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LAUNCH, BOOK SIGNING, OLD PHOTO EXHIBITION AND REFRESHMENTS all day from 11am on Thursday 3rd December at Eastringon Chapel Schoolroom. Exhibition & book signing continues 4th/5th December. Containing 360 pages packed with family stories and over a hundred old photographs of the local area, the book tells the story of the village of Eastrington from Saxon times to present day...click here for more details and to view the cover text, index and contents pages. Please contact me if you would like to know more and/or order a copy. |
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Memories of Reedness, Yorkshire (1) |
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| Or go on to Reedness memories (2) - includes baking, ironing, the coming of electricity, Glebe Farm, the stack yard, the stick hill, the old school site, the old flax mill, Ivy House Farm, Mawsons' cottage, Wheelgate Farm, Jasmine House, tennis, Reedness House, village shops, Half Moon Inn, Little Reedness...
Reedness in the 1930s These are the memories of Mr Bill Wroot, written in 2009.
My father was Edwin Gardham Wroot, who was born in Goole in 1895. My mother was Minnie Walker, born in 1894 in Whitgift at Penny Hill, the first child of Joseph Walker (there were to be eight more), a carpenter. His surname was Walker, which was his mother’s name. His father was said to be one of the Irelands who at that time lived in Reedness House. Apparently the son of the house was responsible for three illegitimate children in the village. His father therefore decreed that he should spend money on (a) educating them and (b) obtaining and paying for an apprenticeship for each of these boys, and that’s what happened. So Joseph Walker was
educated at the school run by the then Vicar in the south-west corner
of Whitgift churchyard, near the gate in the lane. He then became a carpenter
and joiner, serving his time with the Lawrence family of Whitgift who
had a wood-yard opposite the Anchor Inn in Whitgift. On my father’s side, my grandfather was William Gardham Wroot, born in 1870 in Eastoft. There are a lot of Wroots still in Eastoft and no doubt they all came originally from the village of Wroot which is to the west of Epworth. My grandmother was Emma Wroot, née Dickens, born in Swinefleet in 1872. Many years later she was to return to Swinefleet, where she had a shop at No. 12 High Street. My paternal grandparents had six children (four boys and two girls). Three sons volunteered for the Army in World War One: only one returned. This was my father. I was named Horace, after one uncle who did not return, and William, after my grandfather.
He was an electrician and wireless mechanic, having made wireless receivers since he was a boy, at the bottom of Common Piece, where he had a shop in the former Sunday School. I worked with him and charged the accumulator batteries for the wireless sets, and delivered them round the area on a bike with a box over the front wheel; all over Swinefleet Common and all round the villages. In addition to having wireless sets, batteries, aerials, valves etc. on sale, he had part of the shop at the time filled with stock from the ladies and children’s clothing business he had previously had in Goole. Part of my job therefore was to serve the lady customers with their requirements. I also did the window dressing, including dressing dolls up in babies’ clothing. It’s all part of the learning curve, I’m sure!
On Mondays Mrs Guy hung her washing out, including old-fashioned voluminous drawers which had a slit at the back and two short legs. These were known as ‘ham bags’ and could easily have been used as wind indicators on an airfield!
The family who lived there were the Mawsons. And the son of the miller Mawson was George Mawson. He still lived in the village when I was a boy. Eventually a family moved in there called ‘Simms’. I believe they came from Barmby. There was somebody else in there previously whose name I can’t recall. Now a farm, it was owned by Mr Walter Dunn, a blacksmith and farmer in Reedness. The unpaved lane on which this house stood leads on to Swinefleet and the area is known as the ‘Underwoods’. There were many small fields here with hedges and gates, some of which were divided, with the part nearest to the lane used for grazing and the rear part through a further gate for crops. A number of the grass fields had ponds. The historic names for the fields in the area between the river and the Causeway are still in use; ‘Uppersands, ‘Middlesands’ and ‘Lowersands’, in addition to the ‘Underwoods’. This lane was unpaved and had a mud surface until the early 1900s, when it was paved.
There were also some
buildings in fields quite a distance from the village, which were used
to stable the horses after work rather than have them walk back to the
farm. Carts and other equipment were left in these buildings over night. Now back to
the main road
The occupants
of the Council houses The next house was my uncle on my mother’s side, Joseph Walker (Jnr). He worked for Yorkshire Electricity. His wife, my Aunt Lucy, came from Crowle. They had three children. Bernard, the eldest, was in the Royal Navy during World War Two and married and settled down in the South of England. Elsie was a schoolteacher and married Jack Muttock of Goole, later becoming Mayoress. Gerald settled down in Whitgift with his wife (a former Miss Canty) and family. One of the most prominent things hanging in their living room was a very large framed certificate stating that Joseph Walker was a member of the Ancient and Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes (a Friendly Society). He was a ‘Buff’. His father (my grandfather Joseph Snr) was a ‘Free Forester’ – this was a big thing in those days. Later, as war clouds threatened, he would become Captain (CO) of the Local Defence Volunteers, afterwards re-designated the ‘Home Guard’. The next house we come to, the third council house, was occupied by Mr and Mrs J. Foster. He was a crane operator on Goole Docks. They had a large family of sons and two daughters. One of their sons worked in Scunthorpe but unfortunately in his early twenties had an accident on his motorcycle at Keadby Bridge - a well-known accident spot in those days - and sadly died as a result of his injuries. The fourth Council house was occupied by Mr Robert and Mrs Elisabeth Christie, together with their family of two boys and four girls. Mary, the eldest daughter, married a Canadian soldier after World War Two and went to live in Canada. Mr Christie was employed aboard the ‘Goole Blight’, which was a specially built dredger in the river Ouse. The original dredger was a barge towed by a tender but was replaced in about 1938 with a self-contained dredger vessel: quite a magnificent craft, the ‘Goole Blight’. In those days the dredger was always in the river and the rattle of the chain was a common sound to all the villagers.
This never really
seemed to need clearing away, as people collected it for their gardens.
So that saved the Council a job! The road sweepers also cleaned out the
grates. Not having a proper tool for this, they would put an old saucepan
on the end of a stick, creating the perfect tool for the job. Of course,
the odd copper or silver coin came up occasionally - so it was probably
worth their while. Of course, as time went by the steam ploughs were replaced by Caterpillar tractors from America. These huge beasts arrived towing a caravan, and the crew of the two men who worked the rig and lived in the caravan also worked through the night with a constant clatter, sounding like a regiment of tanks coming down the road.
Miss Elsie Laverack lived there and she was a teacher at Swinefleet School, having previously taught at Reedness School, standing in for Mr. Butler during World War One. Miss Laverack was,
in addition, very active in working with children and although she lived
in Reedness and worked in Swinefleet, she gave her time and experience
to organising the entertainment for the Whitgift Church Gala each summer. At this time there was a little bit of an edge between Churchers and Chapellers – but when it came to this occasion then it didn’t matter where we went, as Miss Laverack was keen to recruit us and form us into a group to put on a stage show for the Vicarage garden party. In those days if you saw a girl or boy walking in the street carrying a music case, leather with a flap and a bar to keep the sheet music in – and all very posh in their Sunday best - they were on their way to learn to play the piano with Miss Laverack. This lady was quite a character and I remember that in her house was a stuffed fox in a glass case. She said her father had shot as it was attacking their chickens - so that should have taught it a lesson, I think. It was the only fox I ever saw in Reedness. Later, in the late ’30s, the house was lived in by a Mr Chetwind Thompson and his family. The Thompson family took over Reedness House and the farm further down the village from the Middlebrooks. This then was the son of Mr Thompson Snr of Reedness House and, as you couldn’t have two Mr Thompsons, he was therefore known as ‘Mr Chetwind’.
I also found that
when net curtains were washed in the summer, and in order to bleach them,
they would be spread out to dry on the top of the hedges so that the sun
bleached them nice and white. I don’t suppose we had these fancy
washing powders in those days; or perhaps the natural method was much
cheaper.
There was also a little cottage tucked in at the rear of these houses – a very small cottage – and there lived Mr Simms (who later moved down New Lane on Dunns’ property) with his wife and Geoffrey and another son. Geoffrey was a friend of mine and was the only one I knew in the whole of the time I lived in Reedness who had to go to the hospital with diphtheria. He recovered. Mind you, we all got mumps and measles and all those kind of things. I always found it strange after I’d been lying in bed all this time and hadn’t been to school and thought, ‘when I get back in class they will all know more than I do’, only to find that, on my return, that they had all been off too. Ringworm was another excuse for not attending school: caught from cattle, I believe. When the Simms family moved out and went to live down the lane a Miss Madge Simms [I think she was a relative of theirs] moved in there with her brother and sisters. Later Frank Coggrave, the blacksmith and farrier who took over the business from Walter Dunn and married Miss Minnie Shepherd of Goole (she was employed at Reedness Hall), moved into this cottage.
Reedness Hall, which included a large farm, was in the hands of Mr William Halkon and his wife, whose name was Seaver, together with their daughter of the same name and also their son Frederick. There was a yardman who lived on the premises in a room near the farmyard and looked after the cattle, pigs etc. He was Robert John Shipley – known to all as ‘Robby John’. There were always maids, one or two, living in the house then. Some of them married within the village. Miss Halkon eventually became Mrs Thompson of ‘Advance’ Buses. Frederick married Miss Joanne Wiseman of Swinefleet and eventually took over the farm. Miss Leeman, who was a maid at the Hall, married Herbert Gowler, the farm foreman and then moved to a farm in Swinefleet.
An aerial view of Reedness Hall c.1950
There are still two ‘Bows’ at the Hall. These were perfect for courting couples in those days – they could meet in there out of the wind and away from prying eyes; I think they contributed a lot to Reedness life – there were no street lights there, either! The Hall had a walled orchard which was never used; it was full of old fruit trees and bushes and at the front, which was opposite our house, the wall was topped with thick ivy which hung over the footpath. Very handy, if you were caught in a shower, to shelter under and be perfectly dry. As I have said, in
the same spot where the snowdrops were, there were also walnut trees and
when the nuts were ripe it was permitted to go underneath the trees and
sling pieces of wood up to knock down the walnuts.
If you went out of the back door of the house and straight down the path you came to a corner where there was a three-seater lavatory (sometimes called a petty or closet) and adjacent to this was the milk dairy, where the separator, butter churn etc. were kept. Above the dairy was a loft with a ladder and you could see straw at the top; this is where ‘Scotty’ lived. He was there for many, many years. Then suddenly he disappeared and what happened to him I have no idea. But he seemed to work and live there and get his food and accommodation, but I never actually saw him in the village except with the horse and cart. The Whiteheads who had this farm came from Old Goole, where Mr Whitehead had been a stevedore and his wife a seamstress. They must have got a little bit of brass together and decided to try the rural life. It was a beautiful Victorian style house with a giant elm tree and a horse chestnut tree guarding the gate, which is still there. They built an extra wing on in the form of a wooden bungalow, in which the Wilson family lived. Mrs Whitehead had a sewing machine and took in quite a lot of sewing. She also did laundry for people in the village. On the first floor in one of the outbuildings they had an engine – a very unusual ‘One Stroke’ engine. It worked on paraffin and was started by briskly turning a big handle. A thick leather belt ran down to the ground floor driving a machine which chopped turnips and hay, straw etc. On the top of this engine was a cooling tray full of steaming water – and it ‘phump-phumped’ away quite happily. But it worked. I’ve never seen one before or since.
One other thing that I remember about the Whiteheads – they didn’t like to kill their chickens. They would wait until one appeared to be dithering a bit and Mrs Whitehead would immediately shout ‘George!’ and he would come and kill the chicken – wring its neck. They would make it into soup – they never had a chicken to roast or anything like that – they always waited until it was virtually on its last legs and then they made soup. They would sometimes bring some round for us; it was very nice. Mrs Whitehead made ‘frumety’ at Christmas from cracked wheat in milk and dried fruit, slightly alcoholic but a rare treat. She also had a ‘gopher iron’; this was a double-sided mould at the end of a double steel handle about a yard in length. A mixture was poured into the mould which was then clamped together and thrust deep into the red fire coals. After a time it was withdrawn and opened up to reveal a piping hot, deliciously sweet, golden brown waffle. Go on to Reedness memories (2) - memories of 1930s Reedness continued... |
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