November 5th 1954

A Memory of Croglin.

I, at the tender age of fourteen, arrived in Croglin on November the 5th, 1954. It was 'Bonfire Night' and as strangers in the village I did not know a single soul. However the bonfire for the celebrations had been situated in the old quarry at the top end of the village and festivities commenced at about 7.pm so my eldest sister and I ventured forth to meet the locals. The weather was reasonable for November and the bonfire was dry so a good start was made. Soon the local lads realised that there were strangers in the camp and approached to enquire who we were and were we the folks who had moved into Quarry Cottage, after an affirmitive reply we were really made welcome and the celebration became a memorable one for me.

Charlie Dixon, Jim Metcalf, Joe Thirlwall, Sylvia Marshal, are some of the first people I met in the village and have I had a life-long friendship with them all, sadly one of the ones I have mentioned has passed away but is fondly rememered.

There were no buses to Croglin those days apart from the school bus that transported us, either to the Ierthing Valley or the Whitehouse Grammer School at Brampton, some eight miles away. All services apart from the goods we got from the local farmers was transported by vans which visited the village weekly, I remember one of the vans came from Lazenby Co-op and was driven by a great character called Ronnie, who had a great chat line for the ladies, only in the line of sales mind. I remember one old lady asking him how much oranges were and he replied 'Sixpence each Mrs Duers, but for you five for half a crown!' He was one of the lads who parachuted into Arnhem at the latter part of the war and spent what was left of it as a prisoner.

When I left school I spent a year with a farmer called Bert Pattinson, I lived in there and came down to Croglin at nights  by the pub corner and met other friends, one I have to mention is Hugh Holiday, who still lives in the village. Mostly walking back with Hugh as far as Raygarth Field then I would race up the road frightened that the Boggles would catch me! Fortunately they never did. I left Bert's a year later and went to another farm nearer Croglin called Davygill, owned and operated by Jimmy Ellwood and his wife Joan. I had two wonderful years there and sometimes wish I was still there. We used to share work in the busy farming times and threshing days come to mind as one of those busy days, Local contracters with mobile threshers would come to the farm and local farmers would send one or more of their workers to the farm whose threshing day it was, and hard work ensued from square one as the contractor was on so much a bag of oats threshed and so much a bale of straw baled. Then came a wonderful farmhouse lunch, bellybusting is perhaps a polite term to use, we would finish about four pm and then it was feeding calves, and milking the cows which ended about 6pm thereupon we had high tea which again was something to behold

In those days Croglin had an annual sports day which the Village Hall Committee ran and it was akin to Grasmere sports with fell race, Cumberland and Westmorland-style Wrestling with Peter Hunter, Desmond Ward and many others. Generally there was also a hound trial with a trail being laid by a local athletic lad laying a trail of aniseed which the foxhounds followed. then a grass track cycle race which should have been Olympic class had it still been in today. A local chap Frank Marshal was one of the top men in that field of sport.
The day was generally finished off with a dance in the village hall where an accordian band would play country dance music and new aquaintances would be made with the opposite sex.

We used to have long walks in the summer evenings up on to the local fells and sometimes a paper trail, which I was no good at because I suffered from Asthma. The village pub, the Robin Hood, was the local venue for farmers meeting for a chat and a 'bevvy' in the evenings.

I used to go on my holidays with the local cattle haulier, Stan Thirlwall, who I liked very much and although he did not say much, what he did say was worth listening to. The speed limit in those days was twenty miles per hour so it took one a long time to get anywhere and we used to go north as far as Oban and as far south as Crewe delivering sheep and cattle from Lazonby and sometimes Penrith auction marts.

My parents lived in Croglin until my father died, Mother eventually moved into an old people's home in Penrith where she died and they now are in the churchyard in Croglin. I left in 1957 and after a short say in northumberland I joined The Royal Air Force. I still love Croglin.


Added 13 July 2008

#222018

Comments & Feedback

I was born in 1949 and Joan Ellwood was an aunt of mine. We lived in Manchester and spent many childhood holidays at Davygill Farm.

The water was drawn from the beck via a pump to a tank at the top of a small hill, an innovation of Jimmy's as water was previously drawn directly from the beck. There was no flush toilet of course. Joan came from Manchester too and was a member of the land army in the second world war and met Jimmy while working on his farm.

We as children spent many a happy hour catching crayfish in the beck. We helped picking the potato crop, or at least thought we helped. We brought the cows in for milking, getting to know each one by name. We picked watercress from the beck. We played in the hay barn. The fells were full of rabbits and the occasional hare as well as game birds and just a brief walk would spring a number of them. The farm was a child's paradise.

Jimmy was a crack shot and could hit a target with his 303 some incredible distance away, with no telescopic sight. His prowess with darts was also well known. He was an accordionist and played in a band. When Jimmy retired he went working on the boats on one of the lakes and played his accordion there too. Occasionally he shot young crows with a shotgun for a crow pie supper when at Davygill.

Joan was a plucky woman. I heard that during the war she saw a German plane coming down in flames on the farm fells and ran to the rescue despite the warnings from the nearby men and pulled the pilot from the burning wreckage, with no thought to her own safety. Unfortunately he died anyway.

We went for walks with Stan and Marion, Jimmy's daughter, the two of whom later married. As a countryman, Stan would point out birds' nests and other features which sometimes were right under our noses but not seen, such as shrews and other hidden creatures.

All this was an incredible education to a city boy -the realization there was a totally different life in the country with its own wonders, skills, traditions, and way of life.
Oh for those halcyon days now!

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