Tetbury in Gloucestershire is a
small town, or large village, and HRH Prince Charles lives in Highgrove a
couple of miles away on the Bath road. I mention that for those of you who may
not have heard of Tetbury. It kind of puts it on the map!
I lived there until I was 17. In 2012, when I wrote about my memories of the 1950s and 1960s Coming Full Circle I was astounded by the response, especially from people who remembered me
and my family. Take a look and you’ll see what I mean! To have so many comments
is quite a rare, heart-warming thing.
I have a deep fondness for
Tetbury, as you will see from this nostalgic trip I took a few weeks ago, and
it greatly influenced the setting for my novels. Appley Green lies on the
border of Surrey and Hampshire, but its sense of community was very much derived
from my early years. Tetbury is both very different and the same from how it
was when I was a child and I decided to go back on my own to revisit some of those memories - for real! My parents passed away in the 1990s, so it's a while
since I’ve wandered Tetbury streets simply to absorb both changes and familiar sights.
This may have no relevance to you
if you’ve never heard of the place, let alone been there. I understand that,
but if you read on you may be tempted to stop there on your way to Devon or
Cornwall for example, or take it in when you ‘do the Cotswolds’.
Unsurprisingly, the shops have all changed since I was a child. So here we are inside a relative newcomer, Highgrove Shop in Long Street.
I took a sneaky photo of Chavenage House mentioned in my 2012 post, familiar to you perhaps as Trenwith in TV’s Poldark.
Imagine Aidan
Turner galloping all the way from those Cornish clifftops to Tetbury. Must have
been a nightmare for the continuity team!
This photo will mean a lot to
people who remember as I do, but I am sorry it may be of no interest to
others. This is the back of The Ferns, what
was Sir William Romney’s School, also mentioned
in my 2012 post.
The huge Cedar tree is still there – iconic and steadfast –
but the beautiful grounds with their lawn tennis courts and herbaceous borders
are pretty much built over now. Here’s a couple of old photos taken on my first ever camera, a Brownie, snatching glimpses of it as it was: I was a bit of a daydreamer
on the tennis court.
This alleyway is Eccles Court.
You may well say, 'So what?' A tad self-indulgent, and obscure for you, but it means a lot to me as I walked along this four times a day to and from Courtfield
School situated near The Chipping. I remember swinging round those metal posts
so well, and in a wall was a triangle of three holes
where you could insert thumb and two fingers and make a wish! Now, covered by an interesting plaque!
This used to be the girls’ playground at
Courtfield School and house where a progressive teacher lived.
She let us call
her ‘Sylvia’ – yes, in the 1950s - and did some kind of strange chanting with her pupils. A friend and I spent a Saturday morning cleaning her windows, something I’d
never done before. Our parents knew nothing of this and neither, I suspect, did
our headmistress, Miss Rymer!
This is the side rear view of the school, set
in a lovely, rather wild garden where children must not stray from the paths ...
... and surrounded by a high Cotswold stone wall, and as you can see here those grounds are totally hidden behind big trees (not so big 60 years ago).
Opposite the school are the quite
famous Chipping Steps ...
... and another photo in an area that was the cattle
market, at the base of steep Gumstool Hill. A pen has been preserved to its memory.
Looking down from Gumstool Hill where the old woolsack races took place. Still do!
From the opposite side, this one also looks down and is the exact spot where the photo for Vogue magazine was taken
in 1942 and later reproduced in
The Telegraph 1995.
The maternity
home on Gumstool Hill where I was born! The story goes that my almost 10 year-old sister was not
allowed in and our Dad threw some pocket-money to her out of the window as
compensation! Hopefully the coins did not roll down the hill!
This is the shop behind
the old Town Hall that I imagined as the Wool and Baby shop (not actually selling
babies!) in Secrets in Appley Green, my fourth novel, set in the Sixties.
Another one for
Tetbury aficionados, many of you belonging
to the amazing Old Tetbury Facebook page. Not just any old woods, but Bluebell Woods and the path that leads
mysteriously to Hermit’s Cave where, as 1950s free-range children, we once played.
A bit dark, but I
vividly remember this field in Chavenage Lane being alive at dusk with scampering
rabbits and full of cowslips, before myxomatosis and the decline of indigenous
flowers.
The
house where I lived until I left home. The rockery was built by my
father when they first moved there and had many rare alpine plants – it was his
pride and joy. No ball games allowed!
I had thought this was demolished so was
delighted to see it now uncovered and intact, though a little devoid of plants!
An earlier photo taken in 2010 shows the ‘dwarf’ conifers planted by my father. You see why I thought the rockery had disappeared!
I recall the neighbours in their gardens along this road of eight
houses, all clapping and cheering me (oh yes they did!) one sunny afternoon as I managed to ride my first bike without
falling off, (until I was out of their sight!). Perhaps this memory is slightly
rose-tinted!
Photo of me as a teenager and rockery!
and as a baby with my sister - the same, now famous, rockery behind us.
For anyone tempted to take a look at my old home town, it is a place of great history, beautiful to explore, under bridges, over bridges, through alleys and up steep steps!
Visit Tetbury
�� I enjoy your blog. We were "free range children." I was younger than you but as soon as I got a bike, at the age of ten, I was off with my mates. We'd bike almost everywhere on the O. S. map covering Tetbury. Biked as far as Dyrham Park, via Hawkesbury Upton. Wooton-under-Edge, Nailsworth, Stroud Cirencester a day all the surrounding villages. Chalton, Sherston, Luckington. "Where have you been?"..."Out," would be our reply. We were always more out than in. Kids don't often ha every the licence to roam these days.
ReplyDeleteWe have a link... Tetbury and Frimley.
Kids don't often have the license... was what I meant to write.. Fat fingers
DeleteOh, anonymous! Tetbury AND Frimley! Now I'm puzzled and curious. And licence is fine! License is the verb. Sorry - being pedantic now, who cares?! You're right - those freedoms are gone.
ReplyDeleteHi Mim... It wasn't "licence" that I was correcting.... It was the gibberish but predictive text "corrected" it to license and I didn't notice. I'm even more pedantic than you.
DeleteMy connection with Frimley is a bit tenuous. I visit in-laws and we go to the One Oak and the White Hart for a pint and/or lunch. I've recently been visiting a relative in the hospital.
The Tetbury connection? SWR. I lived about 150-200m from your house.
Lovely to read your trip to Tetbury as we used to live up the Cirencester Road when we moved out of the shop flat and Dad built a house with Holborow.Miss Rymers school was up by the Rec when I went there.The thing that most people remember about Fosters shop is Father Xmas in the window nodding.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment - that Father Christmas must have lodged firmly in my sub-conscious, as it is mentioned at start of Chapter 25 of Secrets in Appley Green!
DeleteHope you are well.
... and Miss Rymer's school, Courtfield, moved around 1955 I think.
DeleteThank you so much Miriam for such an in depth review of Tetbury back in the day. Those photos bring back so many memories! If your house is where I think it is I definitely remember you!
ReplyDeleteHi Miriam just came across this and thought I would check in with you. Hope you are doing ok...
ReplyDeleteThank You and that i have a neat give: Can You Hire Someone To Renovate A House exterior makeover
ReplyDelete