G
Gummy
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Vicarage Road
As a newcommer to this site may I add some of my memories of Vicarage Road?
My name is Robin Mortiboys and along with my parents, Bill and Rose and my sister Wendy we lived at 46 from about 1955 to 1962. This house was owned by a Mr. Bond, who owned a number of houses in the area. My aunt and uncle lived in Victoria road three or four doors down the hill from Vicarage Road they were Dick and Ada Jones and had three children, Richard, the eldest, joined the army and became a member of the Military Police. Unfortunatly he died of cancer ten or twelve years ago. His two sisters were twins, Pam and Gill, who still live in Chelmsly Wood. Another aunt and uncle lived in Pugh Road, Harry and Lilly Mortiboys, they had one daughter Linda.
My main friends at the time were Michael Shaw who lived at 38 or 40, Barry Jones who lived a few doors the other side and David Blakeman whos parents owned the shop on the corner of Victoria Road and Vicarage Road. One of our favourite tricks was to steal a roll of cotton from my mothers workbox and tie as many door knockers together as possible, then wait in anticipation until a vehicle came down the road, broke the cotton and all the doors knocked at once.
About eight of the houses on Victoria Road backed onto a yard with access from Vicarage Road. This yard gave easy access to my aunt Ada's house, but a shock was in store when a sikh family moved in at the bottom of the yard. The boy soon became a firm friend and was nicknamed 'Nobby' due to the knot of hair on his head. For some reason he was not allowed to go swimming so when we went to Victoria Road baths with the school he was always supplied with trunks and a towel so he could join in, he only just missed out on being a member of the swimming team along with Tony Rose, Alfred Glazebrook, Derek Cotter and myself.
We went to Thomas Street school and for a time I was a milk monitor, remember the bottles of milk we all received at morning break? Of course there was always a few left over and that was the perk for getting to school early to deliver the milk to the classrooms.
Can anyone who went to Thomas Street infants remember a teacher called Mrs Brotherton? She was a hunchback and had the first clas on the right as you entered the hall. I still remember her walking me round the rest of the school because I had got a maths sum right on my first or second day, 2+2=4! I am still embarassed by the memory of showing everyone my little blackboard containing this mystry of the universe.
I look forward to reading more on this site.
As a newcommer to this site may I add some of my memories of Vicarage Road?
My name is Robin Mortiboys and along with my parents, Bill and Rose and my sister Wendy we lived at 46 from about 1955 to 1962. This house was owned by a Mr. Bond, who owned a number of houses in the area. My aunt and uncle lived in Victoria road three or four doors down the hill from Vicarage Road they were Dick and Ada Jones and had three children, Richard, the eldest, joined the army and became a member of the Military Police. Unfortunatly he died of cancer ten or twelve years ago. His two sisters were twins, Pam and Gill, who still live in Chelmsly Wood. Another aunt and uncle lived in Pugh Road, Harry and Lilly Mortiboys, they had one daughter Linda.
My main friends at the time were Michael Shaw who lived at 38 or 40, Barry Jones who lived a few doors the other side and David Blakeman whos parents owned the shop on the corner of Victoria Road and Vicarage Road. One of our favourite tricks was to steal a roll of cotton from my mothers workbox and tie as many door knockers together as possible, then wait in anticipation until a vehicle came down the road, broke the cotton and all the doors knocked at once.
About eight of the houses on Victoria Road backed onto a yard with access from Vicarage Road. This yard gave easy access to my aunt Ada's house, but a shock was in store when a sikh family moved in at the bottom of the yard. The boy soon became a firm friend and was nicknamed 'Nobby' due to the knot of hair on his head. For some reason he was not allowed to go swimming so when we went to Victoria Road baths with the school he was always supplied with trunks and a towel so he could join in, he only just missed out on being a member of the swimming team along with Tony Rose, Alfred Glazebrook, Derek Cotter and myself.
We went to Thomas Street school and for a time I was a milk monitor, remember the bottles of milk we all received at morning break? Of course there was always a few left over and that was the perk for getting to school early to deliver the milk to the classrooms.
Can anyone who went to Thomas Street infants remember a teacher called Mrs Brotherton? She was a hunchback and had the first clas on the right as you entered the hall. I still remember her walking me round the rest of the school because I had got a maths sum right on my first or second day, 2+2=4! I am still embarassed by the memory of showing everyone my little blackboard containing this mystry of the universe.
I look forward to reading more on this site.