Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Wednesday 18th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Wednesday 18th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Thursday 2nd January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Grandma & Granddad Fisher
A Memory of Boxford.
I have wonderful memories of times spent with my grandparents when they kept The Compasses Inn.
I am the youngest of six children of eldest daughter of Jim and Kit Fisher, Doris. I can remeber going to Boxford by bus from Ipswich. I used to get off the bus outside The Fleece to walk along Stone Street to The Compasses. It was always magical to walk and hear the birdsong and the sheer beauty of the countryside. My brother and sisters still make a detour through the village whenever we are in the vicinity.
#337650
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Cabot Knewell, with wife Joan (nee Joan I Smith), was the master butcher at Graham House, 6 Broad Street, Boxford, from the mid 1940s to the 1970s. To the right is the Fleece. To the left, Riddlestons stationery, now a café. (The river opposite is the River Box - not the Brett; the shop front of the butchers read: C. Knewell, not C.J. Newell)
After WW2, to supplement income, Cabot and Joan set up a fish and chip shop on the left shop front; the right continued to be the butchers.
Most weeks, Walter Bowers helped Cabot purchase pigs and a bullock from Bury St Edmunds market; these were delivered in a lorry and then killed in the slaughter house to the rear of the property, adjoining the kitchen !
Cabot and Joan later lived at the bungalow 'Ramree' off Clubbs Lane, named after an island off the Burma coast, where Cabot served during WW2
Joan was born in Polstead but was brought up, with her 6 sisters and brother Arthur 'Artie' by her father Arthur-Marshall Smith and mother Hilda at 'Lavender Dene', now 'Vermont' the pink house at the narrow part of Stone Street; part of the building included a smithy. A few doors down was Grimwoods shop, the other being in the village centre.
Arthur-Marshall was converted whilst at Polstead and proclaimed 'the good news about Jesus'. The family enjoyed attending the Congregational Chapel in Swan Street as well as other places of worship and especially Rayden Salvation Army; Marshall sometimes preached.
Cabot was born in New Zealand but was brought up at Great Horkesley's butchers.
Cabot & Joan had two children: Clive and Susan.