This work is part fiction with a lot of fact. (Names and that have been changed as well as true locations to protect the innocent). I would like to add that life was actually like that for some of us and a far cry from the London of the swinging 60s we all hear about. In some ways it feels like another life-time ago.
For those who do not know about the money back then there were 240 pence to the pound. 12 pence to a shilling so 20 shillings to a pound. We also had what we called a thrupenny bit which was a three-pence coin. Before my time there was also a farthing which literally means fourth-thing and was a quarter of a penny and two made up the hapenny which was a half-penny coin.
Many of us still use these terms like when we remember getting four Blackjacks which were sweets for a penny and we still say they were a farthing each.
Two other terms that crop up are The Mead and The Rye:
The Mead was a huge playing field to the east of where I lived and where lots of people gathered to play, attend fairs as well as picnic. The word mead itself means a mowed meadow.
The Rye was another field but much larger. It was closer to the town and where families and others gathered for picnics, carnivals and to play sport.. There was a boating lake at the back and at the front close to the main road was where children could play on the slide and swings. There was even a paddling pool fed by the the river close by where kids not only paddled but sailed their small boats.
It was 1960 when I first started at the infant school at the age of 5. Even then I was as bright as a button. I knew most of my letters as well as knew how to do sums. I felt so proud when the teachers asked and I could tell them that my mum had taught me. From then on I shot ahead.
The only bad time that year was when my mum kicked my dad out. He was a lorry driver and on the road a lot yet he had an affair and got the woman pregnant. I saw them in town once quite a few months after he left. She was big with child but I did not hide how much I hated her or hated my dad come to that. Years later I did overhear her husband had thrown her out so thought she and my dad deserved each other.
I loved my mum more than anything and always had and I hated seeing her struggle as dad did not always pay her for me. But at least we had each other and I always did my best at school wanting her to be so proud of me.
In 1962 I attended the junior school my mum went to and loved seeing what she had seen as little had changed. I was in the top form of 48 children and always in the top 8. That was a bad year though because as 62 slipped into 63 we had one of the worst winters on record. Mum and I were reduced to sleeping in the front room on a matress in front of the open fire to keep warm. Mum got pneumonia though and never survived. As far as I was concerned I had no family apart from my maternal nan so I was sent to live with her.
I was never sure I would understand my nan though. I did get hugs and kisses but they were very few and far between as she was never as loving unlike my mum. But what she did give me was freedom and I guess that helped me come to terms a little with the loss of my mum. Nights were always the worst though with little to occupy my mind so I often thought of mum and cried myself to sleep.
It seemed strange too that as a family mum and dad were well off as we were the first family in our street to own a car. Now we were what you would call dirt poor. Nan did have a small pension as my grandfather had been in the war as well as worked on the railways. I never knew him or at least I could not remember him as he had died before I was two. Nan was 62 when I moved in with her and still worked evenings cleaning offices to earn a little extra money.
All I had with me when I moved in with nan were little trinkets of mum's and my teddy bears. One was like any normal teddy bear mum gave me when I was two while the other one was knitted in yellow wool and from my maternal nan. He was called Tom Dooley as in the song because when you held him up his head hung down.
Nan's house was on the estate to the east of town called the Marsh. It was one of the oldest estates like the one to the west of the town. They were where the oldest and poorest lived and the kids that grew up on them like my mum moved into the new houses on the new estates as soon as the were built. I was nearly two when we moved into our new house. Before then I had lived in a caravan with my parents not far from the Marsh and near the back of the Rye. I remember bits but not a lot like looking out the windows and seeing other caravans.
Nan's house was cold. Like her neighbours we always used the back door on the side of the house. Between that and the kitchen door was the bathroom with toilet. When it was cold you kept the kitchen doors closed to keep in the warmth. When you needed the bathroom you didn't hang around and the worst part was at night and trying to grope around to find the string to switch on the light especially when you were in a hurry to go.
Nan practically lived in the kitchen where there was an open fire. It was burning most of the time not only to heat the water but nan often cooked meals in the pot that hung over the fire. Mostly stews with a bit of meat she called scrag-ends or something like that and a lot of veg.