Weekend Visitors

 

At weekends visitors swelled the numbers—usually husbands and other family members and

friends and all modes of transport were employed to get there including, according to family

folklore, walking all the way by my uncle Owen Shaw!

Yarrantons ran a coach service from Kidderminster but the main mode of transport was by train

Newnham Bridge station was just three miles from the Barracks and the walk was usually made

more tolerable by a “watering” stop at the Nags Head Pub

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                                          Pictured in 2005

 

Saturday night was a big night and most kids were left to their own devices—there was always

Granny to look out for us—and most of the Parents made their way to the Paul Pry or New Inns

Pubs on Frith Common

There was also the Cross Keys and the Bird--in–Hand, in Menith Wood, so no

shortage of “Hostelries”

Either way, it meant walking back in the dark through fields at the top of Dumbleton Lane,

skirting Dumbleton Farm itself

 

Walking back, I’m told was a lot trickier! and we kids always gave the  farm a wide berth

because of the reported ferocity of the Dumbleton bull

 

 

                                  ---------------------------------------------------------

 

Party Time

Towards the end of the season, a Saturday night concert was organised and a remarkable array of

talent was on show, including a couple of songs from my dad—see “A Black Country Tenor”

and a very professional tap dancing routine by my cousins Beryl and Joyce.

A red haired young woman with a delightful voice sang a couple of songs including, I recall,

“Amapola”—top of the pops at that time.

Her name was Gertrude Turner and she lived close to us in the cul-de-sac in Sutherland Road in

Cradley Heath. She now resides in South Africa

And as always, suitably “lubricated”, recitations from my uncle Billy Shaw including—by popular

demand--a very passionate rendering of “The Green Eye of the Little Yellow God”

Another fond memory of uncle Billy Shaw who, on a Sunday morning irrespective of the amount

of ale consumed the night before, would be out before dawn and bring back flat field mushrooms the

size of dinner plates

Fried over the open fire in the top Shanty, and sandwiched between two slices of Lamberts crusty

bread(dipped and slightly warmed in the black mushroom “liquor”) and consumed on a bright, crisp

Sunday morning was a breakfast to be remembered

 

Down at the Teme

A short walk down the lane and past the Moor Farm, the Teme had a pleasant sandy beach area and

it was a magnet for us kids

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                      Reg Homer at the tiller, then Jean Bloomer, then me

                                            Behind Jean, Frank Jeavons and on his left George Hill

                                                                    The tall lad is unknown

                                          ----------------------------------------------------

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


A group of kids in their Sunday best. On the very left is Patrick, son of my cousin Edith Walker (nee Shaw)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


               A few yards up from the beach area was a salmon weir and eel traps

 

                                                       ------------------------------------------

There was another part of the Teme that we visited occasionally;

Opposite the Whitehouse Farm was a very narrow lane; it provided access to the Wallaces’s

house

We were never very sure whether the lane was private or not but, just in case, we always

sneaked down it

It opened out into a very large field with some magnificent Walnut trees—and we helped

ourselves, getting our hands badly stained with the juice from the pulpy, protective outer case

The Teme was at the bottom of the field                                                            

 

                                                             Go back