The Historical Biography of Edward (Teddie) James TUTTLE. Edward James was the youngest son of Edward Robert and Georgiana Tuttle (nee Wright) . He was born on 3rd February 1895 He was born in a rented house in Mattishall,East Dereham,Norfolk, which to this day is still referred to as "Tuttle's Corner". His father was a farm labourer and probably earning less than £1 per week in wages so they were by no means a wealthy family although they would have had the facilities for growing their own food and having eggs from their own chickens etc. They were Primitive Methodists and a deeply religious family,Edward Robert was known to regularly walk over thirty miles on a Sunday to preach as a lay preacher in the tiny village chapels at Carbrook and Winfarthing.Georgiana had probably established Primitive Methodism in the family as up until their marriage the Tuttle family had been Church of England. Teddie was born in the reign of a fading Victoria and the Marquis of Salisbury was head of a conservative government. He was the youngest of seven children, there had been eight but Edward Park had died of bronchitis at the age of one year in 1882. His other brothers and sister were Arthur b.1882 Edward Park b.1884 Robert b.1886 Gladys Marion b.1888 Ernest William (my grandfather) b.1890 and Mildred May b. 1892. He would have been two years old when England and the Commonwealth were celebrating the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1897, the following year a red postage stamp had been issued stating: "We hold a vaster Empire than has ever been". There would have been sadness at this time in the family as Robert, who was twelve, died of sugar diabetes. At the age of four he would have started school, round about the time of the Boer War. He went to school in Mattishall, a small country school the average attendance being 140 pupils in 1900. There was compulsory school attendance up to the age of ten and was not raised until 1918 to the age of 14,although if for some reason he had registered too few attendances then he would have had to stay until he was 13. There is no doubt that he would have walked to school as it was not far away and also the cost of a bicycle at that time was £10 or ten weeks wages! Life at home would have been very basic. There was no running water, no electricity the rent would have been about 35p per week ,candles were 35p for three pounds and a good pair of working boots would have cost £1,a whole weeks wages.Income tax was 5 1/2d to 6din the £1. Between 1900 and 1905, the years that Teddie was at school, the papers would have been telling a very different story of the world outside the little country village of Mattishall: Slavery was abolished in Nigeria, The first petrol motor-cycles appeared in Britain, the Boar War ended and in 1902 Balfour became Prime Minister of Great Britain. Kipling wrote the 'Just-So'stories,Conon Doyle The Hound of the Baskervilles and Beatrix Potter -Peter Rabbit. The first radio message was heard over the Atlantic and Emmeline Pankhurst founded the Womens Social and Political Union. The Rolls Royce Company was founded.Motor buses appeared in London and Picasso,Cezanne and Matisse were painting future masterpieces. When Teddie left school at the age of about ten he went to work for Mr.Neave who was a grocer. He had a shop in the little village of Mattishall and sold just about everything that was needed to sustain life in a small village. Mr. Neave was the owner of the house that the Tuttles lived in so it is very likely that they are one and the same person. It appears that once a week Mr. Neave would fill up his horse and cart with every imaginable food and household item and visit the outlying tiny scattered villages and Teddie would go with him to help him sell his wares. Teddie it seems was a very friendly and good-looking young boy who would regularly call in at a friend in Welborne and partake of some of her mothers shortbread. The friend,Jessie Matthews, remembers clearly that the horse often wore a hat with its ears sticking out! Mary Barham-Johnson was born in the same year as Teddie and is still very active, knew of the family. She remembers: "There were two cottages in a lane east of this farm where lived old Mrs Bunn and Mrs Mendham and next door I saw a new born baby (the first I had ever seen). We used to take soup in cans to these people, and also to Mrs.Tuttle who was bed-ridden at the little farm on Norwich Road at the bottom of school lane. She could remember old Mrs Tuttle and going to see her in a tiny stuffy bedroom and noticed that there was no fireplace and the ventilator had been pasted over! She could not remember any children. She was not allowed to mix with the local village children for fear of headlice! ( She was the Rectors daughter). She tells also of a murder in Welborne in 1907.Jimmy Green had been stalking her father with a gun a shot was heard and they all thought that the rector had been killed but infact it appears that a poor Mrs Smalls who had been "picking stones",was found dead in a field and Jimmy Green dead in a ditch. In April 1914 Teddie was the best man at his sister Millies wedding, it was a very special wedding as the heading in the newspaper cutting was: MOTOR WEDDING.....the bridal pair motored to the chapel...................... Mr.Edward Tuttle was best man.On entering the chapel the organist (Mrs.King) played "The voice that breathed o'er Eden"...... The years between 1906 and 1914 had also been quite exciting. Colour photography had been invented,The Olympic games were held in London,Campbell - Bannerman resigned and was succeeded by Asquith.Louis Bleriot crossed the channel in an areoplane.Edward V11 died and George V was crowned ,plastics were invented.The Old Age Pension, National Insurance and the first steps of the modern welfare state were started. There were Suffragette riots in Whitehall.Scott reached the South Pole only to find that Amundsen had beaten him to it. The Titanic sank with the loss of 1513 lives. In 1914 Archduke Ferdinand of Austria and his wife were assassinated,Austria declared war on Russia and then France.Britain declared war on Germany.