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Little Oakley

Little Oakley maps

Historic maps of Little Oakley and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Little Oakley maps

Little Oakley photos

We have no photos of Little Oakley, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Ramsey| Dovercourt| Great Oakley| Harwich| Parkeston| Shotley Gate| Shotley| Thorpe-Le-Soken| Bradfield| Chelmondiston| Walton On The Naze| Pin Mill| Frinton-On-Sea| Great Holland| Woolverstone| Felixstowe| Mistley| Freston

Little Oakley area books

Displaying 1 of 18 books about Little Oakley and the local area.   View all books for this area

Memories of Little Oakley

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Essex memories

Palm Court

The Cliff Pavilion c1955
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I remember walking along the promenade to the Pavilion. To continue our walk we had to go through the Pavilion. If my memory is correct it had a glass roof and front window and there were some palms and what seemed to a six-year-old huge greenhouse plants. I thought it was a most glamorous place. I remember the words Palm Court. Was it ever called Palm Court?

Ruth Wright (nee Ashman)

Cliff Road

My first flat was 28 Cliff Road.

The Convent in Orwell Road

I was brought up in a Convent in Orwell Road between the years 1947 and 1954. The Convent was vacated in the summer of 1954 and moved to Hastings a year after the sea wall broke which demolished the old school in Harwich.
When I visited the convent again in 1980 it was still there, only standing derelict. I wondered if the building was still standing.

Ruth Wright

New Vicar For Dovercourt

My father was inducted as the new vicar on 31st December 1949 at All Saints Church. I was just nine at the time but I retain some dim memories of a packed church! My dad stayed at Dovercourt until his retirement in 1976. I have many memories of Dovercourt for that period. I loved the West beach where I often used to take the dog on long muddy walks. Often as kids we would walk 'down town' to Woolworths or Candy Corner, usually in search of roughly the same things. Beach Stores though was the place where you could get something 'off coupons': a sort of Crunchy Bar without the chocolate. We were away at school and I was terrified of girls, but used to gaze soulfully at Jennifer in the choir in the hope she would notice me. She never did.
We had three cinemas in those days. I remember my dad taking us to The Quatermass Experiment, rated X, at the Regent, and telling them I was... Read more

Growing up in Dovercourt

I have been trying to remember the exact dates when we lived in Dovercourt but I think it was something like 1953-57, while my father worked for the railway at Parkeston Quay. We first rented a place in Shaftesbury Avenue and then bought a house in Main Road. I was interested to see Martin Johnson's post because I was a pupil at the nursery school that his mother used to run at the vicarage. It seemed like a very big place to a small child, with a huge garden that had lots of corners to hide in during break. I also had one term at the primary school in Main Road. I was briefly in the Sea Cubs and can still tie a round turn and two half hitches correctly. My best friends were the sons from Sutherland's pharmacy - they lived in a big house on Fronks Road with a solarium on top. I don't remember a great deal about the shopping... Read more

More Growing up in Dovercourt

I was born in Dovercourt in 1946, and lived there until 1957. My father, too, worked on Parkeston Quay, but moved to New England depot in Peterborough in 1956 - mother and I followed once I had taken my 11-Plus exam. My mother was from Waddesdon Road, opposite the old school which had by then become the library. My father met my mother during the war when he was posted to Dovercourt. Although we moved away, and I now live in Shropshire, I still have two aunts who live in Dovercourt, so I return from time to time.

One of my best friends was Phillip Cone, who lived a few doors away on Main Road. I see that he has now written at least one book about the town.

We used to go to the Regent cinema on Friday evenings, as it was just over the road. I seem to remember that nearly all the films were Westerns!

Floods!

I was 5 years old when I remember looking out of the large window of my mother and father's bedroom in Waddesdon Road and seeing the old schoolyard under water. I remember not being able to go downstairs as the threat of water was too great. I remember two people being taken in by my parents as they had been flooded out on the Bathside which if you know the area was the worst affected place. I remember not having to go to school for quite a time. I learned in later life just how serious an event it was and how the water rose up and came through the drains. The people who came to stay with us were my godparents and I remember that the man used to give me Owbridges Pastilles to suck to keep me warm. I later went on to attend the Mayflower school which went on to be the Harwich County Primary when the old Esplanade school was closed. I then attended the Sir Anthony Deane school... Read more

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