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Pickmere, the Lake c1960

Pickmere, the Lake c1960
 
 

Pickmere, the Lake c1960 Ref: p272008

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Pickmere's local area

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Memories of Pickmere, the Lake

O to be a boy again

I remember Pickmere Lake (pond) where I and my buddies use to bike to with home made fishing rods tied to the crossbar, you could hire a row boat and get the real feel of lake fishing LOL!!  Our Mums packed us off  with butties and crisps pop was a treat. they assumed we were going to the park for the day, but we off on an adventure.

It was a LONG bike ride and our mums never knew at first that we were out so far biking on a main road to Cheshire.
I am now expat living in Pickering ON Canada for 28 years
Memories of long ago.
Chris
I wonder what it looks like today?

Shared on 25 January 2008 by Chris Walker.

happy days

I used to spend my w/ends and school hols at pickmere in the 1950,s ,I used to hire out boats for jack spencer they were the blue and white rowing boats. his boat shed is hiddenby the tree in the foreground,his house is the white one above the tree, the boats in the midground were owned by the Egletons mum dad and two boys, the far distance was cheethams fair, I used to fish behind cheetham moared motor boats to catch small roach for live bait we used them on nightlines that we put out up the lake at dusk and rowed out to collect next morning ,we normal caught 5 or 6 large eels that made very nice eating, we also caught lots of large bream and plenty of perch. I have broken the ice on the lake many a winter and gone in for a swim. I visited the lake in july 2007 for the first time since 1964 what has happened to it ? houses where the Jubilee club used to be the chip shop (Thows) has gone and the Endeavor club ,Cheetham club all disappeared.
sad sad sad,

Shared on 17 September 2007 by Dave Pitt.

Pickmere & local memories

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Thows - Lake Cottage/Tea Rooms

My mother spent many happy times at Pickmere. Thow's tea rooms was owned by her aunt and uncle, John and Annie Thow. As a child she would help out selling ice cream and serving customers. Does anybody remember Thows?

To the sender of the message 'WALL HILL FARM', the picture you refer to looks like the back of the Thow's tea rooms (l have a picture of the front of the property), do you know if this is the same property? The Thows would have sold it in approximately the late 1940s. I would really like to be able to share your memories of Thows with my mother.

Shared on 04 April 2009 by Janice Baxter.

Photo of Pickmere, the Pond c1955

Pickmere, the Pond c1955
Ref: P272001

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Wall Hill Farm, Pickmere

The name of the farm on the right of the photo is Wall Hill Farm, it was my dad's farm until he died in 1979.  My auntie used to live in the Blacksmith's cottage across the road opposite until she passed away.

Shared on 03 April 2009

Childhood memories by Deborah Taylor, nee Barraclough

As a child I spent all my summers in Pickmere at my nana's caravan on a camp site just across from the entrance to Pickmere Lake. My nana worked in the Happy Hour Club, and also in Happy Hour kitchen serving breakfast to holiday-makers. We used to paddle in the lake, go out in the blue and white boats and sunbathe on the hill,with a picnic . I remember the small fairground, and the arcades where you could win tubes of sweets and chocolate bars for old pennies, fantastic old ball-bearing machines, with tubes of old fashioned spangles, wow what memories. My grandad had a small jetty he fished off into the lake, we were told never to paddle past the rushes because there was an underwater currant that could suck you under, and also a ledge where the lake became deeper. Oh such happy long warm summers we spent there. Coaches used to park at the top of the hill, I can still remember scrambling under the old turnstile into the ladies' toilet to spend a penny and avoid paying to do so! I last visited in the early1980s with my own children but much had changed, no fairground and gone were the arcades, just a few boats left. We rowed across the lake to give my children the same thrill I myself had experienced as a young child, and a good day was had. I think maybe it's time to visit again perhaps and share the view with my grandaughter and note the changes to memory.

Shared on 11 February 2009

Photo of Pickmere, the Pond c1955

Pickmere, the Pond c1955
Ref: P272001

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Going to School at G.B.  1940

In the forties, we would cycle past this pond on the left then turn left towards Gt Budwarth [think that's how you spell it], passing a small woodland with sandy banks, eventually arriving at Gt Budworth, down an avenue of trees to the school on the rightl and the Church on the left. I recall a Wishing Well at the bottom of the hill past the Post office.
   Mrs Dishman, taught the little ones, she was lovely. The Vicker also every day told us a story about God and Jeasus, at lunch time my friend Joyce Dean and I would hop over the Church wall and put flowers on the graves, somtimes wild ones that grew on places where no one weeded, or maybe borrowing the odd flower from a grave thet had lots [saying a small prayer to make it o.k. with any interested spirit who might be watching].
  

Shared on 19 August 2008 by Brenda Burton.

Photo of Pickmere, the Pond c1955

Pickmere, the Pond c1955
Ref: P272001

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Brenda Burton of Holly Cottage

It was either 1939 or 1940 when we moved into Holly Cottage, I was two years old, there was a  thatched roof and it had been two houses semi det, very primitive, dirt flooring, with a huge stone and I really mean big -  THE STONE COULD NOT BE MOVED we were told, as many people had tried in the past. As the house was over 400 years old we decided to live with it, and my Dad [Erny Burton] tiled around it. There was a largish fire place not far from the stone, an open staircase and upstairs we slept in a bedroom with the underside of the thatch showing.  Coming downstairs again there was a back door which led you down, by way of a small path to the Lav [as it was then referred to].  
 The Lav was covered in ivy and there was a long wooden seating arrangement with two holes, one  for mums and dads and a smaller one for little girls, like me. Beneath the holes were the buckets and  behind the buckets was a small door whereby the the contents of said buckets were taken away, also there was the nail hammered into the wall and a piece of string threaded through torn up squares of newspaper.
  By the front door there was the pump, it needed an awful lot of pumping, was very noisy then suddenly lots of water would come gushing forth and splash all over you, dad placed a large sink underneath it, he also built a wooden lean-to kitchen at the back linking the two back doors.
   Over a period of eight or so years with grandad's help, plumbing started to happen, and then after the war we acquired electricity.
  Opposite lived Mrs Hankey [I don't think the spelling's right] and the Post Office shop, she was grandmother to my friend Elsie.
  Next door was Dones Farm where John and his sister [think she was called Mary but might be wrong] were born, I spent many happy times on the farm, in those days people helped each other when needed, as I grew older there was collecting eggs, keeping the barn tidy after playing on the bales, and riding on the cart during the hay cutting, helping with the ropes, riding back on one of the horses that pulled the cart, and when the threshing machine arrived  collecting the chaff and distributing it to the various places where the hens laid, and the potato picking, making friends with the land army girls, [whether they wanted my company or not].
  Now I am reminded of the Italian prisoners of war, they were wonderful, they liked to play with me, calling me Bambini, dressing up my bike with flowers, laughing and singing.  Farmer Done said they didn't know the meaning of hard work,  Dad said they were like children.  They were fun.  They were eventually replaced by Germans who were well aware of the meaning of work but no fun at all.
  Another memory - evacuees -- Lots of children from London arrived in a charrabanc [bus], whoopee, there was, I think her name was Janey who stayed with Mrs Hankey, and she told me that she used to have tea with Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret at the palace every Sunday.  I believed every word she said.
     Pickmere was popular as a holiday place and after the war we had the Yanks who were stationed nearby.  There was a small fun fair and a dance hall owned by the Cheetams who were well off and owned a car, and the lake of course, for swimming, fishing and boating.  Farmers rented land that they weren't using to caravanners, people with tents and small wooden huts were being built for holidaymakers, the Yanks were great they would give us chewing gum, and anything else when we followed them, particularly if they were arm in arm with the beautiful ladies that had arrived soon after and Pickmere became quite lively. There were mutterings like 'over paid and over here' and some people did not seem to approve of the beautiful ladies, but for us kids it was a chance to develop our own skills at earning a bit of pocket money on the side.
  'Got any Gum Chum' we would call out as the Yanky Doodle would attempt to walk off with the beautiful lady, we learnt to be very persistant netting not only gum, but also candy and eventually down to the brass tacks of money.   We were not the only ones, I remember two magic words that were whispered then a number of people would gather around somone who would be selling somthing, and money would exchange hands, the words were'black market'.  
  Dad said it was against his principles to obtain stuff on the black market, we kept quiet because we had the special knowledge of - what Dad didn't know would not worry him.
  There was much merryment in those days, dancing, singing and drinking until one day, the word went out that we were all to be raided by the police.
  We didn't have the communicating networks of today,  but probably more efficient was the kids with bikes, teenagers and toffs with horses, Mrs Hankey at the switchboard in the Post Office and the collective spirit solidarity that no longer [sadly] exists.
  The raid eventually turned up and the Yanks, Beautiful Ladies, music makers, and noisy people had all gone to ground.  Instead there were some very drunken pigs who had made a brave and very wild bid for freedom, these pigs were big, they were MASSIVE and they were MAD.  They chased the brave band of policmen back into there large van and away.  I remember the sound of squealing to this very day, and that must have been about sixty-eight years ago. I didn't ever find out if it was the pigs or the police who did the squealing, it was probably both.

Shared on 31 July 2008 by Brenda Burton.

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