Monday 30 May, 1960

Eva to the family:

Dear Alec June Susan and Carol,

Many thanks for my pretty nylons also Alec’s letter & June’s card. I like the coloured tops of the nylons hadn’t seen any down here like it. I had a hat & dress, also eau de cologne & three cards.

We got back after a lovely weekend about 12.20 p.m. not a drop of rain all the time. We walked miles or so it seemed. Exmouth is improved very much & the holiday bungalow is a good one, they can sleep six people, 2 double beds and a put-u-up settee in the lounge which is a good size room. The dining room & kitchen are rather small but the bedrooms are nice & there is a bathroom & lavatory. They have company’s gas & electric & water laid on & a shop near which sells everything you can think of including milk & bread. It is 22 Shelly Road & there are 200 bungalows different sizes. The people on either side of them are permanent. You go from the end of Promenade through docks & over a swing bridge & the yacht club also put their boats there.

We found everything o.k. back here. Lydia and Joe are coming for a week end in July & when they visit Exmouth again after their last let which is in Sept. they want us to go with them again for a few days. They have let Bungalow for the winter from October & are booked all Aug. next year. They have honeysuckle & flowering plants all round & a few flowers. The beds have interior sprung mattresses & are very comfortable. All the incomers have to find is their food & gas & electric which run on meters. Somerholme is looking very nice & we went out Prescott to see Pat & Eric & the children. We also went to Chettiscombe to see Eileen & John. They have half of Bridge House belonging to Mrs Moore an old aristocrat & have a lovely garden with flowering shrubs & flowers all around & even a stream running through. When we were shopping in Rolle Street Exmouth Joe felt someone tap him & turned round it was Auntie Bessie*. She has got very thin but is lively enough but very deaf. You would not know Tiverton now, down over the bridge in Westend South [?] they have pulled down the houses & made the road three times as wide & going to pull down William St. which is beside the hospital turning into Barrington St. There has been a big fire in Fore St, Timothy White & Burtons burnt down, a funny business I think.

Well I hope the girls are enjoying the nice weather now, can imagine them playing in the garden in their shorts. You do not want to bother to bring bucket & spade down, we have Susan’s which I bought her last year & I will get another for Carol. Alec can borrow a pair of pyjamas & June a night dress if that helps with the packing. June has an old pair of green slippers here & Alec can borrow Dad’s.

Pat’s youngest is being christened next Sunday so we hear.

Well I think this is all for now & thanks very much again.

Lots of love to all

From

Mum & Dad.

*This was presumably Eva and Joe’s aunt, Bessie Fewings, who would have been about 73 at the time and who died five years later.

Sunday 29th May, 1960

Alec to his parents:

Dear Mum and Dad

Well I suppose by the time you get this letter you will almost have forgotten your week-end by the sea. If you enjoyed the same sunshine to-day as we did then it must have been very pleasant.

Sounds as if Joe and Lydia are on to a very fine racket with their charges. They only want to get one more and he can retire.

You will be pleased to learn that both the girls and June are now well again, and so for that matter am I. I think we all had a touch of whatever it was albeit in mild form so far as I was concerned. The Dr. was right in that we all got it. We note you have an epidemic of upset tummy your end and everyone is complain­ing about the same here.

You seem to have dodged the rain which is a pity because the downpours we had did a great deal of good, the stuff advanced very quickly but the stage is now reached where we could do with some more. Have resumed watering.

I am glad you were able to get over to see Peter Morris again before he retires. I had not heard that he was going to Devon but I thoroughly approve of his arrangements. His bungalow site at West Drayton was very poor. I think he was better off when he was at Wembley although it was not his house. I hope Mothers letter turned up o.k. at Tiverton. I see from your letter that you planned not to leave Clevedon before 2-30pm so there may have been one or two anxious moments wondering whether she would get one from me or not.

Thank you for sending the two A.A. route maps. They are a useful addition to help my planning. At first I thought I would go to Cirencester and then take up your route from there cutting through Filton, Clifton, Bridge Valley Road and Ashton Gate but like the idea of cutting across from Harwell to Newbury as you suggested and picking up the Great West Rd or Bath Rd. My route for Cirencester cuts out Slough, Reading and Maidenhead so going via Newbury will be no improvement so far as that goes. At the time June wants to start there will be very little traffic at Bourne End to trouble us I think.

You are very early with your Broad beans. I thought they were not usually ready before the second week in July. Must be thinking of some other fruit. Have not got my peas in flower yet but they are getting on fine now after the rain we had.

Latest on Work Study section is Four out of category jobs in the Cardiff, Bristol, Birmingham and London Divisions for which I am an applicant for the four. Somehow I think I shall get shunted out of all of them and what worries me is the lack of a suitable alternative. No posts are ever advertised to committees so nothing will appear under the guise of Terminal Committee. One has to be posted to a job then seconded from that job to a committee so that any post would do if they want you. Phillips is going to have a big stake in what happens to the Paddington of the future and he will be in on this very shortly. Sorry Griff too disgusted to apply. Too early for him to give up yet.

To-day we motored over to Chessington to see cousin Joan and family. It was a round trip of 43 miles and we went via Southall, Heston, Twickenham, Teddington, Hampton Court, and Esher. We went through Bushey Park which is an adjunct of Hampton Court and saw some deer. Well that is all for this week. Love from June, Susan, Carol and Alec

Thursday 26th May, 1960

Leonard to the family [on the reverse of Table 104 SATURDAYS – continued: London, Swindon, Badminton, Bristol, Newport, Cardiff, Swansea, Carmarthen, Tenby, Neyland and Fishguard Harbour]

Dear Alec June Susan & Carol

Many thanks for your long letter received on Wednesday but sorry to hear Carol off colour again. Hope she will soon get over it and that the Dr will be wrong about all of you catching same complaint – seems to be a bit of a pessimist. Yes I expect Carol felt she was left out in the cold a little on Susan’s birthday – too young to understand the position yet but we are glad to hear the party went off alright. Now they can settle down for the best part of a twelvemonth before their turns come round again. Should like to have peeped in on them when party in full swing.

Noted too that Alec has also been under the weather for a couple of days – was it similar trouble to Carol’s? Mum says there seems to be a bit of an epidemic of upset stomachs around here but so far we are alright. We did not have a lot of rain and things are as dry as ever down here – so far I’ve not resorted to watering anything in garden except when plants are first put in but if drought continues shall have to get busy.

Yes we went to Weston last Thursday and spent the evening with Peter Morris – Mum of course stopped with Mrs Ritchings – Gillett was there complete with bowler hat ready for an interview at Bristol next day for a Divl. freight position Spl B. Charlie Rust also came down with Griffiths-Williams & Doswell and of course most of the District were represented. I thought Peter Morris was looking fairly well. Told me he has bought a business for his daughter and son in law at Ipplepen near Newton Abbot and is moving down between July 4th and 11th. Business consists of a bakery (baker and roundsman being retained) baker’s shop and grocer’s shop. Peter says he himself will look after the accounts and the grocer’s shop. I should think the change from the London area might do him a lot of good. Frankly I did not think much of his position for bungalow at West Drayton – too near the river – if you remember when we called on him a couple of Christmases ago it was very misty in his particular area.

It is a seaside bungalow at Exmouth – presumably a wooden structure – but we will let you know more about it next letter after our visit. Did I tell you they ‘let’ it for £12.12.0* per week during July August and first fortnight in Sept? We shall leave here about 2.30 p.m. Friday for Tiverton and stop en route – query Wellington for tea and arrive Tiverton about 6.30 p.m**. No good to arrive earlier as both Uncle Joe & Aunt Lydia are out working.

Yes you have done right to get Chrysanths outdoors. I put all mine out this week in the space between garage & greenhouse.

Am going to try and include the two AA route maps and an Ordnance map of the Chilterns which covers the beaconsfield – henley-on-Thames area very well. Incidentally considerable delays are occurring at Bourne End*** because of road reconstruction. We were held up for half an hour or more and work must obviously continue there for a long time. Anyhow you must work it out to suit yourselves but I should definitely avoid Swindon. Query after passing Harwell take the road to Newbury turning right there for the Marlborough Road? This would cut out Slough – Maidenhead & Reading, three most difficult places in my opinion. Let us know in due course please. I do hope your car will be alright for the journey.

Have been busy here cutting hedges etc. – shall soon have to get scythe out for grass in the field. Our lettuces have turned in lovely but am afraid the first lot will be over by the time you arrive. Am trying to bring on another batch of fifty planted out yesterday. Continuing to pick strawberries in greenhouse and put netting over those outdoors today to keep birds off – the berries will be ripening in a day or two. Broad beans almost ready to pick – next week for certain. Vegetable peas are in flower.

Note latest information re: Work Study section – what will happen to Paddington Terminal Committee? I hear today that Arthur Price has got the Senior [???? illegible] Clerk’s position in Divl. Office at Bristol – lucky man. Griffiths the chief controller did not apply – said he is too disgusted to put in for anything.

We saw the young lady who is going to live next door working in garden last night so asked her how soon she would be moving in. Said there was a lot of work to be done in the house yet and she was not being married until 1st October.

Well I think this is the lot once more – if any more route information required let me know! Can I get any details from A.A.**** for you?

All our love to you both and once again lots of kisses for those two dear little girls.

Mum & Dad

*About £300 in today’s money; there are some holiday cottages available for that these days, even in August, but they’re mostly quite small and in tucked-away places – nothing like as large or central as the house in Exmouth.

**Nowadays this journey of just under sixty miles would take about an hour, but this was long before the M5 was built.

***Between Marlow and Cookham. I wish I knew what route this was on!

****For anyone too young to remember, one of the precursors to SatNav was the A.A. strip map/directions, only available to members. At this time Alec wasn’t a member; I have a distinct recollection of him joining in a car park somewhere – possibly Burnham-on-Sea – when his car was refusing to co-operate, so clearly Leonard was getting these directions on his behalf.

Sunday 22nd May, 1960

Alec to his (much younger) cousins:

Dear Rebbecca and Sara

Thank you both very much indeed for the card and Birthday present you sent Susan, Unfortunately Susan cannot write yet or she would have written to say thank you herself. She can draw a bit so she has drawn you a picture which is with this letter. One or two very young children came to tea with her last Saturday and both she and Carol enj­oyed themselves.

Carol gave her a blackboard and easel and since then they have put chalk on the front door and the back door, the walls and all over my shed. I do not think the blackboard was big enough.

Poor little Carol has not been very well lately. I expect she got fed up with the weather and thought it would be nicer to stay in bed. She will have to buck up and get better before we go on holiday.

Have you worn out that hammock yet? You will have to fix one up for Dad when he comes home tired after a busy day at the office. I can not think that he would get much peace though.

Susan has a copy of Alice in Wonderland and we have to read her some every night at bed time. Do you still get bedtime stories? Well I hope you recognise the picture. Love to you both.

Sunday 22nd May, 1960

Alec to his parents:

Dear Mum and Dad.

Thank you for your letters. Mum’s arrived on Monday and Dads on Saturday. Susan of course thanks you very much for Birthday present. She had quite a number of cards and bits and pieces of clothes and things which June will no doubt tell you about in due course but not so many toys this time. Carol gave her a little blackboard and easel but wanted it herself on the Monday. There was the usual fight for the toys, and I am afraid little Carol felt a bit out of it. We had to produce a couple of Easter cards to keep her happy.

Glad to hear you have got the divans but can not help thinking that we are the cause of this expense. However hope they are what you wanted. You are obviously feeling much better to be going around and planning to have these various trips. We note you have had a lot of rain. So have we and the ground is properly saturated. To-day we have had some heat with a little sunshine and it has dried the surface to powder. Fancy having strawberries. We have not seen any this end.

We have not so far started to do any interior decorating. That will come along all too quickly though. Sounds as though there are a few changes pending in the main Clevedon shopping centre. Shall hardly recognise the place and will lose my way. Hope your Nicotine spray has been successful on Blackcurrants, Assume that you have to operate the spray as Dad gave up smoking some years ago. Eileen’s Baby is due to arrive the day we travel to Clevedon. Your flax is growing well. You planted it before I did. I mixed my Flax seeds with those of Clarkia and Virginia Stock and sowed them all along the border to the front gate. They are coming up and the tallest is about 2″ high.

Re Dad’s note. The ‘Hart’ appointment is causing expressions of disgust this end. He was Class 3 at the start of the war.

Pinner Memorial Park has not a lot in the way of formal flower beds. Those it has were badly in need of the rain. Much of the park consists of large trees and grass. There are a number of shrubs etc surrounding the duck pond and old buildings. Hope you were able to see Peter Morris. The list came round for contributions to his retirement this week. He deserved to go much further than he did.

Your jaunt next week end promises to be very enjoyable particularly if the weather is fine. I hope you will remember us to them all when you meet. What is this bungalow supposed to be, I note you say “bought”. Is it a wooden chalet on the beach or is it a pukka bungalow of bricks and mortar in own road?

I seem to remember others having Engine failure at Bridgwater or was it Wellington?

We are going to Chessington on Sunday next to see June’s cousin Joan. It should not take us much more than an hour. I have pinched out the heads of the stocks so await them branching out. Have also potted up all the Chrysants into my largest pots and they are permanently outdoors now. Dwarf beans showed through on Monday last. They were planted about 1st April – well before you came up. Have started going through the Smallholders. I must say there is a lot of waste material in them. Rabbits, Poultry etc. Still I suppose some people read it. Note also the wine articles.

I hope they improve the path to the sea-wall so that we can all go and have a look at the new works. Re route. I have been waiting for your A.A. Route map so that I can work out my plans. I have a very good route as far as Cirencester but I can do with information of the way beyond via any suitable roads. I should imagine Chippenham and Bath would be best but I am not fussy. The Particulars I have are on the A.A. Route supplied to Doug on the occasion of his visit to Wales last year and it continues beyond Cirencester along the Gloucester road skirting Painswick and Stroud. Could get to Bristol that way but I should imagine that would be a little out of the way. The route is a very good one avoiding High Wycombe. It turns off at Beaconsfield through Wooburne Green Bournes End Marlow and Henley thence to Didcot and Harwell. From that point the road divides either to Swindon or Cirencester. Will await your details before deciding next move.

Rumour is rife these days at the office but I had not heard of the Bob Morris/Penney link. I expect you got that from Geoff. Roy Hewitt seems to be shewing an improvement if he can get round on one stick.

Latest news on re-organisation is that we go to Divisions in September. That is more than rumour as others have had it officially about us but we have not been told.

I am afraid we have to report that Carol has not been well again. We have had several disturbed nights for one reason or another and then Carol woke one night and became sick in cot. Next day she was out of sorts with obvious gastric evidence. All day Saturday she sat on my knee and slept about three times. Late in the afternoon she was violently sick again so we called in the Dr. Of course he prescribed medicine that was most foul and of course we had terrible job to get her to take any. To-day she seemed a lot better and we have had her running about in the garden. The Dr. said she was not to have solid food for forty-eight hours. Of course she has been asking for it. Although a lot better she is still not right and we had ructions at bed-time. Dr. says it is something that is going around end that we shall all have it. – Cheerful. So far Susan has not shewn any signs nor has June. Had a couple of off-days myself but O.K. now.

Have spent a bit of time in garden to-day. One neighbour gave me some onion setts so have planted them out. Can’t say I firmed the ground down all that hard though. Put some more Dahlias out. Managed to divide several of the remaining groups of tubers. Lettuces are nearly ready for eating. They look good too. Well more next time when we are down to four weeks. Love from us all June, Susan, Carol and Alec

Thursday 19th May, 1960

Alec to his uncle and aunt:

Dear Don and Joan

Thank you both very much for the card sent in aid of Susan’s fourth Birthday also enclosure. She is getting to be quite a big girl, in fact they both are pretty hefty for their ages. We invited a few girls in to tea on the Saturday and her little cousin Christopher came over from Greenford. It was luckily a fine afternoon so they were able to get out in the garden and generally make a mess of it and also take turns on the swing. Of course June prepared loads of grub but very little was eaten – shades of years ago.

By the time all the Mothers and Fathers had arrived we were able to make inroads on the food. I am sure Carol felt a little out of it on the 16th as when all the cards came for Susan Carol said “Carol some too”. I understand they spent the morning fighting over the presents but that is only to be expected I suppose.

Hope the new car is going well, no fears about the ten year tests next September.

It has been pouring with rain all day to-day as it did yesterday. We were crying out for rain a week or so ago but it never seems to come in moderation. At least it saves me from doing regular watering which is very tiring at the end of the day.

I understand our lads will be in the Taunton area soon so you may see something of them. I shall not be with them unfortunately.

Our dustmen have gone on strike this week so that dust bins are cluttering up the place and no where to put rubbish. I shall have to start burning the stuff when the week end comes. Of course it is all soaking wet now. I suppose they have taken exception to the popular song.*

Well here’s hoping you are still keeping fit. Love from June, Susan, Carol and Alec

*Lonnie Donegan: My Old Man’s a Dustman

Thursday 19th May, 1960

Leonard to the family, on the reverse of Table 104 [and Table 104 – continued, and Table 104 SUNDAYS – continued] London, Swindon, Badminton, Bristol, Newport, Cardiff, Swansea, Carmarthen, Tenby, Neyland and Fishguard Harbour.

Dear Alec June Susan and Carol

Many thanks for letter received on Tuesday together with the Horticultural enclosures. Glad to hear Susan had a party on Saturday and that they all enjoyed themselves. The ‘dogs dinner’ incident made us both laugh – just shows how quick the young ones can pick up the conversation of others. Yes as mentioned before the appointment of Hart seems to be a very poor one but there it is – it’s not what you know but who you know.

Noted it was Memorial Park at Pinner you visited – must put it on our list for a call one day. Expect it is at its best at the moment with all the spring flowers and flowering shrubs in full bloom. Thanks for information of Doug Matthews – had almost forgotten him. Peter Morris is at Bristol today and tomorrow and stopping the night – with several others – at the Albert Hotel, Weston.* Griffiths mentioned this last week when here and now the Ritchings have called up and asked Mum and I to go down this evening so shall see Peter & Coy. later. It is his last meeting I understand before retirement – or rather his last Bank Holiday meeting at Bristol.

Uncle Joe duly arrived here at 11.45 on Sunday although he said he would be here at 10.00 a.m. Apparently he had a late start because of rain at Tiverton and was further delayed about half an hour at Bridgwater with engine trouble. He and Aunt Lydia have bought a seaside bungalow at Exmouth and now want us to go down to Tiverton on the 27th and spend the night there and go on to Tiverton – in our car – on Saturday 28th, stop the night in bungalow – back to Tiverton Sunday and home on the Monday and we have said we will go. Now we have an invitation from Lyng to go down there on Whitsunday to lunch and have accepted. Hope no more flu or colds about meanwhile and also hope weather is warmer than at present.

It is bitterly cold (N. West wind) and we cannot work in garden. Have been occupied in making up a bit of framework for netting the strawberries which incidentally are a mass of flowers at the moment. When those stocks are established you must pinch out the growing points to make them bush out. I’ve only just put mine out in the beds on lawn with asters and zinnias but ground is very lumpy and dry and I don’t think we shall have very good results. Next winter I must get some lime into the soil to make it workable. Have now got in 190 runner bean plants against sticks and have a lot of ‘spares’ coming up elsewhere. Also put out 94 various Broccoli plants on Tuesday – these had been brought on in frames.

Note you have both been busy adjusting layout at the back – expect the young ladies have also ideas as to how it should be done and will no doubt show you in due course.

We went to Bristol last Saturday afternoon to visit the Staceys who now live in the Clifton Down area. There were a lot of people on the Downs and the Dance Pavilion at the Glen must have been overcrowded by the number of people we saw going in. We left Staceys just after 9.0 p.m. & were home by 10.0 p.m.

The men are still working on the sea wall – now levelling the banks prior to sowing grass seed. It will be quite an improvement when finished. The hooligans have been busy on Wains & Church Hills again – breaking up the seats and throwing them in the sea. It’s a pity some of them cannot be caught.

Sorry to hear the windows of car gone wrong again – must be put right of course when car goes in for servicing. Have you looked up route yet? And can I send on some of my A.A. details? Am hoping to come up about halfway to meet you. Let’s hope it is a nice day. (Five weeks today.)

Understand Bob Morris Newport retiring shortly and that Guy Penny is being tipped for the job – had you hear?

Mum doing a bit of painting these days – putting another coat on the woodwork of window in back bedroom. The sun strikes very hot here and paint is soon blistered and gone.

Roy Hewett made another of his frequent calls this week – now walking with one stick but with difficulty but he is determined to succeed.

So Wilkinson was pleased with the tankard – bit of a surprise for him I expect. Is there any more news of your own department as to what is happening under the reorganisation?

Not much more to say this time – very pleased to hear you are all keeping fairly well and hope you will continue so. Get this cold wind gone and perhaps we can have a bit of real summer weather.

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

Mum & Dad.

*In later years the Albert Hotel Weston, seems to have taken a turn for the worse; I knew someone who lived there in the 1980s when it was divided up into small seedy bedsits. However that was many years ago and its fortunes may have risen again since then.

**Joe and Lydia’s bungalow was at 135 Shelly Road, Exmouth. It was the only brick bungalow amidst an ‘estate’ of wooden chalets, barely a step up from beach huts, which due to the absence of planning regulations when they were built – and the pressure on housing stock after the war – had become permanent residential accommodation. The estate remained in existence for another thirty years or so, being pecked away at piece by piece until the whole area was finally levelled in the 1990s. A house on [the new] Shelly Road would now cost in excess of £500,000.

Sunday 15th May, 1960

Alec to his parents:

Dear Mum and Dad

Thank you for your letter duly received on Saturday. Glad you liked the photograph I hope they both travelled O.K. and did not get “bent”. You need not have returned the order of service as we have another. Enclosed is the latest Bulletin of the Horticulturla Socty. [sic] Sorry cannot undertake to play marbles due to lack of previous experience.

Have removed a lot of green fly from the Chrysants but they want some shifting.

Glad you managed to get to Soole’s wedding and that it went off all right. Nice to run into Bastin again, I expect, Don’t suppose you have seen him for some time. Shocking about Dudley Hart going to Bristol. They seem to live more on hope than ever these days.

Hope the visit by Uncle Joe was successful. I should not like to travel so far on such a vehicle myself. One thing though, his fare by rail would probably pay for enough petrol to go four times the distance on his scooter. Hope you manage to go down for Whitsun. It should make a nice break. – No colds mind.

Things certainly are very different in the Offices now and I don’t wonder Griffiths finds it so. You finished at the best time. For the older people it must be extremely galling so see the things that happen. So far as I am concerned it is a question of “If you cant beat a racket, get in on it”. I telephoned Doug Matthews the other day and he asked after you. and hoped that you were going along well. He found it strange at first on the Eastern Region but says there is a better atmosphere over there and that he is very glad that he made the change.

As you say I do not hear much from the Rolling Stock these days. Gunn was the logical successor to Frank Fowler but such is the position to-day that I could not tell you if the job still exists. Everybody goes under another new title now. We have the old and the new still functioning side by side. Some of the new men are in office and dishing out work, others are appointed but not in office etc etc etc.

When Eric came back from the Abbey he was still in his Morning Dress. The Sunday afternoon he asked me if I had seen him dressed “like a dogs dinner”, Susan was by me and a few minutes later I could hear her muttering something. When I asked her what she said it was “Dogs Dinner.”

The park at Pinner we visited is not Pinner Park proper, that is a short distance away. This one is a Memorial Park. Incidentally we went there again to-day. Had the whole place to ourselves practically.

Yesterday of course we held Susan’s party and had a crowd of youngsters here, Christopher came from Greenford and Michael from next door. Apart from them the rest were girls. I tried to get some photographs but it was too much to expect to get all children in the same part of the garden and stationary at the same time, I did manage to take three but they were facing in all directions and moving about at the same time so doubt if any good.

Sounds to me as if your Blackcurrant bushes are suffering from rust. That’s the worst of leaving them out in the wet. We have lettuces almost ready for eating and have put out another row. Your stocks were planted out yesterday and are quite healthy. To-day June and I again adjusted the layout of the back garden. We have fenced in the bottom plot to keep the kids off. The wallflowers which were the chief agent for keeping them off before have now been pulled up and that left a large stretch of no mans land. Webb over the road has given us a clump of Chrysants. ( Yellow with red centres ). They are named variety but have not got it handy. The syringa is in bud and it looks as though we shall get a lot of blossom this year. The apple tree had a fair amount of blossom on it and is growing well. French and African Marigolds are growing like weeds over the vegetable plot. I hope to save the former and am waiting for them to grow bigger before transplanting. Space is getting a bit short out in the front garden so I shall have to plant in the back I suppose.

Had a nice letter back from Wilkinson thanking the section for his presentation tankard, I think he was quite thrilled to get it.

Well hope you are both as well as we are here. Another week gone by and time to our visit is getting shorter. Shall have to think about getting the car serviced. All the windows have gone wrong again.

Well there it is till next time. Love from June, Susan, Carol and Alec

Saturday 14th May, 1960

Eva to the family:

Dear Alec, June, Susan and Carol,

Many thanks for Alec’s letter. First of all Happy Birthday to Susan as she is 4 today. [Actually on the 16th.] I expect she will have lots of cards & present.

We are sending you £1. note for Mummy to get what she likes with it.

Dad has been busy on the garden this week, digging the beds or the lawn & earthing up the potatoes – & I have been doing a bit. We had rain at last a good six hours of it.

The two divans came today so we had them taken up by the men who brought them from Bristol. I sent to Manchester for them they are O.K. There is more room there than before as no bottom of bedstead.

We are going up to Staceys tomorrow the first time we shall have gone anywhere since we came home.

I think the photos are lovely & the children especially look natural.

Everyone here says how alike they are.*

I met Mrs Revel [?] today & she says that Peter has gone to Canada & Raymond is married & living in London. They are in Long Avenue now after living in Kenn Rd for seventeen years. It is pelting with rain again for three evenings running it has done that.

We have had one or two strawberries from pots in the greenhouse, nice & juices hope the ones in the garden will turn out as nice. We shall be putting the nets over them soon.

Has June started the small bedroom yet as she said she was going to.

I have rubbed down our bedroom window but that is as far as I’ve got what a mess it was but it’s the worst part done now. Paint is an awful price be it either undercoat or top.**

Billets the fruiterers next to Co-op grocers in Old Church Road have closed down the Co-op has bought it & going to open shortly as greengrocers shop & next to that where Normans used to be is flattened & the house gone & Timothy Whites are having it.

Our new Blkcurrant trees are being attacked by greenfly & we wrote to Smallholder who said to use a nicotine spray so this morning I went down for a tin & they said I should have to sign my death warrant for it as it was poison & it is very strong.

Joe is coming up on Sunday on his scooter hope he gets here. I believe they want us to go down for Whitsun it’s three years since we were there.

Eileen, John’s wife, is expecting on the 23 June that’s on Pat’s second child’s birthday.

Our flax is nearly 4 inches high. I sent for some blue & yellow etc. No more have come yet guess somebody else has got them as sent before Easter.

I think this is all the news now so will close with love from us both to all.

Mum & Dad.

*It was an awful burden to bear; people treated us as a unit and nobody ever – parents least of all – seemed to understand that they were dealing with two distinct individuals. We hated being asked if we were twins, especially when – as so often happened – we were dressed identically, only with me in blue and my sister in red.

**I’ve tried, but I can’t locate the price of paint in 1960. We’ll just have to accept that it was ‘extortionate’ (a favourite family adjective, along with ‘diuretic’ – which was treated as an amplification of ‘dire’!).

Thursday 12th May, 1960

Leonard to the family – on the reverse of Table 179: LEAMINGTON SPA, STARTFORD-UPON-AVON, BIRMINGHAM, STOURBRIDGE JUNCTION, KIDDERMINSTER, BEWDLEY, DUDLEY, WOLVERHAMPTON and WELLINGTON and Table 104: FISHGUARD HARBOUR, NEYLAND, TENBY, CARMARTHEN, SWANSEA, CARDIFF, NEWPORT, BRISTOL, BADMINTON, SWINDON and LONDON (Saturdays only).

Dear Alec June Susan & Carol

Many thanks for your letter and enclosures received on Wednesday. The photograph is excellent and thank you very much for sending it on – pity June and yourself could not have been in it. Also pleased to see the Order of Service for the Sunday School Anniversary – poor little Susan without any collection, she must have felt very embarrassed in her own little way. Expect you heard all about it afterwards. Am returning Order of Service as assume you would like to keep it.*

The Horticultural Bulletin very welcome and I note you are once again a full member of the Society.

Note position re: Iris’s father and it does look as if things are going on satisfactorily.

I agree your efforts at Sunday golf are a dead loss. Why not revert to marbles?

Yes the chrysanths will take a lot of water during dry spells of weather and they should be put into larger pots and kept outdoors – staked – for the summer. Watch out for greenfly and wash or spray it off. A regular spraying of clean water will do a lot of good and help to keep down red spider – a pest you cannot see with the naked eye.

Soole’s wedding went off alright. Mr Aston and I went to the service and there saw Bastin and his wife who had both been invited. I spoke to Bastin before service started and he could tell me that Dudley Hart had got Edwards’ job – what a terrible appointment. He was at one time Junior Assistant at Bristol when Hallett was senior. Now he comes back and Hallett is under him. We used to say years ago “Always be kind to your junior clerk because one day he might be your boss”. I don’t think much of Hart as a railwayman but perhaps that does not matter now-a-days. It will cause a lot of heartburning at Bristol though.

Soole is still redundant and has had interviews for jobs as far north as Glasgow & Edinburgh but nobody wants him.

Had a call from Uncle Joe** at Tiverton on Tuesday evening saying he would like to run up to Clevedon this coming Sunday on his motor scooter. Apparently Aunt Lydia and some other members of the family are going to Exmouth in a caravan for the weekend and Joe thought he would like to pop up here. They have invited us down for the Whitsun weekend but shall hear more about that thus Sunday. It’s rather strange but Mum and I had been thinking of having a run down to Tiverton to visit the Cemetery.

Griffiths (Chief Controller Bristol) and his wife called on us unexpectedly on Tuesday evening. They were out for a run in car and found themselves in Clevedon so decided to look us up. He says things are very different in the office now and he feels out of it. Understand Frank Fowler finishing up this month – query Gunn to get his job. Don’t suppose you have much to do with the Rolling Stock Dept. Griffiths tells me that Arthur Gill (Reading Control) has got another job – Head of Freight Section London Area or something like that.

Yes we saw something of the Royal Wedding after we had finished ringing for Soole’s and again saw it in the evening. Note your neighbour was on duty in the Abbey for same.

We did not care much for the shops at Pinner either. Much prefer Rayner’s Lane, Eastcote and the Ruislip centres – we did not however find the Park. Expect the children were interested in the fish and ducks – something fresh for them.

Am glad you liked the cherry & greengage wines. I think they were two of the best brews of 1959. There will be no plum or greengage wine this year – practically no blossom on any of the trees. The apple blossom is good and providing fruit sets there should be a good crop. The three cherry trees have been loaded with blossom. We had a good drop of rain today and this afternoon I started to plant out brussel sprouts [sic] and early broccoli. Prior to this the ground has been like concrete and everything drying up. Something has got into some of my young currant bushes and the leaves have reddish blotches on them. Have written Smallholder people for information – in the meantime dosing them with a Bordeaux mixture and D.D.T.

We have six strawberry plants in pots in the greenhouse and this week picked the first fruits – and ate them. The plants in the garden are one mass of bloom. I see the third row of garden peas is just showing through but the dry spell has affected the earlier sowings somewhat.

Yes I expect you did have a job to get across road at the top of Swakeleys Avenue and it will get worse as the summer approaches. Last Sunday Clevedon was packed with cars again and Weston & Portishead were also hard pressed to find room for them.

Well I think this is the lot once more – hope you are all keeping well.

All our love from Mum & Dad and lots of kisses for Susan & Carol.

*This is probably a good moment to bring up the family’s attitude to religion generally. Alec and June would never go to church unless they had to, and their sole explanation for sending ‘the girls’ to Sunday School was ‘to get you out of the house on a Sunday morning so we can have some peace and quiet’, which I have never thought was good enough. Leonard, too, seems to have gone to church (1) because his mother insisted on it – Emily was very religious – and (2) because it was expected in his position. Eva’s social life revolved around the church, where she regularly did the flowers, although I never saw any evidence of actual devotion in her. If any one of them had ever said ‘God has been good to us, we want to thank him for it’ or given evidence of an actual religious belief (reading the Bible at home, for example) it would have been easy to respect; on the contrary, they seemed to think religion itself – as opposed to church-going – was evidence of some kind of mental aberration. To be religious was to be strange.

That said, I formed the conclusion at a very early stage that I was only being sent to Sunday School because I was not wanted elsewhere, and that if I ‘got religion’ it would be viewed with deep suspicion. Little chance of that, however, when I saw the adults around me paying lip service to religion without having any apparent beliefs of their own. I decided that, if there actually was a God, He would take a dim view of that kind of hypocrisy. After several years of having Sunday School imposed upon me, therefore – including, briefly, being a teacher – I rebelled and refused to go any more. The only person who seemed to think this would imperil my immortal soul was Edith, June’s mother, who in her modest, quiet way was very worried about me. Nobody else gave a slap. Q. E. D., I would say.

Many years later Leonard did try to force me to attend church by looking on a map, finding the nearest church to where I was living, and instructing me to go there every Sunday. As I passed the place every day I was in a position to tell him it was actually a Mormon establishment, which I was sure would be all right with him and I would be very happy to comply with his instructions.

We heard no more about me attending church after that.

**Eva’s brother.