Skip to main content

News

Lavinia Talbot’s diary : Reflections on the War and the weather, summer 1917

  • 7th August 2017

 

Lavinia Talbot kept a diary from her teens to old age.  She regularly recorded her thoughts and feelings about her life and events unfolding around her.  Her three sons served in the forces during World War I, as did the children of her wider circle of family and friends, so her wartime diaries include many observations on the conduct of the war.

 

Anniversary of the death of her son Gilbert

Lavinia’s diary for July 1917 was initially full of social activities and ecclesiastical duties associated with her husband’s role as Bishop of Winchester.  As the month wore on her thoughts were very much focused on her youngest son Gilbert who had been killed two years earlier at Hooge.  His death clearly still affected her deeply as she noted on the 26th ‘the shadow of ’15 over these days’ and on the 29th ‘thinking of Gilbert all day’. The anniversary itself, 30th July, was marked in the diary with a cross and the entry showed that her thoughts for that day were very much of Gilbert.

 

Lavinia's diary entry for 30 July

Lavinia’s diary entry for 30 July

 

 

Passchendaele

But Lavinia’s mind was also very much on the coming British offensive.  Her diary entry for 18th July noted ‘immense bombarding going on in Flanders’, calling it ‘a preparation for one of the Great pushes’.  On 23th July she recorded ‘the pulsing feel & noise of the awful guns in Flanders’.  On 30th July she noted ‘the bombarding tremendous – shaking windows at Dover’.  There were many stories of people living in the south of England during World War I hearing the sounds of heavy artillery barrages or exploding mines from the Western Front, so Lavinia was evidently one of them.

 

Much of her entry for 31st July was given over to the launch of the ‘3rd Ypres battle’ as she called it, later known as ‘Passchendaele’.  The infantry attack was to begin on 31 July and Lavinia seemed herself to be aware of this as she recorded that ‘the “Push” has begun – at 4am’.  She was very well connected and had been at the House of Lords earlier that day so that may be how she obtained her information.  She noted that the British had taken ‘the first line of the Germans’ and had also taken prisoners and that the French seemed to have been successful too. She also recorded ‘DD’s’ anxiety for her son Oliver who would be in the thick of the battle.  This is likely to be referring to her nephew Oliver Lyttelton, son of Alfred and Edith Lyttelton, who served in the Grenadier Guards in World War 1.

 

Lavinia's diary entry for 31 July commenting on the first day of Passchendaele and her nephew Oliver
Lavinia’s diary entry for 31 July commenting on the first day of Passchendaele and her nephew Oliver

 

The weather

Lavinia’s diary entries for the period also commented on the bad weather in England at the time and in particular the affect it might have on the ‘push’.  As July turned to August her descriptions of bad weather continued.  On 1st August she complained ‘Rain sits heavy on me as never before’.  She described ‘sweeps of drenching rain all day’ and ‘swamps of rain’ when out visiting.  Certainly many accounts of the Third Battle of Ypres comment on the appalling weather conditions participants of the battle had to endure.

Lavinia's diary entry for 1 August commenting on the weather Lavinia's diary entry for 1 August commenting on the weather
Lavinia’s diary entry for 1 August commenting on the weather

 

Lavinia Talbot’s diaries are part of the Lyttelton collection held at The Hive. For information about using our original archive collections please see our Visitor Guide.

 

Further reading

For more information about the Third Battle of Ypres, see:

The Battle of Passchendaele on Wikipedia

BBC History’s account of Passchendaele

Forces War Records

For information about Oliver Lyttelton, see:

The Wikipedia entry for Oliver Lyttelton, 1st Viscount Chandos

By Maggie Tohill

One response to “Lavinia Talbot’s diary : Reflections on the War and the weather, summer 1917”

  1. proptech says:

    Hi there. Love your blog!.

Leave a Reply to proptech Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related news


  • 11th March 2026
Women of Worcestershire

We are excited to introduce some of the women we will represent in an April 2026 display about women’s history. In this blog we would like to take a closer look at these Women of Worcestershire and share some of the stories we have discovered about them. Some of these local women are lesser known,...

  • 26th February 2026
And on that farm, they had a…

By January 1886, as reported in the Berrow’s Worcester Journal an extension of Powick Hospital was completed which allowed for a further 210 patients admitted to the hospital, with the capacity of the previous buildings at just over 700 patients. With such a large number of patients and staff to receive daily meals, it is...

  • 5th February 2026
Uncovering the Art of Ombersley Court, Part Two

From English country houses to dramatic naval battles and foreign lands, we continue our look at the Sandys family’s extraordinary art collection. Many of the pictures at Ombersley came to the Court through Letitia Baroness Sandys, while others were bought directly from artists or collected abroad. From views of Chatsworth House to Spanish bullfighting scenes...