|
Brandon Remembered
Please send me your memories and photographs of Brandon using the 'Contact Us' link on the left, and I will add them to the site here.
Margaret Soto-Olivo
Margaret has lived in Perth, Western Australia since 1974
"My parents, brother and sister came
from London and my mother especially found the locals very closed when
strangers came into town. I was born in Brandon in 1942 and my brother
used to call me a Suffolk swede!
"Italian prisoners of war were billetted at the Silver Fox farm where we used to live. The DP’s or
displaced persons [were] from Poland one of whom my sister married . The
Nissan huts along the London Road that the Polish people used to live in
were like palaces inside, we used to attend the Sunday mass in their
Nissan hut church, the priest used to make the congregation cry with his
sermons, he even let us girls go on the altar at certain times, which is
not allowed at all in the catholic church. We used to throw rose
petals in front of the priest at religious ceremonies. We even learnt
some Polish words, could not spell them but at least we knew how to say
hello and count to ten. There was a Polish canteen where they sold
Polish foods and we used to go there to buy their specialities.
Midnight mass we loved, traipsing over there in the snow. We met some lovely people, (Nina Witoch or Witock [Witosh?] used to
to live in the Nissan huts with her lovely family and her mum often
cook meals for my sister and myself. They were also lovely people,
the Polish).  "We lived at
Town Street Road, now known as Crown Street. I used to work at the
Avenue (cinema) as an usherette from the ago of 13 to 17, as a part time
job while I was still at grammar school in Bury St Edmunds. I earned
27/6 (one pound 7 shillings and sixpence) a week plus a free ticket to the
movies which I could give to anyone. Ben Cooley owned the cinema and
Jack Coutts was the manager. He always (Jack) wore a bow tie and a
tuxedo. Once a year Ben Cooley would give all the children of the local
area a free cinema ticket plus an orange maid or equivalent. On one
occasion the show was Elvis Presley’s "Jailhouse Rock" and the cinema
being packed (we used to squeeze four littlies into the two seat "lovers'
seats" and two littlies into the normal one person seat, there must have
been hundreds in there) really started to rock, all the little kids got
up and started to dance, and the manager came in to see what on earth
was going on and I said to him that there was no way that we could do
anything to stop them,there were just too many of them for us and they
were enjoying themselves so much. Honestly I can still see it to this
day with Jack shaking his head and going back into the foyer.
"Wilfred Pickles came to Brandon
once, my parents went, this was at the cinema, and of course it was on
the radio. Everyone was very excited. Can’t remember who went on to the
stage, but the theme tune was “have a go Joe” or something like that.
"My maiden name is Lingham, and St Margaret”s Drive was named after
me, not the St bit of course. My father was Sidney Lingham and we
traded under the name of S.Lingham Ltd. We built the houses at Peldon,
the big estate next to it, and Saffron Close; the corner one at Town
Street next to St Margaret’s Drive which field had previously belonged
to the de Lotbinieres and was originally used as a football field from
the generosity of old Looby as we called him. He used to have acres of
land where he planted blackcurrants and as kids we used to pick them for
money. Is Lode street that street in Town Street that goes up to the
left, well his fields were up there and at the bottom of the street is
where I came racing down the hill and was hit by a car, my sister Jill
Poplawski told me to stop, but I was 8 and invincible, so I thought, or
stupid. Anyway I was not really hurt. Anyway they sold the football
field to my father and we built houses on it. I worked for my dad
fulltime for 13 years and would have sold most of the houses on these
estates. I was his right hand man. My brother Gerald was a carpenter
and worked on the houses. We also built all of Woodlands Rise and
Oaklands Drive and some down the Thetford Road, 2 storeys, we rented out
40 houses to the US service people. Wealso built houses in Weeting and
various other Norfolk towns. By the way we paid 7000 pounds for the
whole of Peldon, that was a lot of money then.
"People these days may think that the houses were small, but that was all
people could afford or in fact needed. I remember that the one bedroom
ones on the football field estate originally cost 1230 pounds, and that
the ones at the beginning of Saffron close we sold for 4000 pounds,
inflation was working rapidly, halfway through the estate we stopped
selling and then put the price up the 8000 pounds, I remember because I
did all the bookwork.Remembering also that replacement land was shooting
up as there was never enough.
We put in gas heating and the gas company got so confused and stuffed up
their bookwork that they had to come down and I had to help them
reconstruct what they had done through my bookwork.
"After school I
had worked at Lloyds Bank in Thetford, but the pay was so poor, I started
at 4 pounds, sixteen shillings and fourpence and 2 and a half years
later I was still only earning 7 pounds. I was about to apply for a job
at the bank on the US base at Lakenheath, when miraculously my father
offered me a job for ten pounds a week and then put it up to 12 pounds.
I think my mother got in there to make sure I did not end up marrying an
American, or worse. Anyway after that our business really took off as
Dad could concentrate on expanding the business while I did most of the
selling. We used to work 7 days a week, advertising in a London paper
“Are you thinking of retiring ? Then why not move to Brandon” for people
who had valuable houses to move down to Brandon and buy a property for
about a third or less. We had hundred of replies and I had to reply to
all of them individually, we did not have a photocopier at that stage I
used to meet them at Brandon railway station, take them to our house HQ
at 7 Crown Street, show them house plans and then take them to various
estates to show the different types of houses and seal the deal there
and then.Dad was ferrying people at the same time. We used to drop them
off at the Railway hotel for a meal and they would then take a train
back to London. "
Dee Rosco
When we moved to England in 1963, with the USAF, we stayed at the Brandon
Park House until accommodation could be found for us. We eventually moved to a
small thatched cottage called Weeting Cottage. Does that still exist? We were
at Brandon house from Sept., 1963 until about December, 1963. We were
definitely there on Nov. 22, 1963, when President Kennedy was shot. I was about 18
at the time, and my sister and I were dressing to go to the town disco for a
dance. We explored all of the grounds and I clearly remember the mausoleum.
My husband and I lived in Brandon when we first married in 1964. I married at Mildenhall AFB We lived in a
terraced house on George Street. We lived at #11, George St.. There was a
factory next door, and the factory yard was always full of hides and skins of
animals (What were they manufacturing?). Consequently, the house harbored HUGE
spiders. The house had outdoor plumbing, that is, a flush toilet in a small
house behind the scullery. There were hooks in the ceilings which I think
might have been for lanterns.The house was owned by the Jeyes, who also operated
the pub, the Flintknapper's Arms, at the corner. We paid 10 pounds a week
rent. We lived there from Oct, 1964 until we moved back to the US in March 1966.
We were friends with Wendy Jeyes.
|
 |