The same Electoral Register also has an entry for Thomas’s son
Randolph Henry Spencer Churchill Bratt and Louisa Bratt
(presumably his wife) living a few doors away at 74 High Street.
Thomas’s wife Lucy Maria died in February 1927, as recorded in
his poem “In loving memory of
my dearly beloved wife”. Thomas died two years later on 19th
August, 1929 and was buried alongside Lucy in Bentley Cemetery.
Two of his last poems were dedicated to his grandsons George
Beach and Joseph Horace Abbis. They were called “In memoriam –
grandson George Beach” and “In memoriam – my grandson Joseph
Horace Abbis - February 1929”.
The tribute to Thomas's wife reads as follows:
In Loving
Memory of my dearly Beloved Wife, |
LUCY MARIA
BRATT. |
God bless her whom we all do love
Although she's passed away,
She's gone to that bright Home above,
With loved ones there to stay. |
And though she's in the silent grave,
We'll not forget the day,
When Jesus came her soul to crave,
She had to him obey. |
She's gone to join that shining throng,
Before the great White Throne,
And sing their everlasting Song,
To millions here unknown. |
She used to pray both night and morn,
To God, to bless us all,
And now I hope she will adorn
His everlasting Hall. |
She was a true and faithful wife,
Both honest and sincere,
But now she's left this world of strife,
For a brighter sphere. |
Farewell, from all of us, farewell,
Until we meet again,
Along with Jesus Christ do dwell
On Zion's peaceful plain. |
|
Thomas Bratt. |
After Thomas’s death his son Horace continued running the family
business. He is listed in the 1940 trade directory as a
fruiterer, trading at 84 High Street. Horace is also mentioned
in “The Memories of Harry Cotterill” and the fruit shop window
was featured in an article on Portobello that appeared in the
Wolverhampton Chronicle on 23rd August, 1957. A list
of Thomas's works can be found in Wolverhampton Archives and
Local Studies at Snow Hill. The list includes over 430 poems and
90 sonnets.
The poems
Thomas was certainly writing poetry by 1881 because one of his
earliest poems “In
memory of Lord Beaconsfield” was dedicated to Benjamin Disraeli
who died in that year. He may even have been writing much
earlier. His poem “In memory of Prince Leopold” could have been
written in 1865 or a little later. We can learn a lot about
Thomas and what he thought of life from his poems:
He
was very much a royalist and expressed this in the following
poems:
“In commemoration of Her Majesty’s Jubilee”
“To Victoria”
“The Royal Wedding (The Earl of Fife)”
“H.R.H. Albert Victors Last Farewell”
“H.R.H. The Prince of Wales’s Jubilee”
“For the Royal Wedding”
|
Some of his works feature leading public figures of the day:
“In Memory of Cardinal Newman”
“To the Rt. Hon. W.E. Gladstone (82nd Birthday)”
“To the Rt. Hon. C.P. Villiers (90th Birthday)”
“To Lord Tennyson”
“In Mem. Lord Salisbury”
“In Mem. Sir Ernest Shackleton”
|
He was also interested in warfare:
“The soldier and his friend”
“The Transvaal War – The Lions awake”
“A soldier’s farewell”
“A welcome to our volunteers”
“The Russo – Japanese war”
“The St. Petersburg massacre”
|
Thomas was an ardent football fan:
“Villa V. West Brom”
“W. Brom V. Villa”
“W. Brom V. Wolves”
“Football”
“The Wanderers Song (English Cup Final 1893)”
“Derby City V. Stoke at Molineux (semi final)”
|
Poems about local people, places and events include:
“The Portobello Ghost”
“In Memory of Poor Tim the Newsman”
“The Willenhall Park”
“The Willenhall Fire Brigade”
“Lines on the Willenhall Locksmith’s strike”
“The Bradley Boiler Explosion”
|
After many years of searching for the works of "The Portobello
Poet", they have now been found. Alice Bratt, Thomas's great
grand daughter has copies of the poems that have been handed
down within the family. She has over 17 volumes of the
handwritten poems, all in red ink, which doesn't fade. Her
collection includes the poems, sonnets and an entire book of
psalms in verse. She has a complete list of his works and a
large number of letters of thanks, that were sent to Thomas by
grateful recipients of some of his work. Many of the letters are
from famous people including royalty and heads of state.
Maureen Hunt and Alice Bratt with some of
her collection.
It is hoped that all of Thomas's works will be sorted and
eventually published, with perhaps the psalms appearing first.
Read some of the poems
If anyone has any of Thomas’s poems or sonnets, Maureen Hunt
would love to hear from you.
Please contact her at:
3 Slade Road
Fordhouses
Wolverhampton
WV10 6QP
Or telephone / fax 01902 780050
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