Little Waltham

A Memory of Little Waltham.

I lived three miles from Little Waltham from 1956 till I moved out about 1965. I lived in a cottage near Domsey Lane and we had no buses, only to the village, so when we went out to Chelmsford we had to catch the last bus to the village and then we had a three mile walk in the dark to get home and it was scary as there were no lights. When I moved out, my mother moved down to the village to live. My memories of the village are Amos the bakers, he used to deliver lovely bread and cakes to us. The surgery with Dr Bassett,and the little wooden shop run by the sisters. I think they were called the Phylls.They used to sell sweets and general stores. Also the butchers at the top of the street. There was also a man who had a huge Great Dane, near us. I was scared of it. I loved the footpath that went to the church where horses were allowed to roam. I used to be scared to walk up there past them. I also remember the weir where us kids used to play, of course it was dangerous. My mum lived in one of the cottages next to the chapel. Does anyone have any memories? Vic


Added 17 February 2008

#220845

Comments & Feedback

Hi victoria. I was born in lt waltham in 1956. My name then was Susan wiffen. Malcolm farnsworth, gary young, eric searles, trudie turner, melanie buss were all my friends. I know all the places and people you mention. Tbe wooden shop was phils. Amos bakers. John butcher the butcher. Bassett and wood the doctors. I now live in ireland. Small world though. Miss lt waltham and its inhabitants.
yes I lived in lt Waltham in a thatched cottage, no buses as my sister Vicky says think the dog was a irish wolf hound, we were across footpath and there was a horse in there, I started to run and so did the horse, it bumped into Vicky, firightened me.
Hi Victoria. I lived in Little Waltham on the main Braintree to Chelmsford Road , just past the Casco Garage, from 1947 to 1967. The wooden shop that you mention was Fewells and it was a constant source of envy for me as I gazed at all the new bikes and toys in the window as I passed by on my way to the village school. My cousin Myra worked at Amos Bakers next to the Bell pub. There was a tobacconist / Newspaper / Sweet shop ran by Charlie Rayner. The two butchers shops at the Brook Hill junction were owned by Don Wroot and John Butcher respectively. The surgery at The Limes had three doctors in my time, Drs. Robertson, Bazett and Wood. The dispensary was operated by a Miss Wilson who made up medicines as needed. They were stored in an array of glass bottles, all labelled in Latin.
I think I remember you, Richard. Did you live near Mr and Mrs Rose?

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