The Devotion of Joan
Sisters Joan Millard (L) and Barbara Hughes (R) riding together at Herschel in 1939
The Devotion of Joan
Rosemary Paget, a family friend, a few days after Barbara’s funeral, organised the packing and travel arrangements for Gervas and the children, Angela and Timothy. They’d go by train to Barbara’s father at Herschel, a little village just south of Basutoland. Gervas employed a retired farmer to take care of his business for a month.
The Devotion of Joan
In Bulawayo the Grants, Rosemary’s friends, fed, washed, and provisioned them. Next day in Johannesburg Jean, Gervas’ niece did the same.
Jean returned them to the station, to catch the southbound 8pm Sunday night train, another day’s journey. They hadn’t been booked! Due to petrol rationing and troop transport, all the trains were full. Tim fell asleep on a luggage barrow, there were no porters. After three trains had left for Bloemfontein, Gervas managed to force his way into an empty compartment. Kindly strangers handed his children and luggage through the carriage window. He just managed to catch the connecting train from Bloemfontein to Aliwal North.
Luckily, Dr. Millard had to visit one of his distant clinics near Boesmans Kop, on the way to Aliwal North. To the delight of the children, Joan, Barbara’s sister, met them there, hours before they were due at Aliwal North.
Gervas stayed four weeks, devoting plenty of time to the children, writing letters and riding horses. One day he and Joan climbed the 3500 ft. Herschel mountain which rose sheer out of a huge grassy plain at 6000 ft above sea level. They took a mirror with them and reflected sunlight to the house, much to the children’s delight. Joan was the one person they knew really well and loved.
Gervas was running two other farms besides his own in Que Que (having had polio he couldn’t join up). It seemed impossible in war time to find anyone to care for Angela and Tim—so here was Joan’s job for life, to make it up to them as well as she could. It was the accepted thing in those days that unattached daughters stayed home and looked after their parents, so all thoughts of training to be a nurse and going off to work all over the world were shelved.
Both children slept very badly. She never had a full night’s sleep but was determined to make their childhood very special despite their mother’s death.
They only saw their father when he visited Herschel for Christmas. Tim did not speak until he was three years old, but one night he woke up crying for his mother. Angela sat up in bed saying, “Shut up Tim. Mummy is with God and Daddy is with his cows. We live with Joanie now – go to sleep.”
Silence reigned.
Excerpts taken from Rain on the Roof, by Joan (nee Millard) Freyburg (1999) ISBN 0 646 38477 5 with family permission. Tim Hughes has electronic copies of this wonderful book that may be available on request via the comments section of this blog.