I Meet A Vagrant I Know
September 1958 I meet a vagrant I knew. In 1957, I was appointed to be Village Constable, at Lower Penn, Wolverhampton, an upper class district of wolverhampton. My station, was in Springhill Park. The beat was divided by the A449, The SW Trunk Road, no M5 in those days. One side of the beat was Lower Penn, the other Penn Common, both different. It was my wont to be on the main road, in the mornings, as a large number of vagrants passed in both directions, some coming out of New Cross, Wolverhampton, some travelling to New Cross from Kidderminster. I noticed a man sitting on the bench on Lloyd Hill, A449, he did not quite fit the description of the average vagrant. He looked familiar. I decided to speak to him. As I approached him, he said, "Hello, Jack, how is your Dad". I was astounded. I immediately recognised him, it was 'Jim', a Second World War veteran, a hard working man. I will not go into details, but his marriage had broken down, and his established life disrupted, his sister, who we all knew, would have helped him, but he was too proud to ask. I took him to my Police Station, my wife fed him, I telephoned my father. He contacted his sister, and they asked me to get him home. I took him to Bone Mill Lane, Wolverhampton, then the Co-op dairy, with regular transport to Fole, near Uttoxeter. I got him a ride and he returned to his native heath. I saw him several times after, he was always grateful. Whether he is alive or dead I do not know. An act, which I remember. John Mellor
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RE: RE: I Meet A Vagrant I Know
Hi John I tried to send you a message directly, but it wouldn't let me, so i've added it to this. I've thoroughly enjoyed reading your memories on the Uttoxeter and this website, although I'm guessing I'm a bit younger than you (40 this year) a lot of the things that you mention strike a chord with me. My nan (Ida Crutchley/Brighouse/Redfern) kept the Cock Inn at Beamhurst in the 70s. She married Edgar who I presume was the son of Edmund and Florrie that you mention, which would make him your mothers cousin. She'd met Edgar who was a widower, as he was a friend of my Granddad, Leslie Brighouse who was chief mechanic at Stevensons. Edgar drove a Stevensons school bus, and after my nan was widowed they got together. I used to play in an old rail freight car (don't think it was a tram) at the back of the pub which was converted into a fantastic tool shed filled with all sorts of interesting things for a 7 year old including a pair of Varey flare pistols, gas mask filters, ammunition boxes, army badges, and even a heavy set of brass knuckle dusters! Do you remember Fred the cellar man at the Cock? My nan was talking about him at the weekend, at fourteen when his parents died he went to work on one of the farms in Beamhurst (Charlesworths?). He had to live in the barn and one cold winter when he was ill with the flu he went to the pub and asked Florrie if he could come in as if he didn't he would 'day'(die). Florrie replied that she couldn't have him daying and he lived in the pub until he did die, standing up (!) in the bar when he was about 76 in about 1976.
Comment from Neil Deaville on Tuesday, 6th April 2010.
RE: RE: I Meet A Vagrant I Know
I'm too young to remember Edgar though I remember his sister Kate. She married Bob who was a lorry driver from Liverpool who used to stop in for a pint on his way past. They were a lovely couple. We still make aunty Kate's cabbage pickle which she used to make at the pub to use up the hard 'cow cabbage'. When she died we had to pass the recipe to her sons as they had neglected to take a copy. After my nan left the pub in 1978 it was kept by an actor from 'Crossroads' and his male friend. Sadly, last time I went past, the pub was boarded up with the all too common 'To Let' sign on it. I don't know if you have any memories of my Deaville relatives who farmed at Spath farm? I'm not sure which farm Spath farm is, though I think my great grandfather was still there when he died in about 1953. My granddad Bill Deaville farmed in Marchington Woodlands and died a year or so later when his tractor tipped up. Also my granddad Brighouse as I mentioned previously? He worked at Stevensons for nearly 30 years as a mechanic. He helped Joey Bamford in the early days of JCB, with welding when they were based at Crakemarsh. His dad kept the White Horse in the market place. When I was little we lived in Stafford Road (backing onto Westlands Road) next door to Mr & Mrs Rowe, were they Barbara Rowe's parents? The name rings a bell with me, I know the Rowes had been there a long time as Mr Rowe told me he'd dug the air raid shelters in the bank on Stafford Road opposite the cemetery. All the best and keep up the interesting stories! Neil Deaville neil.deaville@googlemail.com
Comment from Neil Deaville on Tuesday, 6th April 2010.