Wednesday 31st August, 1960

Eva to the family:

Dear Alec June Susan & Carol

Just getting a few lines off this week, thanks for letter. The weather this end has been changeable although not like last week. Saturday was terrible here, we had a terrific thunder storm & Hack’s Cottages were inches deep in water & sewage so we gather.

Believed to be Hacks Cottages, Old Church Road. (c) Geoff Hale, sourced from clevedon-civic-society.org.uk

Our new car (to us) is very nice although I liked our old one very much. It is ivory & pale grey quite a good combination of colours when you look at it & the wheel had an ivory centre. The inside is red upholstered stinks of cigar or cigarettes but that will go soon. The only draw back that I can see there are no pockets but a good wide shelf & a small place above for a bag. The light on the roof switches on when the door is opened. The inside of roof is plastic & can be washed & you can double lock the back doors so that children can’t meddle with them. It will carry five comfortably & seems a little wider than the A40. I daresay Joan will be green with envy & want to change “The Countryman” when they see it. They will be up one Sunday soon.

Last Friday afternoon Mr Palmer came up & showed us his gold watch he was presented with also Mrs Palmer’s necklace, brooch & earrings at the do at Bristol on the occasion of his retirement from Hawkins Ltd. His employers also gave him £400. We understand there is no work pension so suppose that is why he hung on until he was 70.

During the time he was here was had another visitor, Mr Stephens called in on a road trip from Hereford. He is much slimmer but looks very fit.

We are still selling tomatoes but the bean stakes have dwindled out.

Was very pleased to hear that Mr & Mrs Baker are at last going to retire from the shop. It will do them good to have a rest but they have another worry until they find another place to live in. Westcliff seems a long way away, as far as we are I should say.*

Hope Alec got on alright at the meeting, no doubt you will get another day in lieu of Tuesday.

Ian Spencer seems A1 again & is shopping for his mother. we hear that the specialist called to see him while he was in bed in the hospital & asked him a lot of questions which he answered then the next day another man called to ask some more questions & he said do I have to say it all over again, what I told the other chap?

We have more roses coming in November & I think they will be A1. They are Hybrid tea: Beaute, Mojave, Grandmere Jenny, Opera, Cleopatra, Ethel Sanday, Konrad Adenauer, Lilac Time, Sutter’s Gold.

This morning we received a nice catalogue from Waltham Cross (Cuthbert’s). We did not send for it & roses cheaper than the ones we bought at Almondsbury, something to note for future requirements.

Dad had two weddings on the go last Saturday at Parish Church & he & Stanley James have been asked to go to one at Portishead on Saturday as they are short of ringers. Nice little extra for them. The house at the bottom has not been sold yet & there is great activity next dor, in there every day.

I think this is all now as will leave any other news for Dad on Friday.

Love to all from Mum & Dad.

*Westcliff is roughly sixty miles by road from South Ruislip, Clevedon approximately twice that.

Sunday 28th August, 1960

Alec to his parents:

Dear Mum and Dad

Thank you very much for last letter, note you have gone back to the old paper.  What was the result of the experiment?  Carol soon shook off the effects of her car jaunt and was as right as ninepence when we got home apart from being a little tired.

Still no news of the applications. Saw John Welchman ( who went to L.M.R. ) last week and he told me that he had the tip off from his own Staff people that the bar had been put up against other Regions taking W.R. staff ( Work Study) and a similar bar also applied in the reverse direction.  This has damped his ardour a bit as he has been campaigning as hard as possible to get back to W.R.  The bar also applies to Manning who was the first to go. As you may expect those of us who sat tight are feeling a little smug now. I hare heard on the Grape Vine that interviews for the W.R. Out of Cats will take place on or about September 20th.  There is considerable amount of time lost when it is viewed from the pocket angle but I suppose from the Organisation’s point of view little time has been lost as the Section has not been set up yet.

The temporary assignment is getting me into contact with the nobs all right, I have to wear my best suit every day now just in case.  Next Tuesday I am going to Cardiff to a meeting with Pattisson, Moore Bennett and his two Assistants, Hankins and Alwyn Jones. We shall also have someone representing the Docks Manager and no doubt several hangers-on.  As I am on holiday this week, the interruption is not wholly welcome but never-the-less it is not the meeting to miss.

Sorry funds running low on the rose stakes – you will have to have a flag day ( Alexandra Rose ).*  Re Dahlias – went out and picked a large boxful of pink cactus blooms this mornng.  These I believe came from a tuber Geoff gave me and the blooms are about four inches across.  They are very good particularly as they make such long single stems.  Note your business day starts at 5-50am,  What a carry-on in retirement. I should be inclined to change Chimney sweep.**

Note your old car in for steering attention.  Mr Payne is wise to be so careful about steering in the London Area but I would not have thought there was anything amiss with its steering gear.  When I got the petrol and oil at Eastcote for you I thought how well it handled.  I suppose that was by comparison.  I must read up again the conditions to be observed when cars undergo a change of owner ship and will let you know what documents I need. No more progress on the garage yet.  Although I ordered garage last week they want me to fill in their official order form and so that has delayed things one week.  The order will go off tomorrow and I shall order some hard core same day.  I may ring round and get several Quotations, including one for the whole job. 

Had a laugh about Elford.  Note you have started some orange wine.  A tip worth passing on is to give the brew plenty of sugar.  I made some once and it was a good strong wine but very bitter.  I think there may be a tendency to sharpness that can only be counteracted by increasing the amount of sugar.  I shall have a look at the Elderberries promised tomorrow when we go to West Drayton, and pick some I hope.  You have been very busy on the wine stakes – I just do not seem to get round to it.

I note the pattern of your car. By looking at the back of several parked Austins I had worked out roughly what it looked like but you have as yet not said what colour model you have.  Saw one advertised in London Garage on Saturday for £461** but did not look to see what condition it was in or what year for that matter. 

Well we have news this time of the probable acceptance by June’s Mum and Dad of the latest offer for their property. Our latest news is that they have agreed to sell and to be out by the end of October.  Of course this creates something of a hubbub as there is the question of disposing of stock ( at retail price ) finding somewhere to store any furniture, deciding what part of the country to start looking for a house to buy and then finding one and buying it.  I think there is an attraction for Westcliffe on Sea but a reluctance to leave the London Area, where so many friends and relations live.  My own feeling is that all other things being equal the price of property at Westcliffe is likely to be much lower than here.  We shall await and no doubt assist developments.

Roy has had an accident in his car.  It happened last Thursday when he was stationary outside Leslie’s shop in Hanwell.  The brakes of a lorry failed when presumably coming down Cuckoo Hill and ran into the back of Roy’s car and damaged another car as well.  We understand there is substantial damage to Roy’s oar but it is for repair and it should be ready in a few days.  I do not know now he will get off for claim.

We have Pauling staying with us this week-end.  June and I and the children motored over to Battersea yesterday to see the flat and bring her back. The roads were shocking going over, I think we got mixed up with the Chelsea crowd. As Roy’s car is out of action shall probably go over again later in week to take her to their place.**** 

We had a short run out to Pinner Park again today and had a few minutes’ sunshine.  Host of the day has been very wet and depressing but it did come out warm for a half hour or so.  We had a short ride through Pinner and ambled back through Eastcote.

Have still not cut the grass, it is quite long now and soaking wet.  It will become a major operation if I leave it much longer.  Runner beans coming in nicely now but no sign of tomatoes ripening.  One pumpkin about the size of a tennis ball but nothing else to report.  Doug has completed fence down his left hand side of garden.

Well that is all for now except to wish that you keep well untill we hear from you again. Love from us all.

*Alexandra Rose Day used to be almost the equivalent of ‘Poppy Day’ in the UK, with people buying little paper roses to wear in their lapels and the proceeds going to charity. I hadn’t heard of the charity for many years and supposed it might have been wound-up, but on checking I see that they are still in business and are largely concerned with issuing food vouchers to impoverished families – which is great news.

**Would you indeed, Alec? Personally I would value a tradesman who turns up on time more highly than an extra few minutes of sleep; your mileage, as they say, may vary.

***The equivalent of just under £11,000 today.

****Can’t imagine why as the Tube was – and still is – pretty convenient for the journey!

Thursday 25th August, 1960

Leonard to the family [on reverse of Table 166; BRISTOL, GLOUCESTER, CHELTENHAM, WORCESTER and BIRMINGHAM]:

Dear Alec, June, Susan and Carol

Another nice long letter from you on Tuesday morning – many thanks. Hope Carol alright again now but June’s outing to Amersham Common must have been spoilt by events – put an extra skirt in car June next time. Still it must have been disappointing.

So you have heard nothing of applications yet? Not a lot of time lost surely? Anyhow we hope you get an interview at least. How is the temporary assignment turning out? Presumably Barnes still away at Birmingham? If you do have to stop at Cardiff for a night or two and can manage to spend an odd one here you know we should be very pleased.

Ian Spencer came home on Monday but I’ve not seen him about yet – perhaps he is confined to barracks for time being.

Yes it was bush rose trees ordered at Almondesbury and I suspect they will turn up some time in November. Funds would not run to standards – a big difference in price. Present suggestion is that we plant them in oblong plot on lawn.

Note your remarks re: dahlias and slugs. Frankly I don;t know whether mine have been attacked or not – they are on far side of garden next to Heels and seem to be bearing a good number of flowers but I’ve not examined them. As you say they do not need a lot of attention.

Have had quite a week so far one way and another. Mum had chimney sweep in Wednesday for the two fireplaces – he arrived at 5.50 a.m. but as he was expected at 6.0 a.m. he was not kept waiting but it was raining in torrents. On Tuesday I put in the onion seed and at 7.45 p.m. I should think we had a cloud burst – water lying about on garden afterwards for some time. Pond filling up with rain water so no opportunity to finish off that job yet. The car arrived Wednesday evening and LTA 259 was taken round to Binding & Payne’s for final attention – slight adjustment to steering column. Mr Payne said as it was going to London he would like to take up the bit of play in the wheel – quite a small job actually but he wanted to do it.

Mum and I went shopping in ours today – gear lever now on steering wheel upright – takes a bit of getting used to but quite satisfactory. Note you are able to accelerate things your end as result of Council;’s co-operation – your real problem is still the disposal of present car. The difficulty is obviously due to the new regulations imminent in respect of cars ten years old. Payne says there will be no difficulty with LTA 259 – it is in really good condition. The mileage recorded is 46284 and is the same engine as was in car when it first came from factory. When shall I send on log book? You will require this for various details for your Insurance Coy. when you transfer insurance.

The radio licence is due for renewal on 1st Sept and I shall try and get it out in your name as licences are not transferable.

Hope your work on concrete base an erection of garage proceeds according to plan – unfortunately I’m too far away to be of any assistance but shall be thinking of you frequently.

To date have picked 191 lbs runner beans and 81 lbs tomatoes – Elford taking all surplus I cannot sell direct to customers. When he saw car this morning (he had 24 lb beans) there were a few remarks but I told him I could not have had the same if he had not bought the runner beans and tomatoes – he appreciated repartee.

Tuesday last when I took stuff down to him I noticed about two dozen oranges in a basket in his yard – he was giving me the basket and I commented on what seemed a waste. he said they were not quite suitable for sale and was going to dump them. I picked the lot out and they are fermenting now for orange wine – a cheap brew.

Today Mr Cornish came over and said if I did not have the elderberries at once the birds would have the lot in a couple of days. Needless to say I’ve now got elderberries fermenting also. It is an early season for them and if you can I should get hold of yours as soon as possible. Fortunately the ground is in such a state I cannot get on it so these indoor jobs keep me busy.

Attached slip cut out of May 1960 Practical Motorist which you brought down. This is description of our car but don’t think we gave £660* for it – far from it.

Well I think this is the lot once more – hope you are all better again now in spite of awful weather.

All our love to you both and lots of kisses for the girls.

Mum & Dad

*Roughly £15,500 in 2020 currency.

Sunday 21st August, 1960

Alec to his parents:

Dear Mum and Dad

Thank you for very newsy letter duly received on the dot. Note the change of paper but do not get the point of saving postage, – have you had to pay more than 3d on them up till now? You certainly seem to be unlucky with your visit to Almondesbury but then any visit is a risk this Summer. Note you have bought nine trees to be delivered in season.  When is the probable date of delivery? I imagine you have gone in for Standards or half standard as you already have some very nice, climbers and/or ramblers. On reading your letter again I see that you have bought bush roses and I am wondering where you win find to put them, – in the front garden perhaps?

I wonder what can have happened to young Ian. It must have been a worry for his parents. It must have been something out of the ordinary but as he will be coming home shortly could not have been very serious.

I cannot see how I can put Clevedon on the Cardiff route except later on when I shall be spending several days there each week. It does not pay to go down for the day as cannot get much work done. If I go down for three days or so, I could possibly pop over for a night provided the trains are suitable. I believe the 6-30 a.m. Weston is useful for getting back.

You have picked and sold an amazing weight of beans also tomatoes. It is quite staggering to think of 1.5 C.W.T. of beans.

Have not heard anything about Uncle Will since last we wrote to you but then we are not on the direct news line. We get our news second hand from Yiewsley.

I should not be at all surprised if the house at the bottom does not go for something near the advertised price. On reflection, although the house itself is not worth the money, it is set in good surroundings and there are immense possibilities in the place for improvement.

Still have not heard anything about my applications, the 0.M. job on the L.M.R. has gone down the drain but it was never really on as a possibility. I understand from the grape vine ( sources external to the office, also sworn to secrecy, ) that the out of category jobs in Work Study will be interviewed very shortly, and that the panel has been selected to do this. Three senior Western Region Work Study Men ( Operating ) are reported to be the leading contenders apart from anything off other Regions. Nothing about the B.T. C. Job. Should have thought that I would have got an interview unless this move has been squashed from above. Geoff told me early this week that he had high expectations as a result of his recent interviews.  That can mean anything from certainty to wishful thinking.

Re slugs, don’t for one moment think that the Dahlias have been left alone. A large number of the shoots never reach maturity. There are slug bites on all the lower leaves and many off the higher ones, and even flower heads have been nibbled at. The only veg they seem to steer clear of are the tomatoes, and fortunately so far nothing has attacked them. We want some sun badly as there is no colour in them yet. As said before I think you should do something about dahlias another year. They are dead easy money. The tubers multiply rapidly, and each year you have at least four times as many available fox planting as the previous year. The flowers grow themselves and only require the effort to pick them. I believe they fetch a fairly good price round these parts but you would know your local price.

Only had a few minutes to talk to Matthews so can not say if he has had any promotion since he Joined the E.R. He said he liked it very much and that he had never been treated so well. I wonder if it has occurred to him that his treatment is as a result of his new higher standing. A bit different from being one of the clerks.

So the deisels have at last reached Clevedon, You say the sound of the horn can be heard on your estate – I take it the drivers name is John Peel.

The sloe wine is nearly all gone – only enough for two more glasses. I did not water it but Peter liked it so much that he has had most of it and I have kept it for his infrequent visits. Had some of your Cherry this week end it was very nice. I am glad the Cosmeas have been brought to the flowering stage. They are not a very special flower but grow quite large and provide many heads for cutting. They throw their seed like marigolds so if you do not want them in same place next year do not let them go to seed.

We are both glad you have managed to select a car you both like. I know the new Austin Cambridge but I am a little uncertain of recognising the 1957 model. I expect you are enjoying the change. It is fortunate that you have been able to garage your old car as it would only have deteriorated outside. We may be able to take it away earlier than at first thought – more about that later. With the same post as your letter I had the O.K. from the Council to erect the garage. Although I only wrote them on August 9th they managed to present the details at the Council Meeting of 14th Aug instead of my having to wait for their September 14th meeting. I can now order the garage to be delivered, and the three to four weeks delay in delivery will enable me to complete the base. I have put the shuttering up and secured it as best I can against the destructive efforts of the girls. Next Saturday I shall be getting three cubic yards of hard core then during the following week ( when we are on leave ) I shall have the ready mixed concrete delivered in L cubic yard lots*. ( I expect it will need three ) With this out of the way the erection of the garage can be done in an afternoon and evening. At this rate arrangements this end will have been completed by the end of the second or third weeks in September.

We have had no one enquiring about the old car and I doubt if we shall. If I were to advertise it for £10 the result would still be the same. The ten year test has got them all playing safe. I paid nothing to Binding and Paynes for the examination of the car. They only told me what I wanted to know – which was the condition of the chassis. No further examination was made or report on any other part so I doubt whether they will make a charge.

Potatoes seem to do very well down in the new plot. I had a good crop here the first year I dug out the bottom plot. Something in the newly turned turf I believe – apart from leather jackets.

We have all been out to Amersham Common with Delph Roy and Christopher, Norman and Pauline. They picked us up about 11-00am and off we went in the two cars. Of course Carol was sick just as we got to Chorley Wood – all over June. This meant she had to take off her skirt and stayed wrapped in newspapers and macs all day**. Carol recovered enough to enjoy herself but she is a little off colour to-day. The common is a very popular place. There were few people there when we got there but by late afternoon many cars had arrived. Where we parked is the fairway of a municipal golf course – nice and wide so that the children had a long runway under full observation. Norman***, Roy and I walked nearly half mile down to a pretty pub only to find they had closed at 2.0 p.m. The scenery was good and the air pure so I expect it has done us all a lot of good especially as the sun came out and kept it warm and sunny all day.

Well there it is for now. Hope you are both keeping fit.  Love from us all till next time.

*(sic) – but on Alec’s typewriter it was necessary to use a lower-case ‘L’ as a ‘1’, so I assume this is what was intended.

**You really would have thought June would be smart enough to take a change of clothes with her, wouldn’t you, considering how often this seems to have happened?

***At the moment I have no idea who Norman was. Roy had a brother, but he lived in Germany so I doubt it was him. Norman may have been a boyfriend of Pauline’s, but if so he didn’t stay around long enough to make much of an impression.

Thursday 18th August, 1960

Leonard to the family – not on recycled timetable paper for a change but honest-to-goodness foolscap!

Dear Alec June Susan & Carol

Many thanks for your letter with all the news received on Tuesday* – thought I would try different paper this week to enable both sides to be used & economise on postage. Glad to hear you are all keeping fairly well now – the weather seems to be improving and that should help. We duly went to Almondesbury last Thursday evening but unfortunately it rained practically all the time we were there so curtailed our walk round the gardens. We bought nine bush rose trees to be forwarded at proper season and Mr & Mrs Griffiths both went with us as between Bristol and Almondesbury. They had of course been out several times before and already have some of the rose trees growing although they recently ordered a few more. Rained all the way home and it was necessary to wipe down car before shutting up garage. This should always be done in rainy weather otherwise chromium will rust.

Must tell you that young Ian Spencer was rushed off to Ham Green Hospital last weekend with suspected Polio or Meningitis but fortunately he proved negative to both and should be home again in a day or two – what a scare! They kept him in a ward on his own too.

My memory is very hazy about George Jenkins still – I do not think he could have attended many meetings. Note you visited Cardiff during the week and had a chat with him. Could wish Clevedon was on the Cardiff route or vice versa then you could have called and picked up a parcel of greenstuff etc. including tomatoes and runner beans. Total weight picked of latter to date 151 lbs and getting on for another 20 available now. Elford took 24lbs this morning at 4d per lb to sell at 6d.

Note no improvement in Uncle Will – it is unfortunately a long job at that age but it’s nice to know that he’s being well looked after and is in pleasant surroundings – that makes a difference. No more news of Mrs Drewett but we see Margaret and family are with her this week on holiday.

Still plenty of work going on next door where Cummings formerly lived. Yes everybody around here is having a quiet chuckle over the price asked for the house at the bottom of the field but strange to say we understand one or two possible buyers have looked it over.

So you have heard nothing of your applications – a bit early perhaps but we should like to know if and when you do. Geoff told us in a letter received earlier this week that things were ‘boiling’ up so far as he is concerned and he is expecting something good. Understand Stells and the girls are at Exmouth this week and Geoff going Exeter Friday and on to Exmouth Sunday returning London next day.

You seem to be up against it properly with the greenstuff in your garden. There are certainly more slugs in Ruislip than here – the dahlias must be too tough for them. Glad you have a nice show of these. The few we have are blooming all right but they are on the far side of garden away from the concrete path consequently no-one bothers with them.

Fancy running into Doug Matthews – expect he is now well up in the railway world. Incidentally Diesels are now working the Clevedon Branch and the sounding of the horn can be clearly heard when I’m working on garden and that is about as near as I want to be to them.

Your supply of sloe wine seems to be lasting well or have you topped up with water? It will be a few weeks yet (Sept) before elderberries will be ripe enough for wine making. Am hoping I shall be able to find enough for my use in the field. Our Cosmeas are in full flower and look very nice – they stand up to the wind quite well too.

We have now decided on our new secondhand (bit of Irish) car. Mr Payne brought it up last Saturday for inspection. It was one he hand picked for us of the several coming under his notice. Both Mum and I liked it at sight and after getting its history and present condition I went out for a run in it last Tuesday with Mr Payne. He (Mr Payne) had had it examined and overhauled and as price was what we had suggested to him several weeks ago we have agreed to have it. It is a Nov 1957 Austin A55 Cambridge – the only doubt – to my mind – was the mileage record 38,000 but Mr Payne said that was nothing to worry about these days and he had put the engine through its tests and it was in excellent order – this I proved when out in it. Unfortunately it is not taxed to end of year and I’ve had to take out license for remainder of current year which as you know mean transferring insurance from LTA 259 to the new one. LTA 259 will now be laid up until you transfer your insurance to it from your present car and when the time comes the Certificate of Insurance will have to be sent this end before LTA 259 can again be put on the road.

Have had one bit of luck – the car will be kept in a garage close here until you are ready for it. Mum was talking to the Clarkes (who live in bungalow next to Miss Martin’s house in St Andrews Drive) about it and said our old car would probably have to stand outdoors when the offer was made to use their garage temporarily – they have no car, so tomorrow Friday I shall run it round. Have already taken out our odds and ends and left in those articles that belong to car. Have told Clarkes I think car may be going to Ruilsip about middle of Oct. so hope your preparations may be completed by then. In the meantime have you had any luck with GJO 120? and incidentally did you pay for the examination of it at Binding & Payne’s? I told them to debit me but have never had the account.

Well that’s most of our news for this week. I must say however that I’ve had a bumper crop of potatoes and hope they will keep. One sort (Dr McIntosh) I only put in 14lbs i.e. 20 potatoes each in four rows and I’ve dug out 2 cwt – one potato weighting 1 lb 15 oz. The other sorts planted were also prolific but not quite as good as the one mentioned above. Disease was scarce – only an odd potato here and there having any trace of it.

No more for now – hope you are all keeping fit and well.

All our love to you both and again lots of kisses for the girls – Susan & Carol.

Mum & Dad

*Alec’s letter of Sunday 14th August, 1960, to which this is a reply, has unfortunately not survived.

The Fabulous Baker Boys

Left to right: Will, Rob, Stan, Reg, Frank and Cyril. Date unknown, but certainly inter-war; 1930s perhaps?

I thought we’d done this before, but apparently not. Therefore – since we have recently mentioned June’s uncles Stan (who died in May 1960) and Will (who had a stroke that same year but survived), and we will shortly be mentioning Cyril who also died in 1960, and June’s father Frank is never far from the proceedings – it’s probably time to do them justice.

William Augustus Baker, 1854-1897, who described himself as a ‘tea dealer and rent collector’ (although we suspect his tea dealing was done from a barrow on a street corner somewhere) was June’s grandfather; however he died nearly thirty years before she was born. He had married Alice Esther Daniel in early 1854, and by the end of that year the first of their nine children was born; this was Alice Edith Macord Baker, 1882-1962, (‘Macord’ being a family name with a fascinating pedigree of its own), who is the Miss Baker (Aunt Eda) who sometimes appears in the letters.

Apart from Eleanor, 1886-1964, who made an interesting marriage and was subsequently the family superstar, all the rest were boys: William Ernest (Will), 1882-1962; Robert Lionel (Rob), 1885-1971; Stanley (Stan), 1888-1960; Reginald (Reg), 1890-1968; Frank, 1892-1963; Cyril, 1893-1960; and Hubert Dudley (‘Bunny’), 1896-1917.

Frank was blinded in one eye as the result of a childhood accident, which kept him out of military service in the First World War when – as far as I know – all his brothers went; however he was able to serve as an ambulance driver. Bunny, who was in the Civil Service Rifles, was killed in 1917 on active service and buried at Railway Dugout cemetery, Ypres. Alice was awarded a pension on his behalf.

All the surviving ‘boys’ except Frank joined the GWR. Again, his disability prevented it; Frank became ‘business manager’ for Eleanor when she was widowed, and ran a number of hotels, pubs, and other commercial operations on her behalf.

As you will have gathered, railways were what brought the family together; Alec Atkins, as a young man, came to lodge at the house in Ealing which was then owned by Eda Baker – and which presumably gave priority to young GWR railwaymen – and there he met her niece, June, whom he married in 1954.

Taken in the late 1950s, so potentially about 25 years later than the picture above. Left to right: Will, Rob, Stan, Reg and Cyril. I would like to thank the ‘boys’ for kindly lining up in birth order each time and making a humble chronicler’s life easier as a result.

In the late 1950s the ‘boys’ were featured in an issue of the GWR magazine; their photo was taken at an annual cricket match and an article was written about their many years of service – which must by this point have totalled about 200 years, a small drop in the ocean of the joined families’ overall service. Five of June’s uncles were railway staff; so were both of Alec’s uncles, his father, his grandfather and a myriad of predecessors dating back to the earliest recorded member of the family in railway service who was a packer in the goods department at Weston-super-Mare.

Apart from Frank the ‘boy’ I have the clearest recollection of is Rob, who outlived all the others. He lived in a house in Ealing – very close to, and possibly later subsumed by, a large branch of Sainsbury’s – with his second wife, Rhoda, and an excitable little white poodle called Pepe. Rob was house-bound and in very poor health, and as result he bought the first colour television I ever saw in private hands – although I had seen a demonstration of colour TV in a department store a short time before that – in order to watch racing in the afternoons. Whether or not he ever had a flutter, I am not in a position to say.

I’m in intermittent contact with Rob’s grandson Christopher, who is one of the many cousins I’ve been in touch with during my family history researches. Chris’s father, Roy, very kindly sent me a whole batch of old family photos before his death a few years ago – some of which I will be reproducing here in due course.

Friday 12th August, 1960

Eva to the family:

Dear Alec June Susan & Carol

Many thanks for June’s letter. I am very glad the doctor says there is nothing seriously wrong with your mother. I expect she is feeling the strain of years of hard work without much holidays or chance to rest. I do hope they will soon see a house or a bungalow they fancy, they are difficult to come by these days as I don’t think there is all that much building going up. Houses this way are fetching a good price & that cuts both ways.

Susan is quite coming on with her writing also drawing. I expect they have been busy in the garden these last few days, it’s been really lovely. This morning although a peculiar sky it has not rained yet. (Leon says it’s just started.)

The men hope to finish today thank goodness. There is an awful smell of paint & pickled onions down here as Dad has done eight jars & I have them in the kitchen cupboard & every tie I open a drawer we get a whiff of onion.

Spencers were going for their holiday & the morning when they should have gone Ian developed chicken pox; Mr S doesn’t mind and hopes Ann will catch it as well.

Dad has been busy cutting all the hedges again, the long one on the lawn behind the flower bed was awful, thought we should never finish picking up the stuff, it hadn’t been cut for two years. We are still selling beans & tomatoes & I suppose we shall soon have to be picking apples, there is no end to it.

Heels have gone to Croyd for a fortnight. Hope Alec can call in for a few hours before he goes to Cardiff this week.

The house at the bottom of our field is not sold yet they wanted £5,250, but this week it’s down to £4,850.*

I went into next door one afternoon with a cup of tea for the girl who is getting married in October, she was busy painting. They have a lovely Claygate fireplace in the fireplace in the front & a nice one at the back beige. She told me they are locking up the front two bedrooms & lounge & going to live in the back for the present so presume they are only finishing the back.

Mrs Marshall & Bessie & a friend opposite her are on a tour of Scotland (coach) for a fortnight.

They have a wedding at the beginning of October at St Peter’s but bells at Old Church but nothing for Sept. other than what they have done already.**

There are notices on the beach at the Pill telling people that there is an unexploded bomb in the mud also there may be several so it has scared people away. If the bomb goes off I don’t think we shall be affected by it. Apparently they have lain in the mud for years; expect they dropped that night they came to bomb Weston.***

Well I think this is all for now so will close with love to you all.

from

Mum & Dad

*£114,000 or thereabouts in 2020 money.

**I confess I don’t know what it means except possibly that with St Peter’s being a new church they may not have had their bells installed yet and the wedding peal would have to be rung elsewhere, and that there were no other bookings for September except what was already known about.

***This was in June 1942, and was actually two nights. I haven’t (so far) been able to pin down the particular bomb that turned up in 1960, but the most recent one appeared in the vicinity of the local ASDA in 2018!

Thursday 11th August, 1960

Leonard to the family [on the reverse of Table 164: NEWPORT, HEREFORD and SHREWSBURY – HEREFORD, WORCESTER and WOLVERHAMPTON; Mondays to Fridays, and Saturdays]:

Dear Alec June Susan & Carol

Many thanks for letter duly received on Tuesday morning – am writing this a bit early as we are going to Bristol again this evening calling at the Griffiths home then on to the rose gardens at Almondesbury [sic]. Mum had made out her list of trees required and I hope she has the money for them also. Actually we went through Almondesbury* last Thursday en route to Symonds Yat but obviously we were on the main road and did not pass the gardens.

Glad to gear Susan getting on with her alphabet – shows she is keen to learn and I expect Carol wants to know what’s going on. Yes I expect you will get plenty of help with the garage from both girls – you will have to keep them in a barbed wire enclosure.

Am afraid Mr Newman’s trouble is arthritis and no matter what he takes or does for it there is no improvement and my own opinion is that it is getting gradually worse. Otherwise he is quite well in himself. Their two nieces should have returned home last Sunday and the elder resumed work at Uxbridge on Monday.

Since writing the above our neighbour at bottom of field** has been over to ask for help with a wasps’ nest in the roof of his bungalow. Only had a ‘Flit’ to spray into small cavity but incoming wasps would not face it so I sealed hole up with some Polyfilla – hope it will do trick otherwise he must get some cyanide for them. Whilst there police turned up and asked who had phoned them about an object floating in the river – query unexploded bomb: it was the people in end house and the ‘bomb’ was a buoy used for the anchor line for small ships in the backwater. Some excitement!

Yes Symonds Yat is a very nice place and well worth a visit but it must be a fine day. Could be a most miserable spot in wet weather.

Note you have made a start with garage foundations – have heard nothing from Payne lately but I know he is looking out for us. Looks as if you are going to have difficulty disposing of your present car but we hope you get a fair price.

You may have mentioned previously about Cecil Moore but I am sorry it did not register. He was rather fortunate to follow through like that to the better job without moving. Note you had a trip to Dartford during the week but should think there would be nothing doing with Computor etc. concern at £50 per hour. Does this charge only cover actual working hours or the whole of the time the apparatus is away from the firm’s premises?***

I should remember George Jenkins but unfortunately do not – presumably he took Gedroych’s place. I knew him well also his predecessor Gibbons.

Note that June has accepted Insurance Co’s offer re: necklace – we can only say again how sorry we both are that it was lost and at Clevedon.

So you have no definite information of June’s Uncle Will’s illness – can only hope he will get over it in sufficient measure to get out and about again.

We have an idea that the home next door went for £1800**** but it must be remembered it was in very poor condition inside and out. The outside of Mrs Drewett’s is pretty rough but we have no idea what it’s like inside. Now we hear the one at bottom of field – where Miss Martin used to live – is for sale, advertised in last week’s Mercury for £5,250***** or near offer. What optimists!

Note your application for B.T.C. job has gone forward and shall await events with interest.

You mentioned a church at bottom of Queen’s Walk nearly finished; query at Whitby Road end close to shops?****** We have not been in the new St Peter’s yet but understand it is quite nice.

So you have both been busy on front garden. Am not surprised you had to use mattock. It looks terrible stuff to me and to break it down would need a lot of time over the winter. Am still very busy this end and Mum carries on with the flower borders. Have this week cleaned through the three rows of raspberry canes and made two more rows. Put in two rows of cabbage seed (for spring cutting) and dug out more potatoes – these are turning out well now. It is a new sort to me – Craig Royal. So far we have picked 98 lbs runner beans and at this moment could easily pick another ten. To date 17 [and a half] pounds tomatoes have been picked apart from the yellow ones which are also ripening and which we use ourselves. They are sweeter and more juicy than the reds. Elford has taken surplus Beans – Lettuce – Beetroot and Marrows – the tomatoes we sell direct to our own customers. The water in pond has not sunk any lower and remains at about 1″ deep in shallow portion. Shall continue to wait this season and see if any further loss occurs. Have had to start hedge cutting again but growth is not so tough this time.

Well I think this is about all once more. Hope you are all keeping in good health and that you are getting some better nights.

All our love to you and lots of kisses for Susan & Carol.

Mum & Dad

*Difficult to imagine why someone as familiar with the district as Leonard should suddenly start mis-spelling Almondsbury, but we all have our off days.

**Identifying these people is not as straightforward as it might be; in later years the field was sold off for housing, and so were Leonard’s orchard and half his garden. However a quick perusal of Google Earth suggests that the ‘end house’ referred to was probably in St Andrew’s Drive and there is certainly at least one bungalow close by. Residents of the last house in St Andrew’s Drive would have had a very clear view of the river and its contents.

***A little shy of £1200 in present-day currency. Interesting that Leonard seems to think the ‘computor’ would be brought to site for use rather than the data being taken to it; I wonder if this was what was intended?

****Roughly £42,250.

*****£124,000. This must have been next to ‘the end house’ as previously mentioned – and the average house price in St Andrew’s Road is currently £520,000.

******No, it was in the other direction – and not ‘at the bottom’ of Queen’s Walk so much as further down it. It was a brand new Methodist Church to which we would later be sent on Sunday mornings.

Sunday 7th August, 1960

Alec to his parents:

Dear Mum and Dad,

Thank you for both your letters arrived Saturday. Please do not be scared at change of paper – happened to be in Woolworths on Saturday morning and spotted some.  Just the job for business letters and small epistles but probably not so good for long ones as too much shifting carriage on typewriter. 

I seem to have got mixed up with the Cafes at Clevedon, I thought someone said then we were down there that there was a new one somewhere near the middle of Marine Parade.

Susan is doing quite well with her alphabet but of course it goes in fits and starts. She is taking a keen interest in being able to tell the time and has now got a toy alarum clock.  She has a go but we seem to be getting some odd times.  What little I have heard about Uncle Will’s progress is not very definite, it does not seem to change and I think they are a little worried about him. 

Glad you were able to go and see Griffiths but pity the Rose Gardens were closed.  It seems always the same these days, we had similar trouble at Kew if you remember*.

Note also Mr and Mrs Newman’s visit but you do not say how he is.  Last time you said he had lumbago or sciatica etc. which was getting him down.  Suppose this now over.

I went to Ross on Wye and Symonds Yat with London D.O.S.O. on Office Outing in 1951 and we were fortunate to have fine hot dry weather. It made all the difference and we were able to appreciate the countryside.

Have marked out the boundary of the New Garage with string and driven in a few large pegs as levels.  These latter project up to 10 inches from ground and together with the string have become the target for meddlesome hands.  I may put some of the shuttering up this afternoon but if it gets pulled about during the week I shall have to postpone any further action until a few hours before the concrete arrives.

Re – job. Cecil Moore is the Head of the Research Section. He got a job as Staff Assistant to D.T.M at Cardiff as I think I told you in one of my earlier letters but he did not take it up as they were not ready to go with the new set up there.  Subsequently his own job was re-advertised at a higher salary and including Organisation and Methods.  Of course there could be only one suitable applicant as he was in charge of O and M.  I think he gets 16 or 17 hundred. 

Sorry about your crack about Littlewoods, I don’t feel quite able to Cope**. 

Re – application, it has gone forward in the usual way but no comment from anyone yet.  On Wednesday in company with Mr Bennett and one other from the B.T.C. Operational Research Section I went to Dartford to put our problem to the International Computor and Tabulator Co***.  We are asking them to devise an Electronic Computor to digest and store details about wagons as they become available at yards and stations, and to give any details at the press of a button.  We wanted this to be available to kick off in the Cardiff District by January next, but we may hare to make do with temporary machines until our own can be built.  The most fantastic cost is involved – a figure of £50 per hour for hiring only has been quoted.

I felt sure you would have known George Jenkins. He was Chief Controller at Cardiff when I was last in Freight Train Section ( Prior to ‘55 ) and he subsequently became the Productivity Assistant.

Have not picked any runner beans yet but have picked about twelve dwarfs for to-day.  There should be enough for meal by next week end as there are a lot of small ones coming on.  The tomatoes are moving well. I have provided tall stakes for the largest and have as many as six trusses forming. I am not surprised you found the soil behind the Green house to be good.  If you recall we had many bonfires there, mostly of Cupresses Hedge clippings, and there was considerable growth of nettles that we kept burning. 

Note Mrs Drewett has put house up for sale.  It sounds a reasonable price but I do not know what state it is in.  I would have thought that Drewett might have fixed up extra cupboards and things that would have helped to sell it.  As a guide what did they get next door.

The insurance people have payed up Junes claim but at their offer.  This has been accepted.  Still no response to advert for car.  Have listed it at £39 and do not particularly want to reduce any more.  I doubt whether there will be much movement for cars of this age until after the effect of the tests becomes apparent. 

We will note that Lydia starts her bookings for the Bungalow at Christmas and if we intend to do anything about it we will let her know at that time.

The men are very busy over in the field where school is to be erected but nothing rising very high yet****.  Think they must be still on the foundations.  The church at bottom of Queens Walk is nearly finished. 

June and I have had a good clear out of the front garden It looks quite neat now although mostly earth. I suppose if we take everything out it will look tidier than ever. Had to use mattock to break it up though.  Well that is all for week, hope you are both keeping well.

Alec

*Even in those days it was possible to telephone and find out when a place would be open rather than just rocking up and being disappointed. What’s the old saying? ‘To ASSUME makes an ASS of U and ME’? Or, indeed, an ounce of prevention is better than a ton of cure. I have no sympathy whatsoever.

**There’s very little information online about Cope’s Pools except that they were based in London and active in the 1930s. According to Wikipedia they were still operating in 1947, but the likelihood is that they were later absorbed by one of the bigger players in the industry.

***Note that Alec spells ‘computor’ with an ‘o’. This is the first indication of any contact between him and a computer; later in life he was known as ‘Gadget Man’ and was a relatively early adopter of technology, buying himself a ZX Spectrum with a pen-writer instead of a printer and learning to program ‘sprites’ and play games like ‘Jacaranda Jim’.

****This would be the St Swithun Wells Catholic Primary School.

Friday 5th August, 1960

Eva to the family [on reverse of Table 152: LONDON, OXFORD, BANBURY, LEAMINGTON SPA, STRATFORD-UPON-AVON, BIRMINGHAM, WOLVERHAMPTON, SHREWSBURY and CHESTER Mondays to Fridays – continued] –

Dear Alec June Susan and Carol

Many thanks for letter. We have been on the outing & had a good time. It was pouring when we left for Bristol to join Newmans but half way there it stopped & although dull most of the day was nice & dry.

It is lovely country all the way & we got there about 5.15. Starting at 2.40 p.m.* We lunched at Newmans.

Aunt Lydia & Joe had a nice time here. I told her you were enquiring about the bungalow & if you think any more about it she starts booking at Xmas. We are going down again in October for weekend when she finishes up the summer letting & has to go through the bungalow & prepare for the winter let.

Glad you are having a new job & with the old it might mean something later on.

Hope you are all feeling better & that Mr & Mrs Baker & Pauline & Peter are well.

Lots of love & kisses for girls from

Mum & Dad

*Even assuming they were in a coach of some sort, two and a half hours from Bristol to Symonds Yat is slow going; nowadays it would take about half that. They must have gone, as we used to say as children, ‘the wiggly-waggly way’.