Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Jaimeson J. Wilkinson, and Harry Brearley BEM








[This is on the behalf of my Great Grandson]

PLEASE SAY A PRAYER FOR US: my Mum, for new employment and training, and all my family.

I was the Deputy Head Boy at Primary School

My Sporting Interests are:
Formula One Racing
Rugby League
Rock Climbing
Football
Cricket
Boxing
Basketball
Netball
Rounders
Tennis.

My Mum is great!
My Family are remarkable!
My Secondary School was wonderful!
Granddad thinks I am The Bee's Knees! and a help in the garden.
Guess which football team my Dad and I support.
_P_R_

Dark green and purple - which sport are these two colours associated with in the UK?

My Great Granddad is trying to teach me an important verse of the New Testament:

"For God so loved the World that He gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life." John's Gospel chapter 3 verse 16  Christians see this as the message of the whole Bible in one sentence.

And to read the Book of  Proverbs, in the Bible, to make me wise.

Jai

Harry Brearley, BEM, written up by Douglas Barrett Wilkinson




In about 1960, attending Bridge Street Church, in the centre of Leeds, I was concerned to purchase a vehicle to use in open air preaching around Yorkshire, and to find someone to teach me to drive; I praise the Lord that both were accomplished.  Harry Brearley became a good friend and driving instructor, and we worked together for many years. 

When he was eighty-two, we met in October 1986, at his home at Prestatyn, North Wales, to record his autobiography, for the Cassette Library I worked for as MD.  We had not met for some twenty-two years. 

The night before travelling, I noticed Psalm 66:16, “Come and listen, all you who fear God; let me tell you what he has done for me.”  The very quotation he normally chose to introduce his testimony - he needed little prompting on this occasion.  Although limited in eyesight and mobility, he still witnessed on the beaches, in market places and churches of the area.  Often, as he told this story, tears ran down his cheeks. 

He was born in 1904, in a rough quarter of Leeds, called “Little Hell”.  There was no school for him … and at the age of 12, he turned to crime, caught by the police for petty theft, he was sent to a Reformatory School.  It had little effect, and he was apprehended for gambling in the street and swearing.  Court and a fine, led to bigger things.  He watched neighbours’ houses so that he could burgle them.  People and the police were on the look-out for him, and he hid in various lodging houses.  Finally, in 1922, it was a case of join the Army.  The Yorkshire and Lancashire Regiment proved too strict for Harry – so he robbed the canteen and went AWOL.  With others he robbed a shop on Crown Point Bridge, was arrested, sentenced to Armley Jail, before being transferred to a military prison, and Discharge with Ignominy.  Even without a prison record, work was hard to find; home life was miserable, not helped with his parents being Spiritists. 

Again he joined the Army, using his mother’s maiden name – the West Yorkshire Regiment.  In trouble again he was placed in the very hard York Prison.  By using his brother’s name, and a forged Birth Certificate, he yet again enlisted in the Army – the Eighth King's Irish Hussars, at Canterbury.  More trouble with the Police and a Discharge with Ignominy.  In 1929 after much difficulty, he found work with Leeds Cleansing Department emptying trash bins.  His mother told him to find a girl and settle down, so he drank in the “White Swan” pub, where all the lads and lasses went.  Here he met Clara Winifred – Clara one night to his mum, Winifred the next night.  Father was sent to spy on her to assess her: “My, he’s got a girl all right – she’s a real one; she’s a blond, and can drink him under the table!”  When she became pregnant, they had to get married in 1930.  They fought like a cat and dog – not caring for each other.  They went down to his mother’s house to play cards, gamble, and drink.  One night they caught the last tramcar home.  At 6.15 the next morning someone knocked them up, to say his mother had collapsed and died of heart failure.  The mother had a brother called Herbert, who was a Christian, so Harry asked him to arrange a funeral service at his church.  “Have you ever been to church?  Have you ever opened a Bible?  Has your mother ever been to church?  You just can’t treat God like a convenience.  Well I’ll arrange a Memorial Service.” 

At the Methodist Church they had Communion during the Memorial Service, and when the bread came round, his wife said, “Don’t touch it, we don’t know what it is!”  Uncle Herbert said they were having a Campaign in a few weeks, would he come; Harry said he’d have nothing to do with it, but his wife promised to attend and bring Harry.  When she told him, he slapped her across the face, “Don’t you promise to take me anywhere, where I don’t want to go!  If it lasts after 8 o’clock, when I want to go for a drink, there will be trouble.”  They were Cliff College Students on Trek, who made the Gospel plain from the words of the Bible: that Jesus had died for our sins.  Before the end of the meeting, Harry and his wife went forward to the Communion Rail, and gave their hearts to the Lord.  They could not hold themselves back.  Harry said he could not go for a drink, because he had given his heart to the Lord.  They had been heavy smokers, but on the way home their cigarettes would not light.  They decided that it was wrong for them to smoke.  Living for the Lord became their passion, with a particular call to preaching in the open air.  Debts were paid off, and they were introduced to Bridge Street Four Square Church in Leeds (where I met Harry and Winifred). 

Harry and Win realized that they did not have a Bible.  So they prayed, and at work, he was sent to clear a house – number 8, Clarendon Avenue - of belongings piled in the yard.  Among them was a large Bible with copious notes on the Return of the Lord Jesus, written by its owner – a subject which interested Brearley greatly.  He then drove the horse and cart with one hand, and carried the precious book in the other, for seven hours.  He was pleased to tell his workmates the reason for the prize: his conversion to Christ.

Prayer for some kind of vehicle led him to anticipate a fine car: in fact it was a tricycle built for selling ice cream from two large tubs – which were cleaned and used to carry leaflets.  It was hard work, peddling up hills with this “Stop Me and Buy One” with a handy megaphone.  Next, he purchased a second hand furniture van, and had texts painted on the sides.  A bout of flue laid him low; the Minister traced his whereabouts via Harry Toft, a Church member, and an International Rugby Player – this led to financial help and a box of groceries – they were down to the last crust of bread.  Harry was then taken ill with the child’s disease of scarlet fever and placed in an isolation hospital.  Winifred was unable to draw any money to pay the bills, but Pastor T.H. Jewitt was able to visit the hospital and arrange the necessary transaction.  Once well, they were back serving the Lord – and getting into many scrapes.

Preaching in a mission church on the text from Jeremiah 51:20: “Thou art My battleaxe”, he inadvertently pointed in his wife’s direction.  She promptly stood up, and humorously shook her fist at him, much to everyone’s amusement. 

At open air meetings they often played a popular recording of a singer called Jo Stafford, singing: “It is no secret what God can do, what He’s done for others, He can do for you”.  When they returned for a second week, a lady came out of the Post Office and said, “Get that woman to sing that song again.”  She pointed to Win, who had been quietly singing along with the record, and was virtually tone deaf.  [The interesting story behind this song: Stuart Hamlin, a well-known radio personality, visited Billy Graham, the Evangelist, and his team in their hotel.  After a long talk, he trusted the Saviour for salvation and immediately phoned his friend John Wayne, the film star. When Hamlin used these words, Wayne said, “You’ve got a song there.”]

A fellow, perhaps drunk, came up to Harry and threatened to floor him if he did not stop preaching.  Starting to take his jacket off, Harry told him he had been the heavy weight champion of his regiment. The man quietly left.

A wealthy American businessman supplied them with an ample supply of extremely tasteful, well-designed leaflets.

Their pitch in Vicar Lane, Leeds, was outside Brown’s Wine Merchant’s.  One Christmas the owner came out and demanded that they stopped.  “Every time you start preaching my shop empties.  When you stop it fills up again!”  He returned with a Police Officer, but Harry showed them his police permit.  Inside the shop the man drew a gun: “Get him out of this shop, or I’ll shoot him!”  So Harry took the Police advice and moved further along the street.  This placed them by a set of traffic lights, and every time a tramcar waited for green, there was a fine audience – sometimes folk gave them requests for hymns on the record player. 

An old man would blaspheme when Winifred offered him a leaflet.  Harry jokingly called him Win’s “Boyfriend”.  There came a three month period with no sight of him.  When he showed up it was to request a leaflet: he had been ill in Hospital.  “All I could see, as I lay in bed, was your husband preaching the Gospel in rain and snow, all kinds of weather.  I gave my heart to the Lord.”

One vehicle was a 15 cwt van with Bible quotations on the side, and full sized coffin surmounted with a wreath, at the back: inscribed, “Is this the end?”  When he visited a friend in hospital, it caused many wry comments – such as, “The van’s come for you Brother.”

In Dewsbury, preaching to a good crowd, the Police moved him on, following a complaint.  “Come on Brother, we’ll go to the cemetery and preach to the dead – they will listen to us.”  They did, but there was no one in sight.  Twelve years later, at a Convention at Bridge Street Church, a man approached Harry: “I know you, and you know me.  Do you remember preaching at Batley Cemetery, when it was pouring down?   Well me and my wife were listening behind the curtains, and we gave our hearts to the Lord, that day; we both serve as Readers in the Church.”

About this time, the Leeds City Elders realized that a centuries old law granted every Englishman the right of one square foot of ground on which to stand and express his views.  The answer was to place a square sectioned stone block in every park in the city.  With some irony, Harry was given the task of choosing the locations, and seeing it through.  I visited the one in Crossflatts Park, Dewsbury Road.

Eventually the Second World War came along, and he was conscripted into the Army.  There was discussion apropos which regiment he should “return” to.  The 8th King's Irish Hussars was chosen.  The posting was to France.  In the retreat towards Dunkirk, they were surrounded and cut off.  Thirteen of them took an Army lorry and found their way south to Marseille.  An Arab cattle boat crew offered to take them home, but whilst helping with the 600 horses in the hold, Harry realized they were sailing eastwards.  Six days later they disembarked at Haifa, in Palestine, and joined General Wavell’s army.  This led to the campaign in Ethiopia, then Palestine, and finally Mount Olympus in Greece.  On the battlefield here, they were surrounded and overwhelmed by the Germans and taken prisoner.  In the Prisoner of War camp, situated at Korinthos (where the apostle Paul had founded a church), many of his friends died of dysentery; there was a lack of medical assistance.  Another colleague died from consuming a large amount of hot bread, which he had stolen.  The Germans said, “Leave him there, we can’t burry him, we have no Padre.”  A man called Duff Cooper went to complain: “I want my friend buried.”  “If you can find a man qualified to bury him, you can.”  Duff said he had seen Harry preaching often in Leeds, he could take a funeral service.  So the Germans made Harry the “Bible Puncher”, the Padre for the camp.

The British prisoners were marched from Greece to Austria – they were shot if they stopped for food - they were not formally registered as POW’s.

Stalag 17 A, at Wolfsburg, was the destination, where Swedish Authorities made the official register as POW’s (Prisoners of War).  In charge was a man by the name of Stinker Steiner: “I hear you’re the Padre, can you preach?  You’re the Padre until one is captured.”  He gave Harry a copy of “Hymns Ancient and Modern” often called “Hymns Ancient and More Ancient”– the official Church of England hymn book at the time; which Harry still had.  He didn’t know a lot, but God helped him, and they had some glorious times.  The first sermon was on Mark 5, The Raising of Jairus’s Daughter, and the Healing of the Woman with the Issue of Blood.  After the message one man gave his heart to the Lord.  The Germans commanded him to hold a Bible Study every Wednesday.  A violent man called Andrew knocked his Bible from his hand, every time they passed.  One night Harry told him that if he did it again, he would forget he was a Christian, and take his coat off to him.  To Harry’s amazement, Andrews agreed to attend the Bible Studies, but on condition that he could choose the passage to study.  “One Chronicles, the first five chapters”, which are lists of Jewish names.  Harry was stumped, but the Lord gave him a word.  One midnight, Harry’s friend Pop Harley (an Australian), woke him – they were housed in three stable blocks – there was a rumpus and shouting.  With the Germans threatening to shoot them, if it didn’t stop – shots were being fired.  “Harry! Andrews is shouting out to the Lord.”  Harry went to the Commander – being the Padre, he was the only prisoner allowed to speak to him.  On being questioned, Andrews said he wanted to know the Lord.  So after a chat they both knelt down, and he gave his heart to the Lord.  Before he was taken away to a punishment camp, Harry gave him a scribbled note of his home address in England.  There was no more news of him until after the War: Winifred received a letter from Eastbourne, where Andrews lived.  It was from his mother – eighteen years a Pentecostal Believer, her husband a Baptist Lay Preacher – how thankful she was that after 18 years praying for him, to learn of his conversion.

A man arrived carrying a huge Bible.  When asked where he had found it, he replied, “On the battlefield at Mount Olympus”.  It was there that Harry had been wounded in the leg – for the rest of his life he suffered a weeping scar.  The Bible had Harry’s Leeds address on the flyleaf.  “You can have it for some cigarettes. I’ve had many blessings from it, but I’m not a Christian.”  Harry did not smoke, but was to take a Bible Study with the Officers, on “Daniel’s Image”, and they often gave him some cigarettes.  They did, and these he gave to the man, who was called Sanderson.  Harry told him he could keep the Bible, if he came to their Bible Studies.  He did, and many years later it emerged that Sanderson was the Band Leader in the Salvation Army at Basingstoke, still carrying Harry’s Bible.  Pop Harley lent him his, until the people at Bridge Street Church sent him a new Schofield Bible, from which he was able to preach and take Bible Studies, and lead Prayer Meetings.  At one of these, a New Zealander gave his heart to the Lord.

There was a division of barbed wire in the camp: to separate French and British POW’s.  As Brearley walked by it one day, someone called his name, “Our Pastor wants to speak to you.”  The German Commander was agreeable to them holding joint Bible Studies, in alternate camps, using an interpreter.  They had marvelous times and men were saved.  Eventually a recognized Pastor was captured, and Harry was no longer required.  This was a Church of England Chaplain, a British Army Officer called Ledgerwood, but unfortunately a Modernist in his beliefs.

Harry was sent out of the Camp to do hard manual work.  About this time a Red Cross parcel came for him; it contained two bars of soap – a rare commodity.  When the Commandant found out, he wanted one, and when Harry refused, the German drew his gun.  Another Officer came in and asked what the rumpus was about.  “You’re a Christian, aren’t you?  What are you doing fighting us – it’s voluntary in your country?  I’ll get you out of this Camp.”  At this second Camp, food was short; but a man was a good shot with a catapult.  He only managed to kill sparrows – still a lovely meal.  When the dog was missing there were suspicions.  In the end, Harry decided to escape, and contacted the Resistance Underground Movement.  A prisoner called Lock was dressed as a woman, and they escaped pretending to be a courting couple; unfortunately they were caught in a curfew, and placed in the slam-bin.

On one occasion, he had just left the toilet block, when it was blown to pieces by an Allied bomb – probably dropped by a low flying De Havilland Mosquito aircraft.  He had several similar escapes, for which he thanked God for His protection.

Later, the prisoners were travelling - standing tightly packed in a cattle truck.  When it stopped a guard would stick his bayonet through a knot hole near the bulkhead.  The first time this happened, it pierced a man’s face, so they took turns at standing there.  Harry’s turn came, and he stood reading his Bible.  This time an eye looked in, and this guard asked him what he was doing in the Army, as a Christian.  Christians in Germany had no option. But he kindly attended to their needs with warm soup, and visits to the toilets – the truck was awash with sewage.

They were sent to Auschwitz Extermination Camp, and were made to dig the graves for thousands of Jewish people killed in the Gas Chambers.  Next they were taken to a POW Camp near the Cilician Border.  The War was drawing to a close, and the advancing Russians took no prisoners – they shot the Germans, and gave the British a very hard time.  Better still though; the Americans were overrunning the German forces.

When he arrived home, Harry, normally a large man, weighed only 5 stone, 9 pounds – 36 kgs.  The medical diagnosis was that there was no hope of recovery; but Pastor Miles laid hands on him for the prayer for healing, and he recovered well.  The Seacroft Hospital Doctor could not understand it, but discharged him on special rations.  Harry resumed his work for the Lord: preaching in the open air, and joined with a young man – Stephen Fisher.  They had little blessing in missions at North Shields, and Middleborough.  Stephen went home and founded his own car repair centre in Horsforth.  Winifred joined him, and the blessing started, with people being saved. 

He found numerous occupations: Leeds City Highways Department, as a Ganger/Charge Hand; Auty Brothers, as a labourer on the Seacroft Housing Estate – when asked if he could lay a drain, he demonstrated that he could, and was quickly promoted to Foreman (he knew no Mathematics, but a man from Leeds University called at his home, and offered to bring his Maths up to scratch, for the reading of Plans); and later he worked on the Intake Estate.

In one of these jobs, as they were demolishing a house, Harry fell from scaffolding onto a sofa – which broke his fall to some extent, and may have saved his life, but he badly injured his back.  He wore a steel brace, and a special collar to protect his neck.  One morning as he woke, he felt that God wanted to heal him, and as he prayed his back was restored.   The Doctor insisted on a small pension for Harry, who still has the brace as a souvenir.

The Labour Exchange/Job Centre found him a possible employment: working for the Government as a chauffeur, at a complex in Lawnswood.  The Secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture told him that people with a prison record could not be considered.  When he explained his predicament – severe, but long-time-ago, incarcerations, followed by his conversion to the Lord Jesus, she advised him to write a full record of events.  Firstly, he had to fulfill a Campaign in Holyhead with Evangelization Society, and another with an Assemblies of God Church.  The job was to start on the 13th of October.  A generous fiscal gift greatly encouraged, and helped him; a not uncommon experience, when folk saw his van with Bible quotation painted on the side.  His meeting with the Chief Constable, a man by the name of Barnet, and a fine Christian, eventually resulted in a full list of his crimes, convictions, Court appearances, and imprisonments.  He needed three extra sheets of paper to complete the long list; but with no convictions since 1932 until the present (1953).  Harry was amazed to be offered the job.  His Boss was a Believer, and told him: “Take as much time off as you need, to do your preaching.”  He had missions in Rugby at the AOG Church, and at the Bible Pattern Church, Bradford.  When his equipment failed, a financial gift bought him a new van.  He was given an established post, on the Staff at Lawnswood, where he remained until 1960. 

One morning, Christmas 1968, his wife called to him that he had a letter from the Prime Minister – he thought it was a joke.  But it was to inform him that Her Majesty the Queen had awarded him a British Empire Medal.  This was often given to ordinary people, who had done good work in their employment.  Unfortunately, the Queen had a previously arranged engagement, but his Boss arrange for the Earl of Scarborough to make the presentation at Lawnswood, in 1969.  All food, drink and photographs would be paid for.  “You have to wet the medal with a strong drink.”  Winifred replied, “Oh no we won’t; we’ve brought our own orange juice.” 

How did he come to be recommended for the BEM?  The theory was that he drove an interesting Jewish visitor to the British Government, who was a member of the Knesset (Israel’s Parliament), round the Jewish sites in Leeds – mainly Synagogues.  They had interesting discussions on the Book of Ezekiel the Prophet, and the Old Testament/ Jewish Bible in general.  He sent Winifred a beautiful set of photographs of his country.

In retirement, Harry continued preaching at markets and Race Meetings.  In 1975, Win became ill; curtailing his preaching activities, as he looked after her, until her promotion to Glory in 1981.

Harry Brearley, BEM, is a great believer in Christ Jesus’s Return, as foretold in First Thessalonians chapter four, commencing at verse thirteen:

13 Brothers, we do not want you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep, or to grieve like the rest of men, who have no hope. 14 We believe that Jesus died and rose again and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him.

15 According to the Lord’s own word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left till the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep.  16 For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. 17 After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. 18 Therefore encourage each other with these words.

 

Harry recommended several fictional books by Sydney Watson: “In The Twinkling of An Eye”, “Scarlet and Purple”, “The Mark of the Beast”, and “The Coming King”.


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