|














|
A message to the web site of a
village that holds many fond memories . . .
COLDEN
COMMON?
Oh, yes - I remember it well!
As we get older I guess we must all suffer from nostalgic mental
trips - I know I do. At least twice a year I find myself staring at
your map of Colden Common and re-living a great part of my childhood
- the time when I lived in this fondly remembered village - the
nineteen-fifties. I sit here and I wonder: where today are all those
wonderful people that I then knew? And: whatever happened to all
those young and tender friendships of yesteryear? Then we believed
they were forever; they were bonds that nothing could, or would,
ever destroy. We thought they were immortal. But alas, they were
not. Sadly, as all too often happens, time and circumstances take
them from you.
Between the ages of around eight-years-old until when I was
seventeen and my father's employment forced us to move away, I lived
at 12 Moors Close. Some older residents may still remember the Knell
family: Joe and Marj (my father, and my stepmother); Michael (that's
me!); and my half-brothers and sisters (in descending age): Vicki,
Nicholas, Simon, and Sally. My father passed on a couple of years
ago, aged eighty-four - I guess many of the parents that I once knew
in the village will by now have gone the same way. Time is such a
cruel master.
Those early days of mine at Colden Common were days of
enlightenment. My father kept chickens in a little "field" near the
entrance to the close, in Lower Moors Road between the then Hardy's
(I believe) tennis court and the back gardens of Spring Lane. He
would sell the eggs to locals, friends and neighbours - mostly from
the close, as I remember, but some further afield.
As a young boy from London now rejoining my family, I'd never met a
chicken before - well, not knowingly. That on your plate didn't
resemble these feathery friends, as they soon became. So I enjoyed
my twice daily chores of trundling down there with a wheelbarrow
full of corn, steaming meal and other stuff to feed them, to collect
the eggs, and to throw something at Toby, the wildest
running-chained Alsatian dog you could imagine whose job it was to
guard them, but whose mission it was to break loose and eat some of
them - as he frequently managed.
It wasn't until just before that first Christmas "in the country"
that I learned the fearful truth. The time when I had to accompany
my father down there after dark and he went into the chicken house -
only to wring their necks and pass the still flapping wildly corpses
of my friends out to me! That, and the subsequent plucking, upset me
deeply and for a while I hated the world. To this day I still don't
eat chicken.
I remember there was a bit of "a split" in Colden Common in those
days - I wonder if it's still apparent today? Some parents favoured
Twyford Primary School and Church (St. Mary's) over the village's
own, and later the Winchester schools over the Eastleigh ones. I
don't know why this was so - in that era you just obeyed your
parents wishes, you never argued with them, and rarely questioned
their decisions. My parents were in the former league and so I went
to Twyford C of E Primary School, and sung as a choirboy at St.
Mary's Church (for tuppence a time), subsequently becoming a Head
Choirboy there along with Bill Russell. Later we both went to Peter
Symond's Public Grammar School in Winchester together, where I
believe he did quite well, but I didn't come anywhere near to my
parent's expectations.
The Russells had a farm a mile or so away at Highbridge by the
river. There, where it would cross the road, we would often go for a
dip in the summer, until there was a national polio scare. After
that it had to be the Lido in Winchester officially - unofficially
we still often managed a river dip. (Were the summers hotter then,
or is it only the memories that are warm?) Bill had brothers: Tom,
Ralph (who had a gruff voice but who simply had to join the choir
because his brothers were in it - and who was often required to only
mime in the quieter bits!), and Andy or Andrew, as I remember. I
wonder, does the family still have the farm?
Occasionally I would pass time at Russell's farm, but the farm that
I was more often to help out on (help? - I was probably a
hindrance!) was the Cook's farm which was on the same road, but only
about half-way to the Russell's farm. I would heave bales of hay
around, and do all kinds of little jobs - anything - just for a few
minutes of driving the tractor. The Cook's lived at the entrance to
Moors Close where the grey Ferguson tractor and trailer parked
outside was a familiar sight.
Geoffrey Cook, their second son, was perhaps a year younger than me.
We became close friends when he too started at Peter Symond's, a
year later than I did. A great chum who, wanting an Army career,
joined the Junior Leaders and once, on leave, frightened the life
out of me when, wishing to show off his training, he forced me to
accompany him in scaling the steep chalk cliffs of the busy by-pass
under St. Catherine's Hill.
Geoffrey used to help Jack Francis with the weekly 16mm film shows
in the Village Hall that were popular at that time. It was a job
that he handed over to me when he "joined up", and one which I truly
enjoyed. Jack and his wife lived in the detached house next to the
Village Hall and had projectors, films, and all kinds of cine
"things" to extravagant abundance. I think "film buff" could never
cover it when it came to Jack! He also owned a small cinema in
Sunningdale that he once took me to in his plush white Jaguar that
was the envy of many. We, at that time, had an old Morris 10 - and
that was considered fortunate.
Originally we used to have the film shows in Colden Common on Friday
evenings, and in Owslebury on Mondays. Later, Twyford was added for
another evening. Never mind the draughty halls, and the much to be
desired noisy wooden chairs, it was great fun in those days: a
cartoon or two, a feature film, and a raffle - all for a couple of
bob! And I got half-a-crown a week for helping - very generous then,
but Jack was a generous person. Distinguished would be a good
description for Jack: edging slightly towards the portly, well
spoken, always smartly dressed - and with either a cigar or his
pipe. That's how I remember him.
When we had to move away from the village, and all my friends, I was
heartbroken. And it seemed to happen so suddenly. Vickers-Armstrong
re-structured and we had to hit Swindon. (I'm now in Blackpool). The
movies job I passed on to another great friend: John Mitchell (the
spelling could be wrong). John would have been two years younger
than me, and another one who on joining Peter Symond's was somewhat
protected by me by being forewarned of the initialisation of bowing
to the founder's grave - which was, in fact, an enormous drainage
vent built resembling a tomb. The Mitchells lived at the far end of
the close, and once astonished everybody by moving next door! John
had an older brother (Leslie?) who was into motorcycles, and at
least two, much older it seemed, very pretty sisters. Another very
nice family.
Friends I had in Colden Common evolved over the years due to "the
split" that I've mentioned. In the primary school days we all pretty
much mixed together. I remember Michael Merrick (or was it Merritt?)
from Moors Close (who was lumbered with taking me to school on my
first day, and with looking after me - which he did well. He was a
good mate), Paul Money from New Road, whose parents had a sweet shop
on the main road where oft, having walked to and from school, we
would spend our bus money on bubble gum, fruit salads and
blackjacks. And Colin Matley who lived in Lower Moors Road opposite
the field with "the hump" (now houses) where we would play, and if
it rained shelter in the old caravan which had become a den in his
garden. We were very much "a gang".
After the "11plus" exam in those days friendships changed as some
went on to Eastleigh and others, like me, went to Winchester. We
were all still friends, of course, but paths changed and they didn't
cross often enough. Different busses, different directions, forced
new friendships to be cemented - many now would be those who were on
the bus you joined to go to school, or who themselves joined you
along the route. Older now we would travel to another village or
town to meet up with these new friends, and our new classmates - and
in doing so we further widened the gap with our old friends. And
around that time too, those things once ridiculed, and called
"girls", started to become important for some amongst us.
Things that I remember: Tennis at Hardy's tennis court for sixpence.
Fallers from their orchard. Swimming at "the loch". Scrumping from
the orchards along the road to Colin Matley. Bluebell picking.
Blackberrying. Harvest time and a few bob earned. The little hut
shop in Spring Lane. The Post Office near the Black Horse pub where
often, like most kids, I'd have to take the little red notebook with
our weekly grocery order in it. King Alfred busses. The (was it: Tip
Top?) baker's horse that would dump in the road - and I'd have to be
first there to shovel it up for the garden. Many a rendezvous behind
the garages down the slope at the end of the close where all kinds
of strange things happened - don't ask! Regularly taunting an older
lad, who lived in the prefabs behind us, until he got angry and
chased us - why we did it, I'll never know - I guess it was a kid
thing. Dragging the streets (and being a nuisance) on Fireworks
Night whilst alternating between the several big bonfire parties
there would be spread around the village. Our "gang" always put our
two-pennyworth in with the Matleys - they always put on a good show
- but we'd be sure to keep a few bangers back so that we could give
the village hell afterwards. Carol singing, and all the mince pies
and sweets we'd be given. Naughtily re-locating beer bottles from
crates by the side of the Rising Sun in order to later claim the 2d
deposit in the off-sales - but not very often. Snow, and sledging
down the hill towards the river, in a field on the left as you leave
the village on the B3335. Skating on the icy pond in the field with
the hump. Lemonade and old-fashioned Smith's Crisps with my family
in the garden at the Dog & Crook, whilst savouring the healthy
country air - their pigs! Choir nights, and disrespectfully playing
amongst the gravestones, sometimes lying in wait in the darkness to
leap out on some poor unsuspecting church-goer. The ghostly stories
of a phantom coach and horses that raced through the avenue of trees
only to crash into the wall of the big house in Brambridge. Those
enjoyable mobile cinema nights. Paper rounds; mornings, evenings,
and even on Sundays once the voice breaking ended the chorister
days. Us smoking lads, big men that we were, had to work our guts
out to buy ten Woodbines in those days (four Domino if you were
short) - but just occasionally, and certainly not often enough, we
were flush and able to run to a large bottle of Brown Ale and go off
to the woods to sup it.
I wonder: does anybody still remember the village copper we had at
that time? He lived on the main road opposite the garage and was
aptly named: Mr Penny! We gave him a lot of respect in those days.
He was quite firm with us kids. I know at that time everybody in the
village had to show a light on their car if it was parked on the
road overnight - even in our sleepy close - he insisted on it. The
dual faced lamp that could be plugged into the cigar lighter, and
then fitted appropriately by winding up a window on it, became
popular, but in winter everyone's battery was flat by the next
morning and so people started parking on the grass verges to avoid
breaking the law - which didn't do a lot for the condition of the
grass around the close.
Something else I recall is a show at the Village Hall, maybe a
pantomime, where I along with Geoffrey Cook were stage-hands, and I
do believe that his mother was the one responsible for winding the
curtains open and shut, as well as being the prompter. I remember
that to our horror, and to the utter delight of the audience, the
curtains jammed open at the end of one of the acts and we had to
embarrassingly wrestle with them whilst perched precariously atop of
step ladders. Being unsuccessful in releasing them, we were forced
into changing the scenery in full view of the appreciative audience.
It was embarrassment beyond belief to a posing young teenager.
Some people I still remember from the area: Billy Hammond whose
jeans were always at least two sizes too small - drainpipes were in,
but how he was in them we'll never know. And then there was his
sister (maybe a half-sister - I believe the surname was different),
a stunning girl and one who broke many a young man's heart; The
Pikes, esp. Sheila; the Moodys who were our neighbours; the Watsons,
esp. Carol - but they moved away for "personal" reasons; the Matleys,
esp. Colin; the Moneys, esp. Paul, who I once saw on a television
quiz show many years later; the Merricks, esp. Michael; the Cooks,
esp. Geoffrey, and the tennis friend of his: dear old Tim who was a
lovely character; the Smiths (they arranged delivery of the evening
paper), esp. "Piffer"; another Smiths, these near Twyford Moors,
esp. Brenda; the Bagleys, esp. Helen who had some great birthday
parties; the Russells, esp. all the boys; the Healeys, esp.
Christopher; Peter Knight from Eastleigh, a close classmate - I
wonder if he still remembers how we got caned by the Head (Shields)
for scrumping when we hadn't been - we'd been smoking behind the
pavilion, but could hardly use that as an excuse! Then there was
Jack Francis and his wife; the Rev. Bynon (Twyford); Anthony
Holloway (Winchester), a wonderful guy with "fun is me" written all
over him; Celia Fulford (Twyford) and her guinea pigs; a couple of
boys in New Road (whose names have gone - was one of them Brian? And
maybe, Cooper?), and another young guy, a bit of a big lad who lived
in a bungalow opposite them where we'd "relax" to the latest pop
records blaring out beyond the point of distortion from his Dansette
record player. I think his name might have been Ricketts - maybe
Alan; and then, of course, there were the Mitchells, esp. John.
There were obviously others, perhaps many others, that I knew well,
but where my memories have succumbed to time. I do hope I haven't
offended anybody who was close by omitting them. Like Mr Chips, all
those that I do remember have never aged. Today my eyes look at your
photographs and I read the news of all the wonderful things that
there now are in the village - but in my mind I still see the Colden
Common that I grew up in. To me it will always be the same loved
"home" as I knew it. And that is why, as pleased as I am that the
village is doing so well, I must never visit it again, in case those
memories should change.
I have been back to Colden Common just twice since leaving, although
I've whizzed past in a car several times on my way to the south
coast. Once, after only having left for a year or so, I cycled there
one hot summer's day (about 70 miles) and stayed with the Cooks
overnight. On this lightning visit I was lucky enough to meet up
with John Mitchell again. I remember we went off for a drink
together and talked of old times - that fortunate meeting is
something I have cherished ever since; something that I shall take
with me to my grave. Oh, that we could do it again. For those few
short hours I was back there and once more a part of it all.
The only other time was several years later, in my Merchant Navy
days, when two of us were hitch-hiking to Southampton (from Swindon,
having spent all our leave money) to pick up our separate ships. On
that occasion, passing through Colden Common, I happened to bump
into Mrs Pike in Spring Lane. From the fleeting exchange we had I
gathered that most of my friends had flown their nests and moved on.
To where? She didn't know. A great emptiness enveloped me - and all
these years later it can still come back to haunt me.
If anybody reading this does still remember me, if you are one of
those old friends and would like to say hello, then you can email me
on knellmj at hotmail.com - it would be so great to hear from you.
Acquaintances: being a paper boy, I suppose once I must have known
most of the immediate village. Friends: I had many of them - and all
of them good. And close friends: I had my full share of those too.
But I think, as we get older, many of us come to realise that we had
one person who was very special to us in our early years; someone
who we could talk to when we were feeling a bit down, and not be
judged; and maybe someone who at that time we did not let know just
how much we appreciated them. I know I do, and mine was strangely
(because of the two year age difference), but undoubtedly, John
Mitchell. I hope he has survived these mortal chains as I have, and
that he is still with us today. Any news from him, or of him, would
be treasured. I do hope life smiled on him and treated him kindly.
The Colden Common web site is beyond excellence. I hope all the
villagers appreciate all the hard work that must go into it. It is
something that should never be let go of, or neglected - it is
brilliant. Believe me, even back in those "good old days", walking
all the way up to the Parish Hall Notice Board to see what was
happening around the village was never this good!
With Fond Memories, and with All Best Wishes for the continuing
success of Colden Common and its many inhabitants . . .
Michael Knell.
Visit:
http://www.coldencommon.hants.gov.uk
TOP OF PAGE
HOME
THE FORCES
OF GREY
THE ELEPHANT'S
NEST
THE PROVIDENCE
OF PAN
THE QUICKIE
FULL BOARD
CUTTER'S EDGE
A WELL UNHAPPY
MOVE
THE DELPHI ATONUS
AN IMPORTANT
MATTER
REVIEWS AND SIGNINGS
LINKS
MEMORIES
CONTACT ME
|