The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here:

An Idyllic Childhood

I moved to Boot in 1952 when I was one. My father, John Heap, was the manager of the Burnmoor Inn, which was owned in partnership by his mother, Ruth Hargreaves, and Sid Cross. They also owned The Old Dungeon Ghyll in Langdale. I attended Eskdale High School with my brothers William & Timothy. Jean Hodgson was the school teacher. She lived in The Hill, near Millom, and stayed from Monday to Friday at Brook House which was owned by the Sim family. Billie Sim also ran the local bus service which went to Whitehaven every Thursday.

The Post Office was run by Mary Nolan, who appeared as a guest on one of the early This is Your Life shows. In the next door farm were Arthur and Florrie Irving and her mother Rosa Dugdale.

Cyril Porter used to deliver bread and cakes, Tom Parker delivered meat, Jack Roberts delivered the milk and Jack Woodall was the local grocer. I used to travel with Tom when he went up the valley. My job was to open (and close) all the farm gates!

I have vivid memories of buying cutprice stock from Dalegarth Station every September when they closed for the winter.

Mr Bailiff lived at Gill Bank Cottage and he used the mill to turn wood. He also had a superb stamp collection.

More memories later when I have more time.

Written by Peter Heap. To send Peter Heap a private message, click here.

A memory of Boot in Cumbria shared on Sunday, 16th March 2008.

Memories Links

Other memories of

See more memories of Boot

Boot homepage

Add a Memory for another place

Tips & Ideas

How does Boot feature in your personal history?

What are your best memories of Boot?

How has Boot changed over the years?

Share memories about your local community, its history and people.

Comments

RE: RE: An Idyllic Childhood

If John Heap was your father, I presume your mother was Josie?
Can you tell me what happened to her?
I have often wondered.

Comment from Don Shore on Monday, 7th June 2010.

Comments

1 comment has been shared so far in response to the memory "An Idyllic Childhood".

Why not get involved and post your comments using the comment form below.

Post a Comment about this Memory

To post a comment about this Memory, complete the form below. Your comment will appear alongside the original Memory on the website. If you wish to send a private message (not published on the website) to the person that wrote the Memory, click here.

Subject: RE: An Idyllic Childhood
You have to be logged in to be able to post a comment.
If you have a Frith account, then please log in below, if not, click here to create one.
Email:
Password:
Comment:
  Note: There is a 300-word limit - you have 300 words remaining.

© Copyright 1998-2012 Frith Content Inc. All rights reserved.