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Harrogate Herald - 25th April 1917
W H Breare letter
I have received quite a budget of news from Pioneer H A
Robinson, who has just been in to see me. He is the son of the
late Mr and Mrs Robinson, 20 [?] Electric Avenue, New Park.
The family have had a stall in the Market nearly thirty years, so
they will be well know to you. Robinson could not leave for
some time, as he is a telephone operator, and there was no one to
take his place. He is now on leave for ten days. Robinson has
put me through to London and elsewhere many a time when he was at
the Harrogate Telephone Exchange. He is located at the headquarters
of his lot. I am glad to say he has never had a day's illness since
he went out, and has never missed getting his Herald. My visitor had
seen Stephenson, whose father is a building contractor, and
lives on Skipton Road. Robinson's pal at the telephone work
is Donnison, of Ripon. They relieve each other on the same
job. He thinks Donnison worked for us at one time, but I do
not remember him. Donnison worked at Ripon in the printing
business before he went out to the Front. The Ripon firm for whom he
worked bought the business of Armstrong, Harrogate, and Donnison
came to manage it. another local man he had seen was Firth,
of Bradford, a cousin of Alderman W J Binns. Firth is
not with him now, as he got blood poisoning, and had to be sent back
to the base. He saw a Starbeck last a week ago, but had forgotten
his name. The man was bringing up recruits. You may remember Robinson's
father fractured his ribs, and then shortly after fell downstairs
and was killed. My caller's wife is the youngest daughter of ex-Councillor
H Abbott, who has been living the last eleven years at Whitley
Bay. I often wondered that I never saw Abbott, and am glad to
know now he is very well. He sees lots of Harrogate chaps where he
is. Robinson's wife's youngest brother (Gunner W S Abbott)
is in the Bath Hospital now with rheumatism. He was in that push of
the 1st of September, and out at the Front up to January of this
year. By then his battalion had been so knocked about that the
doctor ordered it out of the line. Young Abbott came on a
stretcher all the way from France. I am sorry to say that his heart
is bad, too bad to undergo certain treatment for his rheumatism. He
will be discharged, however, before long, and then I expect it is
light duty for him. By the way, the RE Signallers, to whom Robinson
belongs, beat the West Riding Casualty Clearing Station at football
by 4 goals to nil.
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