. In 1970 the Society sent a lengthy letter to all old-timers asking for their reminiscences. The letters sent by return will have numbered into their hundreds, possibly thousands, around the world, and formed the basis for the various histories that subsequently appeared in the Yearbooks. These covered not just countries like the United States and Britain, but everywhere. This testimony was supported by documented proof in some cases. For example, the son of one of the editors of the St Paul/New Era Enterprise was moved to send his files to the Society. However, in many cases it was simply the anecdotal memories of older people looking back. The account in the 1986 Awake may well date from that 1970 initiative. No-one alive in 1970 or thereabouts had any memory of events before 1925 for the Channel Islands. So the “find” of a post card sent to a well-known figure like Weber is significant as far as Channel Island history is concerned. It shows that even the smallest piece of ephemera is worth checking in the search for completeness.
As for the Awake magazine (Awake April 22, 1986, page 19) detailing the start of “seeds of truth” for 1925, one must remember that there was never any official attempt to document the growth of interest in places like the Channel Islands at the time. We have to rely on people looking back long after the event. In 1970 the Society sent a lengthy letter to all old-timers asking for their reminiscences. The letters sent by return will have numbered into their hundreds, possibly thousands, around the world, and formed the basis for the various histories that subsequently appeared in the Yearbooks. These covered not just countries like the United States and Britain, but everywhere. This testimony was supported by documented proof in some cases. For example, the son of one of the editors of the St Paul/New Era Enterprise was moved to send his files to the Society. However, in many cases it was simply the anecdotal memories of older people looking back. The account in the 1986 Awake may well date from that 1970 initiative. No-one alive in 1970 or thereabouts had any memory of events before 1925 for the Channel Islands. So the “find” of a post card sent to a well-known figure like Weber is significant as far as Channel Island history is concerned. It shows that even the smallest piece of ephemera is worth checking in the search for completeness.