Monday, 31 October 2016

Some quirky memories

A few final funny memories from our residents at Glenmoor- a naughty dog, a stolen bike and some strict old ladies...

I was friendly with the neighbour’s daughter, Alice, and she had a bicycle. I was ten years old. She rode it and I sat on the back seat, and we went to Vernon Park, a mile and a half away. It was late summer. Up and down the hills, freewheeling all the way. It had new tyres on it. We played in the park until we were tired out and it was starting to get dark. But the bike was gone.

We went to the police station. The policeman, Bobby Walsh, asked how many bikes there were. I said only one.
“You’re a lad, and you’re sitting on the back?” he said. He took us home, and Grandma saw me first, and got me tucked up in bed before I could get a belting.


I had an Aunty Martha in Oldham. One day I was drawing something and she shouted at my mother. “Ethel! What’s he doing with a coloured crayon? It’s Sunday. Give him a pencil.”

She had a mahogany table with fancy legs, but on Sundays she covered the legs up with red blankets. Maybe she thought I’d start imagining ladies walking down the road! There’s good and bad in every religion. Aunty Martha did her best to be a good Christian.

-James

My grandmother, my dad’s mother, she rustled when she walked down the hall. She would only go in the sitting room on Sundays, when the vicar called.


We had a dog called Gyp, a Spaniel . He was a pup and one day we were going out, so my mother thought we’ll put him in the tall cupboard in the kitchen. He’ll be safe in there. When we came back he was looking very sheepish.

Then later it was time for Dad to get ready for the Home Guard and he was looking for his gaiters. We looked high and low but we never found them. The dog must have chewed and chewed them. They’re known for chewing, Spaniels.

You’d have thought Mum would have been wiser!

-Janet

Thanks once again to all the residents for sharing their stories and making this such a fascinating experience, and to Rachel and all the other staff at Glenmoor House for helping me so much with this project. Many thanks also to Made in Corby and the Arts Council for their support and advice.

Sunday, 23 October 2016

More of James' Adventures...

Here's the final part of James' story. He talks about becoming a fireman and life in the prison service...

When I left the Marines I had to learn how to adapt back into civilian life. I didn’t know what the hell to do. I was twenty three years old. For a while I did some labouring on a building site, then I met a friend and he told me they needed people for the Fire Brigade, so I went there and signed up for that.

We had three months training at the fire station in Oldham, learning how to operate the big ladders, driving, tying knots. I already knew about knots. We moved to Burton on Trent, Millie and I, and lived in two rooms with a Miss Winchester, a very staid and orthodox Scottish lady. We started saving for a cottage on Stanford Road. There was an end cottage that we liked, on sale for £800. So we went to a solicitor, Mr Hicks, he was recommended by Mr Lowe the postmaster. Millie’s parents gave us £120 cash as a down payment, and then we paid the rest in instalments.

I remember one particularly terrible fire, it was the Ind Coope Brewery. The hops were set alight and we went in with our breathing apparatus, but then we had to come out because the bobbing barrels came tumbling down on us. My friend was with me, Arthur Adams, and his breathing apparatus came off. The whole building was lost.

Some time after that I left the Fire Service and started working in a hospital, helping the elderly, getting bathed and dressed. I had a wonderful interest in people. Then one day, there was a man with a fracture and I was taking the plaster off for him. One of the nurses saw me and said to go down to orthopaedics, so I could learn all about plaster. I did that for a while then, until somebody else suggested I try out working in prisons.

I decided to work in prison hospitals, and I was sent to St Thomas’ Hospital in London for training, a few hundred yards away from Wormwood Scrubs, where I was smartly dressed in a white uniform. After training I went to work in Lincoln Hospital for a while, about seven years, I think.

I nursed a lot of patients who were seriously ill with psychological problems. Some of them were quite dangerous, they could be paranoid and suspect you, they could turn violent. Others were placid and easy to manage.

There was a doctor there, and he saw my work, and he said, “You’re wasting your time here.” He thought I should go into the probation service. I met a probation officer, Mr Simpson, and I went for the interview. I got into the service, but first I had to go for training to university, and by the end of it I was highly trained.

The work I did was important because it helped them, otherwise you could go to prison and not be seen by anyone. I would talk to employers too, try and get some work lined up for the men when they left. I remember one chap who was serving time, but when you looked at his past, his father had mistreated him. And that was how he treated women, gave them a bit of thump.  So I found work for him with Mr Field, as an apprentice tuner and fitter on a trawler engine, and he did that when he came out of prison. Then one day I saw him, and he’d brought a girl. “We’ve been going dancing,” he said. They ended up getting married, and I was his best man, and they were very happy together.

There were some who couldn’t cope with life on the outside. There was one fellow, when he got out he stole some rope, just so he could get sent back to prison.

Then there were the escapees. The Thompson family, that was one, prisoner by the name of Fred. He got away and nobody knew where he was. We went to his house and the officers were searching everywhere and they couldn’t find him. I said to his wife, “Come on Hilda, where’s Tommo?”

“I’m not telling you,” she said, looking at me contemptuously.

Eventually they found him, down the road, in a pub in Victoria Street, having a drink. He’d gone up into the loft of his house, then moved along into the next loft and the next, gone down into the house of another criminal family. I think he’d stolen a Vienna clock from a shop.

I’m always telling young people about how I was helped in my life and how they should always aspire to something more, try and progress, and to look for people who can help them, help them get to the next stage.


Friday, 14 October 2016

A little more about James' time in the Marines, and a lovely memory of meeting his wife Millie, to whom he's been married for over sixty years...

There was one man by the name of Warrant Officer Chivers. He inspected the lines. He asked me, “Can’t you stand up straight?”

“I am, sir,” I said.

“Put that in the book!” he shouted.  I had to stand still in front of the mirror for two hours then, as a punishment.

I think he wasn’t born like a normal person, Officer Chivers, he was poured out of a big jug, with neither mother nor father, so he was just standing there, a fully formed Marine, nothing else. You couldn’t imagine him being anything other than a Marine.

As I progressed I was put in charge of a landing craft, I was promoted to coxswain. There were forty four troops, most of them crouched under the gunnels, twenty men on one side and twenty on the other.

It had two big V8 engines. It was a flat bottomed boat, so it could be pulled onto the beach and land the troops on sand and mud and pebble beaches. Pebble beaches were the best for landing. It was buoyant because it was filled with thousands of polystyrene balls, filled ping pong falls that looked like expanded treacle toffee. It wasn’t bullet proof but very few people were killed on landing crafts.

After three and a half years I was posted to a training squadron, where I taught other officers about navigation.

It was on one of my visits home that I first saw my wife, Millie. It was the second week in July. Millie was working as a confectioner, doing an apprenticeship in a village across the river from where I lived, a big shop in Rawley. There was this lovely girl standing outside on the step, wearing a short dress and she had flour on her hands and knees.

They’d been baking only twelve rolls a day, but when Millie started she churned out God knows how many muffins and cakes and buns. She ordered more flour and more yeast, and told them to get a new oven. The manager was astounded.

So I met this girl, and all I could think of was, what a nice person. I had no experience of romance. We saw each other, and wrote letters, and there was an affinity. We had lunch in a restaurant of a beautiful shop, and then later I met her parents. Mr Pearson supplied the meat, a lovely piece of roast meat.

I spent time with Millie’s grandfather too. He had a 1927 Alvis motorbike, and we worked together on it, got some new tyres for it. I think that was why he accepted me, in the end.


                                   WW2 Landing Craft

Thursday, 6 October 2016

Here's the next part of James' story, and his life takes a very different turn to working in a grocery store...

I wanted to join the army but I was still a few weeks away from my birthday. Then I met a friend in the village. He was dressed in a blue uniform, and he told me he’d joined the Royal Marines, and they were recruiting people in the old school in the village.

There were two Grenadier guards without their bearskins on and they pointed us down the corridor to the room. Then there was a sergeant and a chief petty officer, and they asked me if I wanted to join the Navy or the Marines. He said the Marines were the finest corps in the world, "Per mare, per terram", by sea, by land, and he gave me a picture of the Royal Marines. I thought that sounds alright, and I signed up, just like that.

My mother told me I’d received a letter and a warrant from Plymouth, and she packed my things in a case. I was sent on a train to Winscombe in Devon on a certain date. I fell asleep so they lifted me up and put me on the luggage rack. I nearly fell off. My mother was a clever girl and she gave me sandwiches to eat on the way, and a flask of tea of all things, and then the other boys gave me a beer, a half pint glass. It was the first alcoholic drink I’d ever had. It wasn’t meant to make me drunk, just to be with them.

When we got to the big station there was a lot of noise- it was being bombed, and there was crashing and banging. Eventually it stopped and we got out. We were put into files of threes and we ran up the grassy bank to the depot.

We sat down in the mess to have our meals. The first meal I had in the Royal Marines was a tiddy oggy, a huge Cornish pasty that went over the edge of the plate, with meat at one end and jam at the other, and a cup of tea or cocoa, and I ate every last bit. They cleaned the tables with a little brush, made sure there were no crumbs left.

The next morning we were woken up at 6.30am by the sergeant who was very rude. Our civvies were packed up and sent back to our homes, and we went to the store wearing dressing gowns, socks and pants. I put a label on the parcel and it got sent back to my mother in Oldham. The store was full of rows and rows of clothes. We’d all been measured previously and we needed two vests (woollen), boots (two pairs), slippers, tunic top, trousers, all to be stamped.  It was all piling up in front of us. “Get dressed!” Then we got changed and one by one we stood in front of the mirror, and the corps sergeant made sure we properly dressed in Royal Marine battle dress.

Then we went and signed the papers, “Sign there! Sigh there! Sign there!”  We went down to the quartermaster’s store and we were issued with a rifle and a few rounds of ammunition, and a beret. We also had a leather string with a number tag on it. Sergeant Blackburn asked, “Who are you?”

I told him my name and he said, “Forget about being James Smith. Now you’re a Royal Marine.” And that was what happened, you weren’t a person with a name any more, just a number- PLY/H8218.

After that we weren’t allowed out of the barracks. We could go to the naffy, where you could sit down and have a rock cake or a cup of tea and a bun.


We’d walk and run for ten miles and they’d drag you through the drainpipes. We went over the moor, Dalditch Moor. When I see these things on television now, I think, “Did I really do all that?” It’s hard to believe but I did.

Thursday, 29 September 2016

One of the residents at Glenmoor House I've had the the great privilege of meeting is James Smith. James has so many fascinating stories to tell from his experiences as, among other things, a Marine and a prison officer, and for the next few posts I'm going to share some of these. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did...

I was born in Bradbury, Cheshire, on 28th April 1924. We lived at 2, The Cottages.  I went to the infant school there, and the secondary modern was next door, over the big wall. I didn’t pass the 11+ to get into the grammar school so I went to the local school, until I was fourteen.

My first job was in a grocer’s shop, and I worked there, clad in a white coat. The adventurous part for me was cycling to work along the tow path.

I weighed sugar and flour, and two days a week I took orders from the local villages in the rural areas of Cheshire and Derby. There were hills and sometimes I’d push the bike going up, but otherwise it was round the bends and down the hills, across viaducts, along the river, the basket piled high with deliveries. For a young man who loved speed it was wonderful.

Soon I moved to another shop, a high class grocer this time, so I had a smarter coat, and I was a shop assistant.  You start where you are in society and move up from there. I packed the groceries and I engaged with the cheese, Cheshire, Lancashire and a large Stilton that I cut with a wire. It was two shillings and sixpence more in wages.

Some houses that I had to deliver to would have a dog at the gate. One of them had a Great Dane. The lady at my shop used to have bags of broken biscuits that she saved for the children and I would keep these and give them to the dog so I could get to the door. The butcher and the gardener would ask, “How did you get there?”

It seemed like the size of the dog reflected the ascendancy of the family- the bigger the dog, the higher up or richer the family. This is the way life was.

Then one day two plain clothes police officers came and took the manager away. He’d stolen some money, so he was sacked and sent to prison, Strangeways, I think. He had to give up his house and move away when he got out. We sent him letters of condolences.

Next I got a job as a labourer at Woodford Aerodrome. There was an Irish gaffer, and I made tea and got their fish and chips and pie. I was allowed to keep the money that was left over. After that I was a van boy delivering cotton reels and paper and shellac packed in huge baskets to the mills all over Cheshire and Lancashire. They were placed in the van in offloading order. I’d go with Percy the van driver. The lady in the office would give us tomorrow’s route by 4pm, and we’d check it on the map. Manchester, Ashton, Underlime, Liverpool, Preston, big mills.

For lunch we’d have ham or lamb with apple pie for dessert, or sometimes fish cakes, chips and peas, and big pottery mugs of tea. Sometimes when the engine got hot, we stopped and waited for it to cool down. We’d go into a greasy spoon and have bacon butties and chips.

Then the war started and everything changed…

-JAMES


Tuesday, 20 September 2016

Weddings and Work

Today the ladies shared memories of their working lives, how they met their partners, and even a wedding...


I used to work at the clothing factory, for Aquascutum. I did everything. Studding, making trousers, later I was at the silk factory. During the war I went to Finedon, then when it was over they moved us back again.

I met my husband at the pub, when I was twenty one. I’d seen him at the dance before. We weren’t married till four years later because we didn’t have the money.

-HILDA


I was at the steelworks when I met my husband. I didn’t think it was for life. He was smaller than me.

-KITTY


After I left school I stayed at home till I was eighteen. My dad wouldn’t let me work before then, he just wanted to protect me. There were so many forces and that around, you see. They were nice years for me.


Janet, second from right, with ladies from the shop

What a lot of girls did was get service in a big house, but I got a job in a shop. I had to cycle seven miles to the nearest village, but that was a lovely time. It was like I had broken free.

Then a boy called Norman wrote me a letter.  Dear Ginger. I was the only girl in the village with red hair. He must have seen me going up and down to the bank and took a shine to me. I was supposed to meet another boy, but he left a letter for me at the shop where I worked.  He put his address on the back of the envelope so I could write back. So I went to meet him and I recognised him. He was wearing a donkey jacket and boots. We had a pleasant evening at the pictures. The lady in my shop said, “If you’ve got your eye on him and are going out with him, don’t go out of the town lights.” I said, “I haven’t got my eye on anyone.”

Norman was a bricklayer and my Dad warned me against him, saying he won’t be well paid. But Dad said he was polite alright, nice and kind. Norman took me to meet his mum the first Sunday. She was the kindest lady. It keeps me going to think about her.

He got called up to do his military service though, so I waited for him to come back from Hong Kong and then we were married. We had a service in a church. I used to go that church with my mother in law, so I knew the vicar.

It was a beautiful day, a lovely wedding. Everything went swimmingly. The trains were on strike, though, so my aunty couldn’t come. We went to Yarmouth on a taxi, and we were happy.

Later we lived in the big house by the side of a river with a field next to it, on the Melford Road. We rented a room, a big room with a little kitchen on one side of it. I took my own furniture.

When I was having my baby the lady of the manor sat up with me from Saturday night to Tuesday morning.  I thought it was marvellous of her.

They were a happy family, a kind family. Her name was Mrs Hatchett, and he was her second husband. He made marvellous things for people, he was an architect and always in his shed in the bottom of the garden. When I had my boy he came in with the first rose of summer for me. His wife said I don’t even get one and I’ve had five children.

When I was going to have the baby I said I’ll have to go to the hospital but she said over my dead body. You’re staying here, in one of the boys’ rooms. The son kept asking has Janet got a baby yet? He looked in Woman’s Own. Danny was the youngest. He was a sour faced boy and one day he tied the bucket to the dog’s tail. One pound a week with gas, and I did a few jobs for them. I wish we could have stopped there.

We came to Corby then, to get a house and for work. We couldn’t afford to buy a house in Sudbury, and we were told we’d get a house quicker if we moved here. We had a happy life. Norman would do anything for anybody. People would always come and ask him for help. “Norman, are you working today?” We were married for fifty years before he died.

-JANET


Beautiful Janet on her wedding day

Thursday, 8 September 2016

Childhood

Many of us have fond memories of our childhood and school days, and in this post the Glenmoor residents look back at some of theirs, reminiscing about friends, games and chocolate...

To find out more about Avery Healthcare and their work, have a look here.


At the beginning of the war I was in Walthamstow. The school was only there in the afternoon because we shared the school premises, and every other Saturday. We had two evacuees in our house. Peter Watts, and someone Noble. After the war we had a reunion, in Wood Green in North London. Then we met at Aunt Elsie’s funeral in London. We stayed in touch.

-ALAN


I had the cane for dictation. I always failed.

-KITTY


I got the strap at school for talking going up the stairs. I left school at 15 and went to work in a dry cleaner’s, cleaning overalls. Then I left to work for the admiralty, and later at the munitions sorting out guns.

-HILDA


I had a friend whatever school I went to. We read books under the trees. They were lovely summers. Then when the sirens went off we ran towards the shelters, and all fell over each other. We played old fashioned games, skipping ropes and things. It was a little school but my God they taught you. I left at 14 and stayed at home till I was 18. I loved school. I moaned about leaving, why couldn’t I stay? My brother stayed on but he didn’t like school. He took days off. He’d rather be off driving somebody’s tractor. When the officer checked the registrar he couldn’t answer where he’d been.

I remember the time when me and my friend Christine got an old fashioned wheelchair, a basket chair with one handle, and we went down the hill, next to the church, between two fields with sheep in. We had hilarious fun with that old chair. Christine was in it, she was as light as a feather, and I was pushing it down the hill, going faster and faster, and she was laughing so much she fell out and wet herself! I laughed all the way home but she was cursing me!

Then there was a young chap who was staying at the farm, learning about the dairy. He got a pain in his stomach, appendicitis, poor Ted. He was only eighteen but he looked like a man to me, at that time.

“I’ve got a box of chocolates I’ve finished,” he said. He was getting his pyjamas ready for the ambulance and he was going to throw the empty box on the woodpile, but he thought I might like it. “It’s ever such a pretty box. Do you want it?” Me being a little girl, I loved ribbons and bows so I took it. When I opened it to take the paper out I found there was still a layer of chocolates underneath. I was astonished. I shouted up to his window and told him. “Bring it back then,” he said, but I never did. I ate them myself. He went off to the hospital anyway.

The first bag of crisps I ever had, I remember that. The salt fell on the carpet because I tore the sachet in the wrong place. Mum sent me to the pub to get them. She was pleased I got in the door before the bomb dropped. It would have sent us sky high.

(JANET)

Wednesday, 31 August 2016

Wartime Stories

Janet at Glenmoor House has some more wonderful memories about life during the War. It's such an interesting period of history, and Janet really brings it alive with her wonderfully detailed and well observed stories. I hope you enjoy reading them...

I remember there were some Italian prisoners in the village, and my dad had to get them on a bus so they could help out on the farm. One day they asked my mum where she was going. She said she was going to Braintree to do some shopping. They weren’t allowed to go shopping. They asked her to buy some hair nets for them to put over their hair! That tickled me, that did. Those hair nets.

The first bus of evacuees brought the toddlers with their mums. The next day it drew up and it was full of schoolchildren. Someone saw them get off the train, and then it was around the whole village. Mum said, “Don’t you go and pick one up.” She was busy on the farm.

The under-fives went to a big country house in the village. It used to be a nunnery. Us Girl Guides had to and give them baths at night. They wore pixie hoods in different colours, and they’d be walking down the street like a line of little elves. And sometimes we tormented the school children. We’d ask them, “Is it true you’ve got a knitted vest?”  

Mr and Mrs Chancellor evacuated themselves from London.

There was one mother who had five girls, but they were sent to different houses and separated. The pub landlady offered to take all five. When they went back to London after the war they didn’t like it so they came back to live in the village.

We had rations, everyone had rations. My mum knew a woman who had four children so she used to help her out, knit jumpers for them. And if you wanted extra things, extra sugar, you asked the spivs, the wide boys. If you wanted sugar, he could get it.

And nylons. If the women found out there was a shop selling nylons, they’d all queue up for hours. There was a shop in Colchester selling them. We had a packet each, three pairs in a packet, and we guarded them with our lives. It was a great day we got nylons. Once on a birthday I got some silk stockings, and I hugged them. 

There used to be canteens where you could go in and get a dinner for a shilling. Anybody could go in. There were all sorts of places. Tea vans. You could always get a cup of tea. The only food that wasn’t rationed was fish and chips. It was ok for the townies but the country people couldn’t get it. We used to get agricultural pies on Thursdays. They were made of beef or pork. We ordered them the week before, then I went along to the farm to collect them. They made a meal. They were nice.

If you saw a queue you just joined it, even if you didn’t know what it was for. You might get a tin of stuff.

Mum and Dad got extra rations of tea and sugar at harvest time because they were up early and worked till late. They could work late in the summer because there was light, but in the winter it was dark and you couldn’t hang a lantern in the wheat fields because of the enemy planes.

  
                                  Janet's dad on the farm.

I think the war modernised England. We took a step forward in agriculture. The Americans helped us, they built aerodromes, on the flat lands. Anywhere where there was a flat space, they built aerodromes. A lot of fields went under concrete. 

It’s funny when I look back, I wasn’t frightened.

We used to listen to the radio. A lovely story you’d get on a Saturday night. And it was a marvellous day when Churchill came out and said the war had finished. There was whooping and shouting and everyone being silly. Every barn got decorated and we had teas. I don’t know where they got the decorations from! One barn for the adults, and another for the children.

Gradually things went back to normal. There used to be green mesh on the bus windows, to protect passengers from the splintering. That came off when the war was over. 

-JANET



 Janet as a toddler, above, and below, recreating the scene many years later.

Monday, 11 July 2016

Stories from Glenmoor House

I've been talking to the residents of Glenmoor House Care Home in Corby, run by Avery Healthcare, to unearth some wonderful stories from the past. We started off with childhood memories, and the group had some fascinating tales to share, particularly as many of them had grown up during WW2. Here are some of their wartime experiences...


"The car headlamps were hooded. They had masks on them so they shone downwards and the bombers couldn't see them.

They were digging shelters, Anderson shelters, you dug a hole in the garden.  They were sunk in.  Morrison shelters were fitted inside the house, and there were brick ones in the back street for the community. Alarms would go off at school. We used to sing war songs and we had to sing in tune. 

My dad was a congregational minister, and my mum was a housewife. He was what you called a "conscientious objector". They arrested him and sent him to Dartmoor for a few weeks. In the end he didn’t go into the army because he was taken ill in prison."

-ALAN                                                                                                                                                                                                     -

Adolph Hitler visited my house when I was a young girl in Germany. He was very handsome, and had kind eyes.

-CLAIRE                                                                                                                                 


We queued for everything. There were queues everywhere, and you were always at the end of it.
The coupons were a headache. We had rations. 2oz butter, 1 egg a week, bread, butcher meat, bananas, extra sugar for making jam. We didn’t starve. Everybody cooked. 

We used to get eighteen clothing coupons. You used two for stockings. People were selling coupons. We were still using them after the war, for five years we used coupons. We got used to it, it was a part of life. 

The land girls got extra rations of sweets. They smuggled them and gave them to the children. Girls joined up for the land army without being conscripted.

They took all the metal to make guns. The railings were all gone. They took it all, railings, old saucepans, even the lipstick covers, the hair clips and the curlers. Women were working in the munitions factories so men could go to war.

Every field on the farms had a searchlight. Air raids happened early in the morning. You heard the machine guns and you'd try and hide. They dropped bombs on the boatyards, they were after the ships. We had ten days of bombing in Barrow.

Signs got taken down so planes couldn’t see, and the lights on cars had grids on. There were blackouts. Even if you could see a pinhole of light you’d get a knock on the door for letting out light. You got fined 10 bob, half a pound, for letting the light out. You could get a good dress or shoes for a shilling.

-KITTY

                                                                                                                               
My father made clothes, my mum was a housewife. When the sirens went off Mum hauled us out of bed and put us under the table, me and my brother. I remember playing with a car, under the table. It quietened down soon afterwards.

Everybody brought out a plate of food for the soldiers at the end of the war. They all baked for the street parties, and if it rained we went in the barns. There were no children's toys during the war. Nothing at Christmas.

-HILDA
                                                                                                                                    

During the war, when we were in Hertfordshire, we stood in the field and we could see the flames from London. We dived under the hedges. My dad told me not to be scared. It was dreadful for the Londoners though. 

One time we heard there was a bomb in the farmyard, an incendiary. We were told to go home and we spent all day at the windows. It was near the school and church. There was a note inside the bomb. Then soldiers came and set it off. We all thought it was a joke.

Everybody had a gas mask, and an identity card. My number was DFFRR. We practised at school. The siren would go off and we would jump up and put it on. The babies had mickey mouse masks, and for tiny babies there were cradles with a cover.

We lived on a dairy farm. Mum worked in the dairy too. She would get up at five. One day I looked out of the window, and saw a parachute in the field, stuck in an apple tree. Dad went on the bike to check, there was no petrol ration. Then the Home Guard came and they tracked down the German soldier in another village.

Dad worked on farm. He had a bad eye. The spark from the fire flew in it when he was three. He couldn’t go into the army, so he was in the Home Guard. He was a lovely man. He kept the village boys amused, played cricked and football with them on the field.

Mum stopped reading the paper. It was too gruesome. One day I was trying to read about Poland and she snatched it away.

Men were digging on the first Sunday it started. Making shelters. Then the Yanks took over the villages. Have you got any gum, chum? That's what us kids would say, trying to talk like the Americans. They were in charge of searchlights and aerodromes. They'd come and ask for eggs and buy them. We had two or three chickens. Every Christmas one would be killed and roasted. Mum tried to kill a chicken for grandma once, but it got up and ran away.


Then there were the war brides. Girls got married to the Yanks. But they were disheartened when they went over. They were disillusioned and broken hearted. They couldn't afford much. They ended up coming back through unions and then they were looked down on. I remember one of them who stayed there, she was happy. But otherwise it was a sad time for the war brides.

I’ll tell you something that’ll make you creep. One day they built gallows on the edge of the churchyard. They were built of wood. I was mesmerised by these gallows. We asked, "What is it?" They said if they catch any Germans in the village they’ll hang them upside down. We were petrified, we stayed a good foot away from them. It was a hideous thing to do, and in the end they had to take it down.



-JANET

It was lovely to hear the memories that the group so generously shared, and we have plenty more to come. And please, if you or anyone you know would like to share a story, please get in touch!

Friday, 10 June 2016

Inspire Artist's Residency

The Inspire Artist's Residency is a community project, led by me, Azma Dar, a writer, with the aim of exploring the stories and memories of people living in Corby. The project is funded by Made in Corby, an Arts Council supported initiative that helps local people take part in arts activities.

Over the next few weeks I'll be working with people in the local community to talk about their memories and experiences, and will be sharing them on this blog.

I've already begun working with the wonderful residents of Glenmoor House Care Home, and they've been reminiscing about everything from ration cards to the Royal Marines. It's a real privilege to listen to the lovely stories they have, and I look forward to sharing them on here. And if you live in Corby and have a story to tell- then please get in touch. Quirky, funny, scary, romantic- we want to hear about them!