Auld Millfield
I was another Auld Millfielder, times were hard and nobody was well off but it was a happy place to grow up. I remember as a kid everyone under 18 playing cricket on the 'square' at the top of Millfield Crescent and using dustbin lids for wickets and a tennis ball, no one owned a cricket ball or stumps, and playing football all day from morning till it was too dark to see, on the flat bit at the top of the clay field. There was a big but not too deep sandy hole in the clay field where we would dig tunnels through the clay, kids wouldn't do it now, and it was daft and dangerous then, but no one seemed to care as long as your parents didn't find out! I remember having to feed my dad's hens every day after school (Newburn Manor) and having to rake out the cree, and worst of all, it was my job to go to Walter Wilson's at Newburn and get two stone of corn and carry it all the way back home, that was a heavy load for a little lad. It's a fact that nearly all the tradesmen who came selling in Millfield seemed to have a horse and cart, but I remember the fish man who came once a week in a little green van, he'd open the back doors to display his wares and cry out at the top of his voice "Come on ladies - fish cakes and dirty stories!". There was always a huddle of women round the back of that van! I also remember how people in those days kept linnets and finches in cages and would hang the cage on the back door in the sunlight so the birds would sing. Great times and not a care in the world!
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RE: RE: Auld Millfield
Hi Norman, Thank you for the Millfield Memories, I used to visit my aunt Ethel Brown amd all my relatives in the rows there and remember the sand pit at the end of the houses, also the washing lines on pulleys from the top flats across the back lane. I tried to send you an email but the system said I was trying to send a blank message. Thanks once again George,
Comment from Name withheld on Wednesday, 30th September 2009.
RE: RE: Auld Millfield
Thanks George, you're welcome, I remember lots of Browns, there was a family lived next door to me Granda and Gran, (Kit and Nan Patterson), they had daughters, one called Sylvia and I think the other was Madeline or something similar, then there was another set of Browns, no relation, who lived on my street, Francis Terrace. That was George and Rae, and they had Carol, Trevor (my best mate) and Christine. Trev's grandparents lived at the top end of the Crescent, I remember his Granda was called Geordie. Are you related to any of them? Happy Memories!
Comment from Norman Dunbar on Friday, 2nd October 2009.
RE: RE: Auld Millfield
Does anyone remember Florence Brown/Foreman and married Ernest Palmer and lived in Millfied Crescent 1930/55 - and why can't I find the crescent on google earth - is it not there anymore? I live in the Midlands but my family originated from up there. I would be interested to hear any imformation of said people.
Comment from Ray Brown on Thursday, 1st March 2012.