LONDON:
Property agents working on the sale
of a house in Gloucestershire have discovered a metal box
containing a treasure trove of family letters dating to the time of
the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947. The letters, as
well as certificates and other memorabilia, were found in a house in
Cirencester belonging to a couple who had lived there since 1910.
Described as a historic treasure, the box was found in a wall
cavity. All the material in the box is said to be in a good
condition, according to property agents Moore Allen and Innocent.
The box contains birth and marriage certificates, wedding
photographs and correspondence with friends from India. The house
belonged to Herbert and Irene Branston, who spent their entire
married life at the cottage.
Reports from Cirencester say that Irene Branston
died in 2002 and so far none of her family members has been traced.
The box was found when workers knocked down an interior wall built
across an alcove in the cottage. Rachel Vincent, of Moore Allen and
Innocent, told mediapersons: “It is a fascinating record of a
complete marriage and family life dating back to 1910. There are
birth and marriage certificates, photographs of weddings and family
occasions, letters from friends, some who live in India - all of
them giving a wonderful insight into bygone times. “The letters
appear to be from a friend Herbert Branston had made during his time
in India. The friend is a Hindu man who mentions that he lost all of
his possessions during events in Pakistan in the 1940s.
”after a local appeal, the property agents traced
a niece of Irene Branston, Maureen Baulch, who lives in Wiltshire.
She said: “I’m quite delighted to be in possession of the box. It
opens up a window on my past. It is so fascinating. One of the
photographs of me as a child, dressed as a bridesmaid at the wedding
of Herbert and Irene, brings memories of that day back to me as if it
were yesterday. “To be in possession of so many of the family’s
documents, letters and photos of the family holidays gives me great
pleasure.”