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Eulogy 24 - A Salute to Les Kimpton

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  EULOGY 24 - A Salute to Les Kimpton His Gift never stops Giving! Leslie Andrew (Les) Kimpton [1] was the youngest of 5 children. That simple fact is very important to this Salute to Les! There was 18 years difference between his eldest sibling, Mabel [2] , and himself. The time gap does suggest that Les may have either been a mistake or a very unexpected outcome. But being the youngest, Les had the distinction of being the last to die. He was the “ last custodian ” of the family memories, the family home, and the family possessions. This as such is not unusual, except that 3 of the Kimpton siblings had never left the family home [3] – in Les’s case, he had lived in the same house for over 70 years – unmarried, and when his 2 brothers died, alone there for 19 years. Les was only basically educated and factory skilled. He had started in a local hosiery factory in his 20s and stayed there until he retired 45 years later. His friends were those at the factory. They were largely kind t

Snippet 17 - Capt. James Saundry

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  SNIPPET 17 - CAPT. JAMES SAUNDRY “ Right in the middle of the Action” The parents of James Saundry [1] , Tom & Ann [2 ] , farmers from Breage, Cornwall, may have had other dreams for their 3 rd child, James, but Historic Events clearly shaped him. Within his first decade, the English Navy was sailing to the opposite extreme of the World, Part Jackson, to off-load convicts in a strange, new land. And at the same time, the French were rioting, declaring startling new beliefs, inflicting horrors on their nobility, and creating a new Hero, Napoleon, who would soon take on the might of the English Navy & military. And at the same time, the Irish were rebelling against the might of their English Masters.   Within his second decade, England had 2 new Heroes – at sea, Horatio Nelson, and in India & Spain, Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington.   James stepped away from his family farm and sought a life at sea – the natural home of any Cornwall man.   James was to