1935 LETTERHEAD OF GRANDAD'S, l rode in his lorry @4 years old.
During the summer months he took me out in the lorry all day, l loved it on the road, and one day he passed our house and Mum saw me riding in the back, stood behind the cab !
When Granddad & l got home she complained very strongly about this, saying how dangerous it was, but he dismissed the fears, saying 'The boy's alright, he always rides there, with the dog '
Taken by myself with 2/6d. camera!My dog, Nell posing on our Standard Flying 14 horsepower car (holiday @ Hayling Island circa 1960 )
l recall going into Spencer's shop in Farnham, they were drapers. l was spellbound by the cash 'monorail' on the shop ceiling, which took Mum's money from the assistant to the cashier, & returned with Mum's change & receipt. It made a loud 'bang' as the carriage hit the stop at each end of the rail.
We went for flags on long tapes, (it was 1953, Coronation year. Mum tied them up, & hung a framed portrait of the new Queen Elizabeth in the front room window.
As an only child l found starting infants' school rather scary, with all these noisy kids around, fighting & pushing each other. l had always been on my own, for as we lived on a main road, l could not go out on my own to play, so never mixed with other children.
Miss Davis, my first teacher, taught us to read & write with the aid of a freeze across the top of her blackboard, it started with an 'a' & a picture of an apple, & 'b' for bat etc.
Miss Evans was the head teacher & arrived each morning in her Singer Bantam car, with two-tone paint, black & deep green on the lower half of the doors. She parked it next to the coke heap in the playground.
By the time l had progressed up to the primary school l had discovered that l was better at English than l was at arithmetic, so used to dread number-work lessons, for as l failed to understand most things I ended up counting on my fingers !
Upon arrival at Weydon Secondary School l was put in the lowest of the 3 first year grades, (1B), but after a term, was moved to the middle ability grade (1X), & remained in the X grade until l left to start work at 15.
On leaving school l did a 5-year apprenticeship as a motor mechanic at E.D. Abbott's Ltd. a main dealership garage between our house & Weydon School, a 5-minute walk from home, so ideal.
l had always 'helped' Dad mend his various cars, and loved every minute, so a mechanic was all l wanted to be !
On the Saturday before l started work, Mum took me to Wilcox, the gents outfitter's in Farnham & bought me 2 blue boiler suits & a donkey jacket with plastic-covered shoulders, was l proud !
On reporting for work that Monday morning in my new work wear, the foreman, Mr. 'Tich' Hockey showed me how to 'clock on', & introduced me to Fred Covey, the skilled mechanic l was to work with.
We started work on a series 1 Land Rover, replacing the exhaust tail-pipe. l worked on many makes of cars, including Daimlers, Fords, Hillmans, Humbers, Singers, Sunbeams & Commer vans, etc.
After 2 years l was put with Dave Binfield, the Rolls Royce expert, we worked on mainly Rolls Royce & Bentleys, did l enjoy the road tests ! l worked on cars from the 1930's up to the newest models.
When l was 17 l started taking driving lessons, & was eventually allowed to drive the service van ( a Commer Imp, new in 1966), going out with the labourer, Tom Hutchings , to various other garages to collect spare parts our stores needed.
This enabled me to get some driving practice in. On passing my driving test, Tich advised me 'No heroics' & allowed me to drive company vehicles & customers' cars.
The village was a wonderful community to live & work in, where everyone knew our family, some knew 3 generations of us.
l sung in the church choir, like Dad did as a boy. He took me to the village pubs at 17, and introduced me to halves of beer in moderation, so when l was 18 l did not go mad on it & make a fool of myself.
When l was about 10 I joined The Church Lads Brigade, & went to meetings on Tuesday nights.
l can recall getting a no.3 Meccano set for Xmas & getting 100's of hours pleasure from it. l saved up my 1/6d. pocket money to buy extras to be able to build bigger models, & the following Xmas l got a 3A set, which made it a no.4 set.
The next year l got a Triang electric train set, and then saved up & got extra long lengths of track & points. l only got toys at birthdays & Xmas, there was not the money for the rest of the year.
Summer holidays were always spent in a caravan at Hayling lsland in Hampshire: all day on the beach with my bucket & spade; evenings in the pub garden, on the swing & slide, a bottle of Cherryade & a bag of Smith's crisps with the twist of salt in blue paper.
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At a Christmas Eve dance in the Bourne's village hall l met my first 'real' girlfriend, Lesley Frost, from the next village in the Wey valley, Bentley. She phoned her dad &told him not to pick her up, as l was driving her home.
We had a great relationship for several years. At 22 l got married, & we bought our first house. Later we had our first son, John jnr., & later we bought our present house where our second son Matthew was born (in the dining room) with me 'aiding' the midwife.
Circa 1982 -- Matthew rides the same Austin car's that l rode in 1952 @Hayling lsland fun fair , history repeat's itself !
Sadly, my first wife Kathleen passed on with cancer @ 40, but l was befriended by Sharon, who became my new wife, & we are very, very happy together. Ten years on & life's just great.
My sons have grown up & long left home & are enjoying their lives. So now l am 53 & a lot wiser due to the passage of life!
John Shrubb, Halifax, West Yorkshire, 2002
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