The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here:

Life in County Oak

I was born in the cottage that was named Morning Dawn in 1937. The house is now a Muslim mosque. I remember the recreation area very well. We played there often. My dad had an allotment nearby. I remember the Covey and Brown farms that were just across London Road from my home. My aunt, Joan Brown, was married to my mother's brother, Major Stewart Collett, and I remember the Brown family. It sticks in my memory that in front of the Brown house was what had at one time been a swimming pool. It certainly had water in it. I remember collecting tadpoles in it on numerous occasions. Next door to Morning Dawn was the house occupied by the Haywards. He looked after the sewage farm, I think. Olive Hayward often took me on the bus to school in the mornings. I remember one morning watching a German bomber dropping bombs on the town and hitting the Post Office; in fact two of my cousins Jean and Esme Cheeseman were in the Post Office at the time the bomb hit it. I believe a bomb hit the CofE school on the same morning. I remember going to the store just to the north of our house, and also going to Webb's store just south of us, too. We got Walls or Lyons ice cream there, probably after the war. My father worked for James Longley in Crawley and was also an ARP warden during the war. I had another cousin, Alan Steer, who lived in Crawley at the time, but I have lost all touch with him or any of his family since we moved to Canada in 1948. My wife and I were in Crawley again in April and visited Morning Dawn. Lots of memories, mostly pleasant, though some disturbing ones too.

Written by Ian Cheeseman. To send Ian Cheeseman a private message, click here.

A memory of Crawley in West Sussex shared on Sunday, 26th June 2011.

Memories Links

Other memories of

See more memories of Crawley

Crawley homepage

Add a Memory for another place

Tips & Ideas

How does Crawley feature in your personal history?

What are your best memories of Crawley?

How has Crawley changed over the years?

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

Comments

RE: RE: Life in County Oak

Hi Ian Cheeseman,
This is my second attempt, having computer problems.
Bascally we were in County Oak together if you stayed until 1948.
My family moved into Roselea, a semi detached property on the other side of the main road, north of Overton's Beekeepers in Sept. 1945.
I was signed in to Lowfield Heath school having come from Surrey, but was
moved to Robinson Road school Crawley after a year. This was to sit the 11 plus exam for Collyers, Horsham. Our postal area was Crawley, Sussex.
If you were living in County Oak in early 1947 you will remember snow and
ice lasting through March. Did you slide on the pond in the field opposite Couny Oak Stores, run by Mr and Mrs Lyons? Maybe you went to a different
School in Crawley, but your name seems familiar.
I will send this before my old computer switches itself off.
Regards, Tony Tester.

Comment from Tony Tester on Sunday, 24th July 2011.

RE: RE: Life in County Oak

Hi Tony Tester Where, in relation to Covey's Farm, was Roselea? I went to Robinson Road School in Crawley. I do remember the snow in 1947. It was a cold winter as I remember it. Yes I slid on the ice in the field opposite the County Oak Stores, but I didn't remember who ran it. My father had an allotment near the Stores, I think, and I remember being down there one day and kicking at what I thought was a rabbit hole in the bank. It turned out to be a wasp's nest, and my brother, Peter, was badly stung before he could get away. Yours, Ian Cheeseman

Comment from Ian Cheeseman on Monday, 1st August 2011.

RE: RE: Life in County Oak

Hi Ian, First, sorry to hear of your brother's problem with the wasps. If you left Morning Dawn, nearly opposite Covey's farm, and walked north to the County Oak Stores, then crossed the road and walked another 30 or 40 yards you would have reached Overton's Beekeepers, quite a large detached house. It had a garden full of beehives and a workshop on the north side. Next door to the north were a pair of houses, "Ivy Dene" and "Roselea". Beyond these were two more pairs, then three much older cottages joined together. Next was the Sussex/Surrey County Boarder mile post, followed by Boundary Cottages (with long front gardens), and then the "Blue Pencil Cafe." By then into Surrey. If you and I both went on the frozen pond in the field opposite the Stores, then we could well have been in the same group, and off from Robinson Road School due to the extremely cold weather. I do recall the 405 double decker bus skidding well past the stop on sheet ice whilst trying to pull up for us opposite the Stores. I am sure the service failed to run through to Crawley some days. Do you remember any of the other children from County Oak? Roger and John Simmonds, David Overton, Stella Baratt, Shirley Brunker? Regards for now, Tony Tester.

Comment from Tony Tester on Friday, 12th August 2011.

Comments

3 comments have been shared so far in response to the memory "Life in County Oak".

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: Life in County Oak
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.