In
the churchyard of Barnack, a large stone monument in the form of a
semi-recumbent palm tree marks the grave of George Ayscough Booth,
Gentleman Cadet, Royal Military College Sandhurst, who died in 1868, aged 20.
George
Ayscough Booth was born in Wiesbaden, capital of the
Duchy of Nassau, in Germany on 27th
December 1847. He was the only son of the Reverend George Ayscough
Booth and Anna Maria Godolphin, the eldest daughter of Admiral John
Ayscough. His parents had married in Southampton on 21st
October 1843. George was brought back to England
to be baptised on 5th
February
1847 at Hatfield, Hertfordshire but the family
returned to Wiesbaden where twin sisters were born on 12th
December 1848.
The
cadet's father, the Reverend George Ayscough Booth, a graduate of
Exeter College, Oxford, was curate of Barnack, 1856-61, and then held
the living of Clandown near Radstock in Somerset, 1861-72. The
parents brought their only son’s body back to St
John the Baptist, Barnack for burial close to
the grave of his infant sister; Nina Jane Carnegie Booth had died,
aged five months, in 1858.
Gentleman
Cadet George Ayscough Booth had died on 17th April 1868 at
Paris, on his way to England from Hyères (on the French Riviera).
The cause of death is not reported.
The
semi-recumbent palm tree on his memorial can be seen as a symbol of
the resurrection; a palm tree bends in a storm so that the top could
touch the ground but still spring back upright. The choice of a palm tree might allude to the place he had gone to for the sake of his health. Hyères’ position
facing the Mediterranean is ideal for the cultivation of palm trees
so the town is referred to as Hyères-les-Palmiers (palmier meaning
palm tree). Hyères was popular with
English visitors in the winter and Edwin Lee had published in 1857 a
book on the virtues of the climate of Hyères for recovery from
pulmonary consumption (tuberculosis) which might suggest a possible
cause of his death.
A
memorial window to George
Ayscough Booth was
erected in the east end of
the Royal Military College Chapel,
Sandhurst in
1869.
“The
stonework of the fifteenth century, by Mr Buckeridge of London, is a
richly-cusped four-light window, with elaborate tracery. The two side
lights, bearing a series of subjects in stained glass,
commemoratively display, under the form of allegory, the virtues of
bravery, piety, brotherly love, and resignation, while the
Crucifixion, Resurrection, Ascension, and Judgment, are embraced by
the centre compartments. Faith, hope, charity, humility, forgiving
spirit, and repentance are also allegorically displayed in the
tracery and with two angels bearing texts, complete the figurative
arrangement, the entire work being perfected by canopy work
surmounting each group. It is a very successful work of art, and a
great improvement to the chapel. R. B. Edmundson and Son of
Manchester, are the artists of the glass work.” (The
Bath Chronicle
21st
October 1869). The
architect, Buckeridge
of London, is presumably Charles Buckeridge ARIBA who died 1st
September 1873. The
glass business,
Messrs Edmondson and Son, Angel Street, Manchester was established in
1854 by Ralph Bolton Edmundson who had earlier headed the stained
glass section at Pilkingtons.
The
stained glass window still exists in what is now the Indian Army
Memorial Room at Sandhurst. The chapel of the Royal Military College,
Sandhurst, was consecrated in 1813 but it was not large enough when
the number of gentlemen cadets rose following the abolition in 1871
of the purchase system for commissions, and it became, successively,
a model room, a museum, a cadet dining room, the Indian Army Museum
and, in 1970, the Indian Army Memorial Room.
Sandhurst
confirms that Cadet George Ayscough Booth joined the college on 1st
February 1867 aged 19. The Royal Military Academy holds copies of
correspondence between his father, the college and the War Office
regarding the intended design of the window, which apparently
required the approval of the Commander in Chief, the Duke of
Cambridge, who took a personal interest in the project.
The
cadet’s mother, Anna Maria Godolphin Booth, died on 25th
March
1876 in
Bath, aged
59.
The widower married Frances Elizabeth, second
daughter of Maj-Gen Pickering RA, on 4th August 1881. The
Rev. George Ayscough Booth died “very suddenly”, at 54, Pulteney
Street, Bath on 17th December 1884, aged 67. The only
surviving child of the family, Kathinka Wilhelmina (born 1855 in
Germany), married Charles Edward Mackintosh Russell in 1885; she died on 28th
December 1932 aged
78.
The monument is in St John the Baptist Churchyard (north
east of the church),
Barnack, Peterborough Unitary Authority. Barnack
is south east of Stamford, Lincolnshire.




