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Joy Arnold as A Child

I lived on the Isle of Wight from the early 1930s until roughly 1943.We lived at several different locations, Cranmore being one of them. I remember as a small child Mrs Jordan's shop. I also have vague memories of the old postman wearing his Victorian postman's uniform and also of Mr and Mrs Higginbottom. As I recall, Mr Higginbottom worked for an insurance company and was also a Sunday School teacher and taught myself and my two brothers Reg and Archie . Mr and Mrs Higginbottom took all three of us to Sunday School in their car. There were two elderly sisters who lived next door to us who kept angora rabbits for their fur, which they used to spin! I think of them as my guardian angels as they used to tell me to sing "There is a happy land" at the top of my voice when I went to fetch the milk from the farm nearby so that they knew that I was safe. ( I was only about four years old at the time). I remember the adders in our garden and the bonfire which my father Ted used to keep alight during the summer months ready for their impending cremation (much to the horror of my two guardian angels!). There were also two other elderly ladies who lived together further along the road. They lived in a bungalow and kept goats. They invited me to tea one day and the one sister asked would I like a drop of goats milk, the other lady insisted that perhaps I wouldn't like it and suggested she add some sugar which she did. I very tentatively took a small sip and looked up at the two anxious faces and on being asked did I like it said "Yes thank you" and drank the lot down very quickly. My childhood memories of Cranmore are very happy ones because of the freedom and the caring friendships. From here our family moved to Abbitsford near to the American Woods near Cliff Bridge.

Written by Claire Spencer. To send Claire Spencer a private message, click here.

A memory of Cranmore in Isle of Wight shared on Sunday, 26th September 2010.

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Comments

RE: RE: Joy Arnold as A Child

Dear Joy, These are the sort of memories that my late father would tell his 5 children about +- 6,000 miles away from the Island, in Rhodesia. How I wish that I had come over years ago. My great grandfather and his wife, Walter and Ada Emily Baker, owned or ran the post office in Shalfleet in the late 1800s. Do you perchance know anyone who is truly old who may remember them? They later moved to Cowes and there on the 18/8/1910 my father entered the world at Kimble, no 25 Coronation Road, Cowes. His Mother Eva Irene was my grandmother and the daughter of Walter and Ada Emily (or Emily Ada as she liked to be known). Eva's brother Edward owned the confectioners at no 14 High Street, Cowes, the shop was called E. Baker & Sons from 1933 to 1951. Take a look at the memory that I put on the site for Cowes and you will see a fuller story. Any assistance that you can give will be dearly appreciated. Kind regards, Judy

Comment from Judith Petrou Nee Baker on Tuesday, 22nd November 2011.

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