The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here:

Living in

Cricket Green c1960
Enlarge photo |  More about this photo

When I moved to live on the Cricket Green with my parents in 1947, the previous tenants were called Bacon, and for many years afterwards, people would say "Oh you live in Bacons' old house" - my mother would seethe!  My brother Richard was born in 1948 and our younger brother Patrick arrived in 1950, always doing his own thing, and was delivered by my mother on the kitchen floor - the baby born in a bucket, as he was reminded for many years.  When I married in 1965 at St Thomas More RC Church in Mildmay Terrace, we borrowed a piano from the Stewart family at Longfield Cottage - ours was the second wedding held at the church.  Many happy memories of childhood and beyond of Hartley Wintney - my children spent many holidays with their grandparents, playing on the green, feeding the ducks on Causeway Pond and blackberrying on Hazeley Heath with their Grandma Vaughan.  I learned to score for cricket matches, something I thoroughly enjoyed until marrying my sailor Michael and moving away - but often returning to be with my family.  My parents are remembered by we three siblings  with a seat in the Millennium Orchard on Hunts Common; another close by is in memory of Richard who died aged 56 in 2005, leaving a loving family; we have come to love this orchard, a project dreamed up by Patrick when he was Parish Clerk to the village, a job he thoroughly enjoyed doing.  Sadly Patrick died of cancer in August 2008 - his funeral at St John's was joyful and attended by so many friends, family and colleagues, followed by a wake at the Cricket Clubhouse on the Green, yards from "Bacons old house" where he lived for almost 58 years.

Today Mike and I drove to the Apple Day celebration in Victoria Hall, meeting our daughter and her two children, Ruth Vaughan (Richard's widow) their two daughters and three grandchildren - Pat's death is still raw, but we all talked about him and later went to the orchard, which is where Patrick's ashes will eventually be scattered. I am so very fortunate to have been connected with Hartley Wintney for sixty years. Still known by my maiden name - YOU know, that Heather Vaughan who married a sailor!   Incidentally, our home is clearly seen in the 1960 picture of the Cricket Green - I can see the porch built by my father.

Written by Heather Tierney. To send Heather Tierney a private message, click here.

A memory of Hartley Wintney in Hampshire shared on Sunday, 19th October 2008.

Memories Links

See more memories of Hartley Wintney

Hartley Wintney homepage

Add a Memory for another place

Tips & Ideas

How has this scene changed?

Do you know who lived or worked here?

Why is this photo significant to you?

Particular points of interest - transport, architecture, fashions etc.

Comments

RE: RE: Living in

My father Edward (Ted) Jeffares was made head of Hartley Wintney Primary School in 1958 and we lived in the School House (attached to the school, on the site of what is now Old School Close) for six years until 1964. It was a very grand place, with an orchard and disused tennis court, and was a huge contrast to the council house in Farnborough that we had moved from; it came with the job and we loved it! Dad was at the school - which moved site twice and was latterly Greenfields - until his retirement in 1984.  He then got involved in Citizens Advice (CAB), then local politics, becoming an Alton town councillor (then Mayor) and also serving on North East Hants District Council. He died in 2006 at the age of 87.
The village was lovely then and I'm sure remains so - it could not be otherwise. I and my siblings, Stephen, Bev (twins) and Trina moved out of the area a long time ago and haven't been back, but after reading Heather's very moving reminiscences (her brothers were both close friends of mine) and seeing Frith's evocative photographs of the time I will try to pay a visit soon.

Comment from NIGEL JEFFARES on Tuesday, 7th April 2009.

Comments

1 comment has been shared so far in response to the memory "Living in ".

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: Living in
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.