Max Wenner Mystery part two

wenner so it was

Following on from my earlier piece on Max Wenner and his mysterious death, I have been doing more research. That sounds a bit more involved than the truth of the matter, which is that I have acquired a copy of “So It Was”, Michael A. Wenner’s autobiography. He was the nephew of Max, and so the first section of his book gives plenty of detail on his Wenner forebears, including his Uncle Max, who actually features on the cover, holding a hawk, as described in my earlier piece.

I was relieved to find  that the story I had pieced together was broadly correct. And, of course the biog. gave a lot more detail and background. Some minor details in my piece were incorrect. For instance, what I stated (repeating someone else’s mistake) was a photo of Max and his brother is it seems a picture of the brother and some Icelanders. However, I suspect that it was actually Max who took the photo, because the book emphasizes Max’s keen interests in the natural world and photography.

As well as giving family background and some personal details about Max , it has suggested some further lines of research. One of which is the Royal Flying Corps, in which Max served as a pilot during World War One. This may have been where he began his interest in photography as at that point in time military aircraft had a more observational role (including photographic reconnaissance), rather than being used for combat.

On Max’s demise the book is rather brief, but does introduce a curious new element. It says as follows “I must have been around fifteen in the mid to late ’30s when Max – returning by air from a visit to Essen, the home of a German lady of whom after Dolly’s death he had grown fond – unaccountably fell to his death from the aircraft. One of his fellow passengers was a Mr John Vincent Cain, a colourful entrepreneur and former smuggler of arms and planes to Franco – and possibly a not too reliable witness. The Daily Express reported Mr Cain as stating that he had watched my uncle ‘hurry on to the airliner at Cologne and…pen sheet after sheet of note-paper at furious speed; thrust the notes into his pocket and suddenly disappear into the back compartment..The letters stated to have been written were missing when Max’s body was found and were never recovered.’

I find it a little odd that the book’s author has relied on a newspaper article to tell this part of his  history, after all he was fifteen years of age at the time; hardly a child, but perhaps his recall failed him, nonetheless it does seem strange to me.

The newspaper tale is not entirely accurate since, as we have seen, the letter (singular) was found on the poor man’s body.

What is also curious is the presence of an arms smuggler in the story.  This only adds weight to the Agatha Christie-esque colour of the whole tale.

I shall in due course update my earlier piece, to include more of the background to Max Wenner, provided by this biography. And there are of course more lines of research to take forward, not least of which is the curious Mr Cain, for whom my initial research has proved largely fruitless.

The Max Wenner Mystery

Max Wenner was a person who was referred to in a previous blog post, having fleetingly been mentioned in the book The Prince of Poachers.

That slight reference really engaged my interest and since then I have done a little internet research. By that I mean I have looked for the full story and, having failed to find one, have pulled together various references (from the links at the foot of this page), some of which are prime sources and  others not, to piece together the story. The picture that emerges is a hazy, but intriguing one. It could perhaps form the basis of a film, certainly a book and undoubtedly a documentary for television. But that is not to trivialise, however, one man’s tragic demise.

So let’s start with my own original datum point, the book excerpt. Quoting it in full, starting by talking of Long Mynd moor it says:

“I think it must be the ideal spot for a gliding club; there seemed to be very few windless days. A German gentleman, Max Wenner, was a leading light in this gliding idea there. He fell – or was he pushed? – out of a plane over the Channel. He was staying in a pub in Minsterly. Somehow Father was in on the search of his rooms. I remember seeing a gun in the shape and size of a fountain pen that fired a three-sided bullet.”

This is, my research has shown, is very much a mixture of vagueness and error – mostly the latter.

The man in question was an Englishman of Swiss extraction (not German) and very anti-gliding, which he felt disturbed the grouse on the Long Mynd moor shoot. He was co-owner of that shoot, which explains why the author’s father, one of the shoot’s gamekeepers, was present when the rooms were searched (or perhaps just cleared). Though mention of him having rooms at a pub is curious as Wenner lived fairly locally. And finally, his death was on the other side of the Channel and not above it.

Mr Max Victor Wenner was of Swiss descent from a family of wealthy textile manufacturers who had settled in England during the 19th century. Born around 1888, he was the son of Alfred Wenner and his wife Malvine (nee Egloff). Alfred had initially been married to Louise Egloff. They had three children together before she died aged just 25. He subsequently wed her older sister, having six more children.

Albert’s family wealth came from the textile industry and that is no doubt what drew him to the cotton capital of Manchester. He had premises in the city at Greenwood Street and seems to have diversified his business interests, and articles can be found where he is selling drilling machines and “an invention of improvements in fire bars and grates.”

The family lived in Earnscliffe Villa, a large house in Alderley Edge, Cheshire.

Albert died in 1911 at around 56 years of age. The following year, Max Wenner gives his address as Woodside, Trafford Road, Alderley Edge, though I don’t know if this is solely his home, or the whole family relocated following the patriarch’s death.

Malvine died in 1925 aged 77 by which time, or following which, Max had moved to Garthmeilio Hall, Langwm, Conwy, North Wales.

Max was keen on the outdoors, particularly birds and more generally shooting and fishing.

He was elected to the British Ornithologists Union in 1912 and appears in their publication “Ibis” and  a number of other periodicals. For example a 1926 issue of The Field quotes him talking about stoats’ interest in the guts from rabbits he’d shot and there are a number of articles on birds carrying his name, including one from December 1933 on “Vipers Preying on Young Birds” – including photographs.

His brother Captain Alfred Emil Wenner was a British Army officer and the pair were photographed earlier that year on 14th July, by the River Thvera in Iceland, after they had caught 55 Salmon by lunchtime, with another 22 landed afterwards.

Much of this family biographical information comes from the WebPages of the State Archive of St Gallen in Switzerland, which also includes photographs of Earnscliffe Villa,  Garthmeilio Hall and of Max and his wife. In one, which I think might be at Garthmeilio Hall judging by the balustrade in the background, he looks very much the countryman. Wearing a heavy jacket, plus-fours, thick socks and stout shoes, he stands before the camera with a hawk perched on his left hand.

By 1934 Max was living at Batchcott Hall. when he bought the manor of Church Stretton, to the east of Long Mynd moor. Manor here seems to be in the sense of a tract of land, rather than a manor house. He was one of three owners of Long Mynd, and it might be assumed that this ownership came with the manor. Batchcott is a hamlet to the north of the moor.

He owned 6,000 acres in all and spent a large sum improving the hall and building a bird sanctuary and lakes for trout fishing.

He’s also said to have put a lot of effort into developing shooting on the moor and so when gliding started there in the summer of 1934 he did not approve. Though It’s not clear whether that was due to thinking that the gliders themselves disturbed the birds, or because of the hoi-polloi, who came to watch the engineless planes, tramping across the land (it does seem to have been a spectator sport). Legal action followed, presumably initiated by Wenner and partners, with a four-day hearing closing on 15th March 1935 with Justice Crossman “effectively” banning flying gliders from Long Mynd, as it “interferes with grouse shooting”.

Wenner is described as “devoted” to his wife, Martha Alice Spinner, known as “Dollie”. She was about eight years his senior and aged around 58 passed away in July 1936.

He was in the habit of flying to Germany and Switzerland for winter sports.

On one of those winter sports trips in Switzerland, he befriended the 34 year-old Olga Buchenshultz. She was secretary to the Swedish Consul-General at the German town of Duren.

The friendship developed and they became engaged to be married in the second half of 1936.

Olga apparently had doubts whether a German woman should marry an Englishman, perhaps because of the European political situation, or was this to do with the 15 year age gap – probably not as that was not unusual at the time, I would suspect his recent bereavement.

Whatever the case during Wenner’s visit to Olga in Kupferdreh, a district in the south east of the German city of Essen on December 30 she promised to marry him. Wenner’s brothers and sisters it seems were aware and agreeable to this engagement.

On Monday 4th January 1937 Wenner started the journey back to England taking a Belgian airliner from Cologne to Brussels.  Fellow passengers described him as seeming agitated and spending 20 minutes writing a single letter of many pages, which he put in his pocket and then left the compartment going to the rear of the plane.

The aircraft was flying at 3,000 above unbroken cloud over Limburg, when the other passengers heard a bang and felt the plane lurch. This was ascribed to the plane’s rear door slamming shut and they seem to have guessed what the reason for that was and a nurse was who was onboard fainted.

The man’s body was tragically found four days later on 8Th January, in a forest outside Genk, Belgium. It was apparently unblemished apart from “a scratched nose and buttons torn from his coat, there was no visible sign of injury”, apparently due to the trees slowing his fall. An unfinished letter to Olga was found in his pocket.

Belgian officials called his death a “mysterious accident” and it seems one of his brothers looked into matters speaking to Fraulein Buchenschultz.

Other passengers flew on in another plane to Croydon (Britain’s major international airport at the time) where they spoke to the press and the story was reported in newspapers as far away as Singapore and Australia.

Shortly before his death Max had made a will. This was perhaps sensible given his wife’s passing. I’m assuming here that she was a significant, if not his sole beneficiary. However, in light of his curious demise, one might view this differently, particularly as he left Olga Buchenshultz, £2,000 “in case anything should happen to me before our marriage.”

The will was proved in May 1937 and he left a large part of his estate, including Church Stretton manor and his share if the grouse moor to his friend and former agent William Humphrey, a renowned breeder of English Setters.

According to one reference I came across Max Wenner is said to have been ‘well connected in the highest political circles, both in England and Germany” and so it has been supposed that his unusual death had a “connection with espionage”. But I have found no prime source for this speculation.

As a true-life story, it does have the ring of an Agatha Christie novel.

Returning to the origins of my research, the mention of a fountain pen that fired bullets does make us in these times think of James Bond, but back in an era when the sword-stick was not uncommon, pen-guns were not necessarily the preserve of spies and spooks and this was a man who would have been au fait with many firearms.

The mention of Wenner having rooms in a pub at Minsterley is curious though, as it is not far from his home (about 32 miles by road) but is perhaps a mistake by an unreliable source.

All in all, it is an intriguing, but tragic tale.

There is a follow up piece to this post.

 

SOURCES

 

http://www.ukairfieldguide.net/airfields/Church-Stretton

http://www.ukairfieldguide.net/airfields/Long-Mynd

https://m.facebook.com/graysgundogs/posts/1797086413838175

https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/salop/vol10/pp72-120

https://www.churchstretton.co.uk/

http://mvsetters.com/MrHumphrey.html

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Mynd

https://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/auk/v051n02/p0271-p0278.pdf

https://www.lax-a.net/good-old-times-in-iceland/

https://www.pestsmart.org.au/behaviour-of-stoats/

http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/singfreepressb19370204.2.87

https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/58778222

https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/47776628

https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/11954611

http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/straitstimes19370106-1.2.41

https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/34404/page/3617/data.pdf

http://scope.staatsarchiv.sg.ch/detail.aspx?ID=114333

https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results/1937-01-01/1937-12-31?basicsearch=max%20wenner%201937&exactsearch=false&retrievecountrycounts=false

https://prabook.com/web/michael.wenner/564292

http://scope.staatsarchiv.sg.ch/Detail.aspx?ID=114334

https://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=444746.0

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1474-919X.1914.tb06642.x

https://archive.org/stream/britishbirds2319unse/britishbirds2319unse_djvu.txt

https://archive.org/stream/ibis_21914brit/ibis_21914brit_djvu.txt

https://archive.org/stream/britishbirds2219unse/britishbirds2219unse_djvu.txt

http://scope.staatsarchiv.sg.ch/Detail.aspx?ID=114211

http://scope.staatsarchiv.sg.ch/detail.aspx?ID=114197

https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/24001/page/3514/data.pdf

https://www2.cs.arizona.edu/patterns/weaving/articles/tm4_mach19.pdf

Midsummer Mornings

mm

Since watching one of his talks, I have been waiting in enthusiastic anticipation for the publication of My Midsummer Morning by Alastair Humphreys.

It is due out on Thursday 30th May, but I pre-ordered and got an email Saturday from Waterstones telling me that my copy was ready for collection and I will be racing to collect  it tomorrow.

The book is about the trip that Al made following in the footsteps of Laurie Lee, as he set out on foot for Spain. The journey is recorded in his classic travel memoire, As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning, which coincidentally (or perhaps not) is being aired weekdays on BBC Radio 4 Extra, starting today.

I’m feeling spoiled at being able to listen to the audio version of an old book I read some time ago and at last getting my hands on a new tale that pays homage to it.

Rare Earth Radio

radio3

This week’s ” Outdoors, Nature, Adventures, Escapades,” radio* is a bit thin I’m afraid, but nevertheless here it is:

Saturday 12th August

The only thing showing up today is a 6.07 Radio 4 repeat of last week’s Open Country with folkie Eliza Carthy talking about bogles and other things around Robin Hood’s Bay.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0902n78

Sunday 13 th August

Sounding really quite dull R4’s On Your Farm is about people who follow combine harvesters collecting grains and veg they miss. At 6.35 in the morning. Double yawn.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b090vrgd

It gets much better later, on the same station when, at 11.15, The Reunion features Tracy Edwards and others from the first female crew to complete the Round the World Yacht Race.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b090vtzt

There is also a bright spark on Radio 4 Extra when The Listening Project has a short programme about flint-knapping featuring Will Lord, an amazing guy who I enjoyed watching on the stage at the Bushcraft Show back in May.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01sdw2g

Later at 3.45 pm on R4X The Old Road concludes with Hilaire Belloc’s 1899 walk from Winchester to Canterbury.

 http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0075r05

 Monday 14th August

This week’s R4’s Tweet of the Day (5.58 a.m.) features Guillemot chick, Razorbill, Raven, Puffin and Guillemot (adult I suppose).

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b090wg27

One of the new arrivals this week is a series on every day at 1.15 p.m. on R4. Bones Stories features a variety of skeletal stories that include Irish Giant, West Renton Mammoth, Mary Rose Archer, Dodo & Man-Eating Tiger. Sounds great.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b090whd4

Other than that we have only the repeat of last week’s Natural Histories on the cuckoo.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0901fqk

Tuesday 15th August

The latest edition of Natural Histories (R4 11 a.m.) is about a remarkable creature that my son keeps telling me amazing facts about, the Octopus.

 http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b090xs6y

Radio 4 – 5.58 a.m. – Tweet of the Day – see Monday
Radio 4 – 1.45 p.m. – Bone Stories – see Monday

Wednesday 16th August

This is the best day of the week for radio.

All week Radio 4 Extra has been airing Richard Ingram’s biog of William Cobbett, but it is only this third programme that covers his Rural Rides.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0076sgs

At four in the afternoon Radio Four goes to the Dark Side of The Sun in a programme that looks at the mythology & psychology related to solar eclipses.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0910l6t

Off to Asia with Radio 3 at 10pm where Ginsberg in India retraces the beat poet’s travels there.

 http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06t4d01

Radio 4 – 5.58 a.m. – Tweet of the Day – see Monday
Radio 4 – 1.45 p.m. – Bone Stories – see Monday

Thursday 17th August

 Crossing Continents at 11 in the morning on R4 is about the remote state of Abkhazia.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0910n6p

Later on the same channel this week’s Open Country is an episode called Ballooning in Bristol which includes a perspective on that hot-air perspective of our landscape.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0910p

Radio 4 – 5.58 a.m. – Tweet of the Day – see Monday
Radio 4 – 1.45 p.m. – Bone Stories – see Monday

Friday 18th August

POETS Day is always the slimmest for good ONAE radio. Today is no exception, so just the dailies.

Radio 4 – 5.58 a.m. – Tweet of the Day – see Monday
Radio 4 – 1.45 p.m. – Bone Stories – see Monday

(*All these programmes are available to listen to via the BBC website if you are unable to listen to them in real time)

Walking Away – Simon Armitage

walking-away

Walking Away – Simon Armitage

Faber – 2015

Having walked the 260-odd miles of the Pennine Way as a modern troubadour, earning his keep with poetry readings and being put up at various homes along the way, Simon Armitage undertook to do the same on a similar lengthed section of the South West Coast Path.

This record of that escapade is the sort of adventure I like – one that’s not taking itself entirely seriously. There is humour throughout and whilst it’s generally pretty gentle, a la Bill Bryson, other examples are laugh out loud funny. Some in terms of description, such as a pair of fat, ludicrously dressed golfers in their buggy, looking like a pair of out of work clowns searching for a circus. In others it is in terms of encounters, like the autograph hunter who added Simon to his “collection” which had thus far amounted to just three name – Geoff Capes, and Little & Large. Presumably his “collection” was started in 1978 and one can only guess as to the reason for a hiatus approaching forty years. Perhaps he was in an institution of some kind.

Also very enjoyable, (albeit hardly surprising) were the poetic descriptions. I shall never again see a wren without thinking of it as “squirting about in the undergrowth” and likewise of dolphins “darning the water”.

Towards the end of the journey the author’s body starts giving up on him, but with a scheduled itinerary it’s not possible to recuperate with spontaneous rest days. However, he soldiers on, and on the final leg it is the tide that defeats him. his plan was to walk between two of the Scilly Isles, though I’m sure that that attempt, like the rest of the book, was not deadly serious.

Walking Away – Simon Armitage

A Vagabond in France – Paul Williams

vagabond

A Vagabond in France – Paul Williams

2008 – Minster Publishing.

Spied in the clearance box outside a local charity shop, I was drawn to this book by the curiously bad illustration on the cover. And after a quick scan of the blurb on the rear I was tempted to part with the fifty-nine pence needed to acquire it – well, it was signed by the author.

The account of a 500 mile pilgrimage of sorts, on foot from the author’s home in Winchester England to his other one at St. Puy in the south of France, the title is somewhat misleading. Granted vagabond can mean a rootless rover, but its more common connotation is one of idle vagrant, or homeless thief. Putting aside the fact that someone with two homes basically calling himself a tramp is fairly risible, it is really rather fanciful to call yourself a vagabond when you have the following night’s accommodation booked for several weeks ahead, even if you do dry your underpants by threading them up your arm as you walk. Indeed, in one place that he stays, the French couple running it estimate the cost of the author’s jaunt and conclude ruefully that it’s not something they themselves could afford.

This is a curious book in many ways. Not just because of the title, nor the illustrations, looking like badly traced photographs, that are peppered throughout. But some of that is of course due to my own preconceptions. Undoubtedly I was expecting something a bit more freewheeling, thanks to the title, but I guess I was anticipating a tale of wonderful countryside and equally impressive food. It was nothing of the sort.  The food pretty much all sounds dreadful and the people poor and depressed, particularly during the first third. And throughout the travel seems to be very often along busy roads, making it both unpleasant and dangerous.

All of which means that the book doesn’t particularly read like the “pilgrim” is enjoying it, but nevertheless towards the end he proclaims “I am certainly enjoying every minute”, following this up with an encounter with a snappy terrier that unnerves him, another with an ancient woman in a smelly, dilapidated farmhouse, who he speculates has hexed him and topping that with the depressing description of his decrepit lodgings that night.

Having said all of that, it was an entertaining enough read that bounces along at a nimble pace and the walk itself was a meritable achievement. As someone who takes a 12 to 20 mile walk most weeks I can utterly appreciate the sustained effort needed to do so for a month, over unfamiliar territory, with unreliable maps and, as the book itself concludes:

“Ça oui, il faut le faire, hein? C’est pas évident”.

“Fancy all that way…that’s quite something”.