Scam, kidnap by South African police

Scam, kidnap by South African police

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Scam, kidnap by South African police

Scam, kidnap by South African police

 
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Campbell Lindsay Smith

Aberdeen painter: Campbell Lindsay Smith. SJ Dodgson. MJoTA 2013 v7n2 p1111

Campbell Lindsay Smith was the love of my grandmother's life. He was known by her sisters as the man with the pale blue eyes. He was older than Hannah Dalzell-Piper by about 12 years, and she also loved to draw.

How they met: I have no idea. I traveled to Edinburgh and Aberdeen and to the south of England to find out, and did not.

I saw the line recording Campbell's death in the remembrance room in Edinburgh Castle. I walked through the Aberdeen art school where he learned his trade. And also in Aberdeen I walked through the Gordon Highlanders Museum, and was astonished to see a huge painting of a pile of Gordon Highlanders bagpipers dead in battle. The first man into battle was the bagpiper, an unarmed man. As soon as one was killed, another grabbed the bagpipes to lead the men with guns. And another. And another. Sitting ducks. The Scottish version of a suicide bomber. I wonder if Campbell  was a bagpiper.

I know that Campbell was the son of Major General John Smith; and that Hannah was the daughter and step daughter of 2 Kent Anglican vicars.

Maybe Campbell was a guest in the vicarage. Maybe they met in a rail carriage. She was my grandmother, and my lack of fear came from somewhere, perhaps from her and her Irish grandfather.

I was told by her niece that when Hannah entered a room, everyone stopped talking and looked at her. And that she knew that she was beautiful, which clearly annoyed her niece.

Hannah had huge dark eyes and curly chestnut hair and creamy skin. And she was tall. Her sisters were all short blue-eyed and blond. My mother always wondered. Hm.

Did Hannah ever go to Scotland, to Aberdeen? I do not know.


Hannah and Campbell married in August 1915. Less than 3 months later, Campbell was dead, blown up on a field in Belgium, in his Gordon Highlander kilt, on Nov 10, 1915.

I have a photograph of him in his kilt, I have been looking at it every day since Hannah's nephew gave it to me in 1985 when he was moving out of his palace. Campbell was 36 when he died, but he looks a good 10 years older. He does not look like a robust young soldier. Hard for me to understand why a portrait painter with a delicate constitution could be considered for active duty.

Hannah's nephew, my father's first cousin, was the Rt Rev Maurice AP Wood, an Anglican Bishop of Norwich. The Bishop was named after his uncle Edward Maurice Baldwin Cambie, who had fallen in France in the Battle of the Somme at the age of 22, 6 weeks before the Bishop was born in 1916.

So many died from 1914 to 1918, so many mowed down by the guns of Europe.

Campbell Lindsay Smith was not my grandfather, or anyone's grandfather. Hannah married another man with pale blue eyes, Hubert Cecil Dodgson in Jan 1919. My father was born 9 months later.

The picture above is of an oil by Campbell Lindsay Smith, I do not know who owns the copyright; my family or his, should when I think about it. I hope I have permission to show it. I find the picture extremely disturbing: it is as if he foretold his own death in a field.

Two portraits below, I hope I have permission to post them. I don't know if he ever painted Hannah. or if he even drew her, or she him. I hope so, and that somewhere in an attic, 100 years after his death, some token of their love will be found.