Wickham Bishops Born And Bred
A Memory of Wickham Bishops.
In 1950 I was born on a cold winter's night to my mother Rosemary Jesse, at 'The Black Houses', Kelvedon Road, Wickham Bishops, built by architect, designer and socio-economic theorist Arthur Heygate Macmurdo. I had an older brother Neil and a sister, Christine. My mother had lived her childhood at Goldhanger, another delightfully unique part of Essex, bringing forth many joyful memories of childhood. My father Chris like me was born in Wickham Bishops, his father Joe walked into the village at the tender age of 11 with another lad from who knows where and were taken in and raised by a couple of families in the village, hence no record of our ancestry on that that side of the family.
My mother worked at the local primary school for endless years, firstly as the dinner lady then the dinner and lunchtime playground lady. Luckily for us kids my mum had a wonderful sense of play, the only downfall for me was that from the moment I could sit up I got carted off to school on the back of mum's bicycle as day care wasn't an option in those days (school at 9 months old). Miss Stapleton was our headmistress and as tough as she was, I loved the nature walks she took us on, all down the winding, one car only, horse and cart or tractor, leafy lanes and through the short cuts none only to locals and named (after what, one wonders?) 'The Piggeries', 'Lovers Lane', 'The Rainbow', explaining as she went about the flora and fauna, as we followed in a somewhat unstraight line.
Mum would visit her friends in the village on the way home from school, firstly the post office for a cuppa, then The Mitre Pub, my godparents owned the pub, Frank and Mary Williams. Time permitting we would call in on the Cluttons, Derek and Betty the milk delivery people, mum worked on the milk round before going to the school job, we were what would be described today as a low income family, hard work was a necessity to survive. On Monday morning mum and I would go to the wash house built on the corner block of the nine houses, when we walked in the warmth hit us from the fires underneath the hot tubs of boiling water ready to clean the laundry, it was made totally from concrete and was blue due to the blue bags used to make everything extra white.
We bought groceries from vans rather than shops, Monday the co-operative van for basic groceries, Tuesday the ice-cream van, Wednesday the soft drinks, Corona van, Thursday the rag and bone man, Friday the fish and chip van.
I lived my life growing up outside, I knew every crack and cranny of Wickham Bishops, nothing stopped me going anywhere, I spent many wonderful days getting lost in the beauty of massive gardens, open to the public at weekends, just sitting with the trees and flowers and lawns and lakes long before the gates opened.
I worked in the village on and off at the Goulds Bakery and The Chequers Pub, and what fantastic parties we had. My father was involved in the running of the extremely popular Tuesday night Rock and Roll club at the village hall, he would design the posters. Being too young to get in myself, I would sneak out with a friend and watch the Teddy Boys and girls line up to get in, then listen to the music from the live bands from the recreation ground outside. Many happy hours were spent in the surrounding woodlands from drinking the crystal waters from the tiny streams, to climbing the giant trees and diving into the colorful autumn leaves, as the years progressed so did the purpose of the woods, boyfriends and first kisses. The church holds vivid memories of marriages, finding unknown relatives in the churchyard, to ghost stories of the pond, murder, night riders, so scary my friends and I would stand at the rails and spook each other out, I ended up having nightmares.
There was a tiny community centre next to the church with a stage and dressing rooms to the sides, the school would put on a yearly nativity play for the local community, the excitement on the night was equal to that of the Oscars. Pantomimes were a yearly occasion and much preparation went into the gala event, lots of local gossip, who will get the lead rolls, usual village politics. The village hall was used for many different occasions from rummage sales to billiards to whist drives to pantomimes to carnival events and dancing. It was a focal point of the community. Carnival day, oh so exciting, best dress on, sister as Carnival Queen, roads lined with cheering people, floats from neighboring villages, look out Rio for excitement, in Wickham Bishops on carnival day you could get a ride in a bubble car, and go home with a piglet a duck or a coconut, plus the biggest home grown vegetable won in a raffle.
Mr Plod the local policeman knew everyone, neighbours knew and told everyone everthing, cameras were not needed then.
I left the family home for the last time some 30 years ago and moved to Perth, Australia> My father died this year and the final ties to my family home will be sold by my brother. I feel very blessed to have had the experience of early life in Wickham Bishops
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Comments & Feedback
We played in the fields all summer long with our dogs and we walked them along the river twice a day, every day. Mrs Pick lived in the Mill and she would visit us at Easter and bring us Easter eggs. My friend Jane kept her horse (Connie) at a paddock in Ishams Chase and I caught the bus to school right outside the Mill house. I think
The farmer sold off the land and they've made the field s into a golf course now. Im going back in the spring to take pictures for my memory book before developers make their way in and destroy my little piece of paradise. ....
Tom Marvin must have been a patient soul as we kids at harvest time would build "house's" out of his corn sheaves or bales (later on ) I could go on with many more memories Happy New Year 2025 Regards Pete Moore Palmerston North New Zealand
Marilyn Jesse - I remember your parents fondly. Rosemary Jesse was not only part of my childhood as a dinner lady at Great Totham School but also my next-door neighbour, we lived at number 43. My brother and I would often pick buttercups from the fields down Handleys Lane for your mother's tortoises and for a chance to pick a "sweety" from the bowl of sweets she kept in the kitchen for such eventualities. I remember your younger sister Christine from when she would return home to visit your parents, often still in her nurses uniform.
To Paul Butler... you and I were in the same class at primary school (could have been Mr Cuttress's or Mrs Terry's class or both). If memory serves me correctly, you were a blonde haired lad. Sorry for pushing you over and getting your smart school trousers muddy... I was a little $*!t back then and I apologise... albeit 50 years too late.
To rachlregan. My mother worked for Mrs Pick as a home help, I remember Mrs Pick as a lovely elderly lady. I shook her hand once and she had secreted a £1 note in her palm for me for being so polite. It was the first time I had received money in a handshake.
Growing up in Wickham Bishops on the poverty line, we as kids from the black council houses were resourceful in ways to earn some pocket money. Knocking on the doors of nice houses asking if they needed help in their garden or have their car washed. Depending on the season we would help on the surrounding farms stacking straw bales, picking strawberries/black currents/potatoes. Back then everything was not as automated as today, there was no health & safety or child exploitation laws. I think we grew up quicker back then. At the age of 14 I was driving tractors preparing the fields for sowing, at 15 I was helping my mate David K. in The Chequers Pub as a bottle boys, restocking shelves after Friday nights revelry, helping to clean the beer lines and sometimes serving behind the bar. After the beer pipes were flushed with clean water, the beer had to be tested to ensure that the detergent was completely flushed from the system. Both myself and David K. would inevitably head off to our Saturday afternoon job on the farm slightly drunk.
Wickham Bishops being built on a hill was great as a bicycle ride in every direction was downhill, coming home again was not nearly as much fun going back up the hill. I was so grateful when I was able to buy a moped.