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The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

Lower Green c1962
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I always remember the Cricket Green as the lazy hazy days of summer.  My father played cricket here, I don't remember the name of his team, but we had to sit and watch him.  I liked it when the crocuses poked their heads out of the ground at the beginning of the season.  They would appear in glorious colour in all the corners of the green, with the cricket pitch in the middle.  We were never allowed to play on the green.  If we wanted to run around or fly our kites on a bit of grass we went to Commonside East or Commonside West, just up the road, where there was plenty of room and no one to tell us off.
The cricket green was reputed to have been played on since the 17th century, but the first recorded match was in 1711.
Along one side of the green was the clubhouse, but we never went in there.  On the Main Road side the Town Hall sat, like a miniature Houses of Parliament.  The bus depot that was the cricket green stop was here, about a hundred yards from Leo's Ice Cream Parlour.  Just out of sight in the lower right hand side was a horse trough and drinking fountain, which we often used when we watched the cricket.  I think there was also a war memorial too.
Next to the bus stop is the Cricketers Arms, where a lot of the male spectators went when they had a break in the cricket matches.  The Town Hall next door, as I knew it, was used for a few social events for the townspeople, mainly fundraisers or rummage sales.
The Lavender Parade, with the Lavender Queen and all her attendants, stopped at the green next to the Town Hall.  After wending its way from Figgs Marsh Common,  down London Road, around the Fair Green then onto the Town Hall Green.  At the green they would have stalls like toss-the-penny, coconut shy or shove-halfpenny.  The maypole was set up and we would watch the local dance acadamies plait and unplait the many colourful ribbons hanging from the pole, whilst dancing to Old English Country Fayre Music.  We would also have the Morris Dancers doing their thing, with bells tied around their legs just under the knees.  They had long sticks that also had bells on I think, but they brandished them at each other in the dance and took turns jumping over them as well.
The Lavender Queen, apart from her attendants, also wearing lavender coloured outfits, had other flowers represented as far as I can remember.  I think it was roses, daffodils and maybe bluebells, all very pretty and colourful.  They sat on trucks and open air cars all dressed up with bunting and balloons.  Others marched in the parade as well, with some local brass bands playing tunes as they went along.
I had a Rosebud doll given to me when I was about ten.  It did not have any clothes on it so my Mum found a lady who made an outfit the same as the Lavender Ladies.  It had a crinoline type dress and hat with a huge rim of fabric on the top front of it, similar to the ones popular in the days of Charles Dickens.  After that was put on the doll I was not allowed to play with it.  It sat on the broad windowsill in my bedroom, for all to see, but not to touch.
Whether they still have the parade I do not know, maybe someone will remember, or maybe it is long gone and forgotten, like the horse trough that has probably been removed to give way to busy modern traffic.  

Written by Carole Baldwin. To send Carole Baldwin a private message, click here.

A memory of Mitcham in Surrey shared on Sunday, 20th May 2007.

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Comments

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

I think the parade was later called the Mitcham May Queen which is no longer still going. I was in the parade for many years since I was a little girl. Each year I was a different flower girl until my final year at the age of 12 when I was picked to be the May Queen, which was a big honour, and I was the first 12-year-old to become Mitcham May Queen as you had to be 13 all the years before that.
I can also tell you that the brass band playing was the Mitcham sea cadets.
My mum has been trying to find out as much information as she can about the event as she can. She was quite a bit upset to find out it is no longer running so if any one can help it would be much appreciated. My email address is legs_324@hotmail.com.

Comment from Deborah Dignam on Sunday, 10th May 2009.

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

I remember all those great days by Mitcham cricket green. I also remember going to the annual garden party just up from the cricket green, hosted by the Sunday Pictorial. I remember the huge fire in the tyre dump. Don Humphries

Comment from Don Humphries on Tuesday, 3rd May 2011.

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

I remember the Cricket Green and the Town Hall very well. I was a pupil at St. Peter and St.Paul's R.C. School from 1947 to 1956. I was in the Mitcham May Queen for about three years. My last year was as Prince to my friend Valerie who was Queen that year. Valerie and I both went to the same school. The Town Hall also plays a part in my life as that was where I had my wedding reception after marring at the Catholic church St. Peter and St. Paul's on the 26th Sept.1959. I had been married for 49 years when sadly my husand Michael died. Also many of my family lived in Mitcham. We have all sinced moved away to different parts of the country but still keep in touch. I did need to go to Mitcham last year, although the Cricket Green looks much the same Fair Green has changed. We used to catch the 152 to Hampton Court in the summer, it made for a good day out with a picnic by the river. I used to catch the 118 to go to work in Streatham Vale at Marco Refrigerators which has now gone. My father-in-law would be the bus driver on the same route and could be seen waving to me to hurry up or miss the bus. On London Road there was a cleaners, it was my job every Monday to take the Blue Bag of laundry before I went to school, a job I hated. I did enjoy going to the Majestic cinema on a Friday night and then enjoying my fish and chips wrapped in newspaper on the way home.

Comment from Sheila Barclay on Saturday, 14th May 2011.

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

I have already posted on this site, but I would be interested in anyone who was in a TB hospital in 1951, called Cumberland House in Mitcham. I was in there for 3 years and although there was a lot of pain we had such hysterical times there when we would laugh so much we couldn't breathe! (Well, we couldn't breathe anyway but laughing didn't help our lungs but sure helped our moral!!) I remember Yvonne, Joy Chappel, Moya Krause, Pat Whitehead, Brenda and Jean (sisters), Jackie, too many to mention. Moya was an artist and had very arty friends. The hospital backed on to the 'News of the World' athletic field and we used to sneak out into the grounds, if we felt well enogh and lark around with the boys there, in our dressing gowns, they must have though they were in with a chance!! Anyone out there who remembers any of this/ Would love to hear from you. I was Pat Fisher then.

Comment from Patricia Cohen on Sunday, 28th August 2011.

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

I remember the town hall as I lived there when my father was the caretaker.

Comment from Patricia Burford on Wednesday, 28th September 2011.

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

I have already posted a message saying I lived in the town hall. My friend Josie and I used to go to Leo's and George's cafe. My surname was Parkings in those days and I met my husband David Rogers there. We also used to go to the local youth club and Wimbledon Palais which is now a furniture shop I believe. I was also a patient at Wilson Hospital for a while when a wall fell on me in Western Road. I used to work in the paint factory down there. I have lots of happy memories from Mitcham which has changed a bit since then.

Comment from Patricia Burford on Wednesday, 28th September 2011.

RE: RE: The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall

Re the Cumberland hospital, I remember Coldblows Alley where the trees would arch right down over you and from them would fall great big cockhorney bugs - that's what we used to call them, I think now as they were like cochroaches with horns! I remember the News of World Sports Ground as all the top runners used to train there and I remember the nurses in the hospital with their white uniforms including white stockings, shoes and hat. I remember walking through dark Coldblows Alley and emerging to the bright lights of Mitcham fair. I remember after the war they dumped all the tyres at Willow Lane and we used to play in there and make tunnels out of the tyres (can you believe that now!), there were millions of tyres as far as you can see and when it caught alight the smoke blacked out most of Mitcham and after, all that was left was just the metal reinforcements from inside the tyres. I also remember during the Second World War an incendary device dropped against our front door and calling to my mum "Mum, the door is alight" and her saying, all matter of fact, "Put it out then".

Comment from Tom Inglis on Friday, 30th December 2011.

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