Martha, with her brother Albert, his children, and an unknown man ~1930. The boy in the middle is my great-grandfather.
Martha's last letter was never sent. It is dated a three days after her previous letter. "Albert and I spoke once more of the children [sent to Skerra] and he tried to re-assure me all would be well for them. I plainly told him I did not believe him, and which he stormed from the house. I returned to my packing". Here, however, the story turns. Albert, perhaps fearing their customs will become more widely known, or having taken counsel from another, returns to make a wild offer. "He proposed to take me to Skerra himself, and see all was well with the babes, subject to approval from the municipal authority." This is an incendiary revelation because it is commonly understood Martha was alone at sea when she disappeared. Here, we learn from Martha herself that it is her brother, with the resumed suport of the town council who volunteers to take her to Skerra. Martha was nervous, "My initial thought was to decline the offer. Perhaps becuase Albert and I had quarrelled, and these past days he has been angry and short with me. I put down these unkind thoughts and accepted and thought rationally : what harm would kind Albert do his sister?" Albert also knew how to persuade her and seal the deal ".... and he has offered to personally show me the ancient monuments that exist on the island. Of which, he assures me there are many."
The next part of the letter is just before Martha is due to leave. "We are set to leave and the weather is fair. We have packed a tent, and by luck I have been able to borrow some equipment to undertake a cursory survey of anything interesting we may find. Albert assures me there will be a great deal that I will find curious."
These are the last recorded words of Martha Tirion. There is no tender sign off of the letter this time. She never finishes or sends it. Perhaps she had to leave suddenly, perhaps she mislaid the letter. Perhaps it was stolen, as she momentarily left her desk of the kitchen table where she was writing.
Those last written words in her careful, beautiful handwriting feel ominous to me. Perhaps because it is clear, to me at least, that Albert killed his sister and her murder, was covered up as an "accident at sea". In the parish records for that year along with Martha four children are recorded as also having died that year through "misadventure". I cannot say for sure if these are the children Martha was so concerned with, but I am sure they too were murdered out on Skerra. Shortly after the Ministry of Defence took ownership of Skerra and were testing chemical weapons such as anthrax there by the early 1940s. Like many of the traditions Marth diligently documented, the Binding the Tied ceremony never revived publically after the war.
I do not know if Martha even set foot on Skerra or was killed whilst out at sea on her way there. There are no clues, no signs. Perhaps that is what has compelled me to go to Skerra myself. I have applied to join an archaeological survey that is heading to Skerra in June next year. It is is exciting, but will also be tinged with some sadness as I think of Martha. I hope I get to go. I want to do her proud.
Rhona Tirion.











