Well John your post card leads to some fascinating people. Mollie (the recipient) through her mother, Maud Erskine, had Scottish aristocratic connections and her father was a major landowner in Cheshire. This meant Mollie was born in Lawton Hall, not far from Barthomley, where the servants outnumbered the family two to one. Her father died when she two, her mother remarried to the Vicar of Barthomley and then, after producing a daughter christened Ralou Zoe, died when Mollie was 11. So from the age of 11 Mollie was brought up by her stepfather, Rev George William Charles Skene (1845-1923).
The Skenes were something else as shown by this 1908 newspaper clipping. Zoe & Felicia Skene were George’s sisters making them Mollie’s step-aunts. The friend of Walter Scott was George's grandfather, and his son was George's father.
I have finally found the true identity of Miss Flo Merry and she was in no way related to the Erskine, Lawton or Skene families. According to the 1911 Census, Barthomley Rectory had 26 rooms so it looks as though George decided to supplement his stipend by taking in a lodger.
This 1905 newspaper clipping gave me the breakthrough:
From there I discovered Miss Flo Merry started out life as Evangeline Mary Thomas, the daughter of a Bristol bookseller. Her husband Henry Jasper Akerman was a widower and a soldier, he served in the Army Service Corps (Regimental number 6271) from May 1885 to May 1906. His service records show 5 years of the 21 were spent in South Africa from January 1900 to January 1905. So not only did he bring himself to the marriage but also two medals – the Queen’s South Africa Medal (Paardeberg, Dreifontein, Belfast & Cape Colony clasps) and & the King’s South Africa Medal (both date clasps). Here is an extract from his service records covering his marriages – you can see the date of his second marriage agrees with the newspaper clipping even if the Irish locations seem to differ and the newspaper used her stage name and the army her real name.
To complete Mollie’s story she emigrated to the USA in 1927 and died a spinster in a New York hospital in 1941 having celebrated her 60th birthday by a few days.
Regards, David.