Recollections of A Special Village
I attended Sunday School in the 1960s at St Peter's School, Caverswall and my teacher was Mr Harp. He was a great inspiration to me as a budding historian and he sometimes took us to visit the castle and taught us much about the church. I remember being taken by Mrs Yates (the former Vicar's wife) as Brown Owl and Christine Tranter (Tawny Owl) to Caverswall Square and being taught, with other Brownies, to use the telephone box. We would attend church parades at St Peter's, often marching from the school grounds and presenting our standards. Christmas parties were at great hit, with Bert Poole in charge of the games and music. My friends Ruth and Jane Tranter had bicycles and it was still safe in those days to cycle round the village. St Peter's Church was a very important location in my childhood, however, the first time I went inside St Philomena's RC Church was on the Millennium Eve, when the 2 churches had a joint service, part of which took place in one church and part in the other. A yew tree was planted in the grounds of St Peter's to mark the Millennium. I was confirmed and married in St Peter's in 1986 and my sister Kathryn Boden was married there too, some years later. We have an old home movie of the wedding of Gilllian Inchley and Brian Proctor in 1962, showing the robed choir and Vicar Yates. I am so pleased that the bells have been restored recently at St Peter's. My house in Guernsey has framed notelets which were the result of artwork by the well known artist Tom Hinks, who lived in Caverswall and which raised funds for the building of the village community centre. My daughter Emma Boden-Heaume went to Caverswall School in 2001-2 and we were warmly welcomed back into the area by Mr Beardmore and Mary Hull. The Christmas carol service of 2001, in which we joined the choir, was a great highlight for us, after I had been seriously ill. Ann from Caverswall School and Wendy Scott have been a wonderful support to my family. Mrs Thorley from the school, taught my daugher to play the piano. There was always a cheery smile and supportive comment from Paul in the Post Office along with Tery, Yvonne and Susan from church. Even though so many friends are no longer with us, Caverswall retains a very place in my memory and I hope that others will avail themselves of this opportunity to share something of their memories. I am sure they will be ones of a close, caring community. Long may the spirit continue.
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RE: RE: Recollections of A Special Village
Margaret, talking of the phone box. I don't know why, but I spent a lot of time in it listening to "meet me on the corner" by Lindisfarne, & for some strange reason the talking clock, mmm now having given it some thought I guess I was in Caverswall because all the phone boxes in Meir were vandalised :-) & the weather was usually crap tbh.
I remember Mr Tranter from Grange junior school as a great teacher & really decent person, who once explained in graphic detail about getting his sinuses sorted out I also remember the Tranter sisters, who were coincidentally & being the only Tranters in the area were, unsurprisingly his daughters.
I'm based in China, so Caverswall seems a long way away, not only in terms of distance, but also nostalgically.
I hope you & the T sisters are doing well, & stumbling onto this website has stirred a few once forgotten, butnow recalled, happy memories of Caverwall for me ( not least of all the Red House, where I generated my first hangover)
Comment from Dave Birks on Sunday, 4th September 2011.