Gillian was born and brought up in Littlegate Street in St Ebbe's. At our first reminiscence workshop she saw a photograph of her childhood home for the first time. The house had been demolished in the early 1960's. Memories came flooding back and since then Gillian has shown me some of the objects from St Ebbe's kept by her mother after they moved away and shared the memories that they triggered.
Gillian has spent most of her life living in Blackbird Leys, first in Evenlode Tower and later, as family circumstances changed, in a house nearby. Her house is full of objects that she has collected over the years, each with a story and most of them relating to family, friends and memories of the past. The objects are carefully arranged in cabinets and around an impeccably neat and tidy home.
Albion Terrace. Gillian's house is mid-terrace with a gas light in front of it.
Photo courtesy of the Oxford Mail
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Gillian has spent most of her life living in Blackbird Leys, first in Evenlode Tower and later, as family circumstances changed, in a house nearby. Her house is full of objects that she has collected over the years, each with a story and most of them relating to family, friends and memories of the past. The objects are carefully arranged in cabinets and around an impeccably neat and tidy home.
"My father was a painter. So everything
in the house used to get painted. The trays that you put your cup of tea on.
Plimsolls. Shoes. If you wanted a different colour (we couldn’t afford new
shoes) he’d say ‘What colour do you want it?’.
Everything… The iron – that was painted. I
can remember mum using that afterwards as a doorstop.
But mum used to put it on and then spit on
it. And I can remember seeing her spit on it – to see if it was hot enough I
suppose."
Gillian's father was a painter at Lucy's ironworks. Whether it was toxic fumes caused by spray painting or another vulnerability that caused him to develop pleurisy no-one knows, but he spent eighteen months in hospital and out of work when Gillian was a young child in the mid 1940's. At this point the welfare state was either in it's infancy or possibly just an idea. Either way, Gillian's childhood memories are of the impact this had on the family, her mother's struggle to manage and the support of their community.
Gillian's father was a painter at Lucy's ironworks. Whether it was toxic fumes caused by spray painting or another vulnerability that caused him to develop pleurisy no-one knows, but he spent eighteen months in hospital and out of work when Gillian was a young child in the mid 1940's. At this point the welfare state was either in it's infancy or possibly just an idea. Either way, Gillian's childhood memories are of the impact this had on the family, her mother's struggle to manage and the support of their community.
"Dad – he had pleurisy. And he was in the
old Slade hospital and I wasn’t very old. And I can remember furniture going
actually out of the house. Only small. Not tables and chairs… small pieces of
furniture… and maybe two weeks later they’d come back. And over the years we
found out that mum used to put them in the pawn shop. Because Dad wasn’t there
and dad wasn’t earning any money to look after us. She had to pawn and then get
it out when she could. Eighteen months dad was in the Slade hospital.
I wasn’t allowed in the hospital, but there
was woods. And I can remember my mum taking me in the woods first. Putting me
by a fence and telling me to stay there. And then she used to go into the
hospital and sometimes if Dad was allowed out he used to walk over to the fence
to say ‘hello’ to me.
There was nothing. But you see I can
remember neighbours bringing food. And me going to somebody and having
something to eat. You never questioned it at all."
This experience was probably quite common. Others have talked of ill health and illnesses as a result of serving in the war and the impact this had on family finances before the days of sick pay and benefits. At a point when the country was on it's knees, having expended it's resources there was a clear need for the NHS and welfare state.
"Now my sister. She was 8 or 9 years older than I was. She was the lady and I was the tom boy. We were different. She always wore a dress, I always wore trousers.
I didn’t like playing with the girls. I used to always play with the family of boys that lived next door. I used to go scrumping… they used to put me over the vicarage because I was a girl and I could get away with it. But do you know, I still had a clip round the ear from my mother! 'You shouldn’t do what them boys tell you to do!'
There used to be a policeman on a push bike and we used to wait until he’d gone round commercial Road or somewhere and then I used to hop over.
I never ever camped at the rec ground because I wasn’t allowed. But that was the play area and it had the mounds, and there was a bridge with little alcoves and that’s where you did your courting. That’s where the boys and girls used to go and have a kiss or whatever. And on the rec we used to play or swim. And you could go swimming. I was always getting told off for that. When you think now I wouldn’t go in the Thames. We used to be so daring.
We never had money but we had fun.
"This was supposed to have belonged to my
Great-Gran. I was given it by my mother. But I don’t know. They’re not painted
on the back, she told me, because it goes flat on the shelf. And all it’s got
on is a number. I’ve never really believed it but… I wouldn’t sort of say yes it was…"
“This was under the floorboards of that
bungalow that my son bought. He said “Do you remember senior service?” I said ‘Vaguely.’
But I never did smoke them because they never had a tip on them. He said ‘It
was under the floorboards when we took up the floorboards of the kitchen of
that bungalow.’ And he said ‘I told Kerry just dust off the dust and mum’ll
have that!’”