Return of The Native
I am now 63 but it wasn't till a couple of years ago that looking at my BC I actually took in that I was born at the Holbrook Maternity Home June 30th 1947. I'd always put down Belper as my place of birth as I'd only glanced at the BC which showed Belper Road as the address of the Maternity Home, which throughout my adult life had been good enough for me...until now that is. So last year I made up my mind that I was going to go to this Holbrook, the place which I had never heard of nor as said had it previously registered with me but where in fact I was born. I currently live in Kent so it was not going to be a 30-min drive away but curiosity meant that a diversion was called for on my next trip north. Holbrook is one of those places which are a cross between a small town and a large village, a Villown or a Towvill I think they should be called. Anyway. the Maternity Home is on the periphery of the Villown. It's not actually on Belper Road but is at the junction between Pond Road and Makeney Road with the main entrance on Makeney Road, Belper Road being a continuation of Makeney Road going north. Needless to say it no longer is in the hands of the NHS but has been sold off as a private desirable residence, the current occupants being a family of South Asians, Indian Hindu I think rather than Moslem. I say this because on going to the front gate of the old Maternity Home, the electronic gate perchance opened whilst we were there and out of the Merc emerged the family. A young woman of a confident and independent nature approached us at the gate and I told her that I had been born there and asked if I could come in and take a photo. She was very helpful and said come on in. She remained with my wife whilst I went down to take photos from the grounds. Not a minute had gone by when loud shouts were heard from the window of the house asking me what I was doing. It's OK I said, I was born here and your daughter has said it's OK to take photos. He did not seem too pleased with this response and looked extremely agitated and if looks could kill they would, but I saw the daughter's visage and body language, she was not worried at all about him shouting out and could tell this meant that she could handle Dad without any problem when he told her off when she got back in the house. Anyway daughter of the house thank you very much for being so helpful. I asked her if she gets many people like me turning up and she nodded her head. Not quite sure how many but I know I am not alone. There is wasteland close by down Pond Road where you can get shots of the place though it's not brilliant and you need a decent camera to get a decent shot. There is a parking spot on Pond Lane with seats just by the grounds with a path leading on to waste ground. A overhead shot http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-488227-brook-house-holbrook/bingmap of Brook House will give you an idea of the geography of the place. I'm glad I visited my birthplace and had the luck to get a closer look. On showing my 90-year old mother a photo she said she didn't remember it. I know I certainly didn't!
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RE: RE: Return of The Native
Actually my wife has reminded me of more good work by the daughter of the new owners of the old maternity home, Brook House which I inadvertently left out ( having a senior moment ) which was that when we were at the entrance gate to the property on Makeney Road there was a very faithful recreation of the sight and sounds of the Baskervilles by the domiciled hounds going on.
Discretion being a better part of cowardice we had, prior to the owner's car arriving with the said daughter, decided that we were not going into the grounds to ask the owners if they would let me take some photos of my birth place!
Anyway the said heroic daughter came up to the gate upon arrival and told us we could come in as soon as she had shut the hounds away (Rottweilers I think) which she did and then I got my photoshoot of the house which looks from the outside pretty unaltered to the photo shown on the FF site.
A good result though I still ordered my poster photo to hang on my wall from the FF collection though shot some 18 years after my birth because it was, at the time, still a functioning maternity home.
Does anyone know when it ceased to be a maternity home?
Comment from Roger Taylor on Wednesday, 15th December 2010.
RE: RE: Return of The Native
Hi Roger, I myself was born in the Maternity Home in 1954 my name is Hazel Newton. I can report that the Maternity Home ceased in 1976-77 and was sold in 1978 by the National Health Service for £130,000. If I can manage to get more information I will, I still live near Holbrook in a town called Belper. Hazel.
Comment from Carole White on Friday, 21st January 2011.
RE: RE: Return of The Native
Sadly my dear wife Ann Penelope who accompanied me on the two trips to my birthplace as well as many other "nostalgia" visits to places of my past and was not only tolerant of my urges to go off at tangents and the beaten track on our journeys together but many times supported and encouraged this trait past away in April aged only 65 having succumbed to an asbestos related disease.
An adventurous, organised and artistic soul herself she was a source of constant perceptive observations and brilliant company and my life will forever by vastly poorer for the loss of her sharp intelligence, problem solving abilities and sympathetic listening.
Comment from Roger Taylor on Sunday, 24th July 2011.
RE: RE: Return of The Native
I managed in the miss in the above comment about the recent loss of my wife Ann Penelope (and a major reason why I commented about her in relation to the visit to the old Holbrook Maternity Hospital) was that I think it was her presence which was so vital in our negotiating out way into the grounds of the house. Had she not been there with her friendly reassuring female visage I rather think that the daughter of the house would not have approached a strange single man hanging around the gate of her family's house and invite him in to take shots of where he was born!
Sadly this man alone posing a possible threat is now a problem. One of the many blessings of her company was that I always found when my wife and I were walking together that other people were quite relaxed if you met as strangers in isolated places.
Comment from Roger Taylor on Sunday, 24th July 2011.