A Well Remembered Book Shop

A Memory of Woodford Green.

I moved away from Woodford Green many years ago and have lived in various places since, but I still recognise Woodford Green as my home town. I have 3 vivid memories of my time living with my gran just off the green in Fairlite Avenue.
The first being the trips to the book shop on the corner of Woodford Green, High Road with my gran who at the time was head cook at the Sunset Road Junior School, I would wait for her until she left work then we would both walk to the book shop where there was always a selection of secondhand annuals with pop up pictures and gran, once or twice a week depending on funds, would buy me an annual and I can remember to this day some 60 years on the excitement first of choosing my annual then once I got home of turning the pages and being facinated by the wonderful pop up pictures. It was from these books I learned to read.
My second memory is somewhat more dramatic. I recall walking to school and passing for the umpteenth time the church just off Johnson Road, having got to school being rushed down into some shelters, hearing a huge explosion, being sent home early and passing not the splendid church but now a pile of rubble. It's now the site of The James Hawky Hall.
My third and last vivid memory is even to this day a very sad one. It's of the "Lady in White" who walked every single day, irrespective of the weather condition, in her bridal dress, from Snarebrook to Woodford Green, High Road where she would wait till late in the afternoon then walk all the way back to her flat in Snaresbrook. According to my gran she had been making this trip from a period after the First World War, she was certainly making it into the late fifties. I had cause to work in her flat in, I believe, 1956 and was shocked and saddened  to see the terrible state she was in, her face was covered in white powder and rouge, her wedding dress was filthy and the bottom torn and frayed from years of dragging across the ground. I was always led to believe that her attire and her pilgrimage related to a lost loved one during WW1.  


Added 27 July 2008

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Comments & Feedback

Do you remember "school for vicars" (theological college/school) in a house in Sunset Avenue that was run by a Mr & Mrs Vickers? If so do you know what happened to them? My late mother worked there for a time as a cook, and remember going with her on occasions to help her (I must of only been about 9 or 10) and banging the gong when refreshments or lunch was about to be served. They must be in their late 80's now if they are still alive. Any information would be welcome.
I know sunset road very well ,went to sunset road school and after school my mother would walk us along sunset road and across the green to the
lake in Whitehall road.
I remember well the large houses but Not the School for Vicars unfortunately
The only house ,or I should say Garden I remember well was the last property in Sunset Road ,the garden was full of garden knomes positioned around the garden as if they actually lived there.
My gran was the head cook at sunset road school,my brother and I were spoilt rotten ,always got seconds while the other kids were in the play ground.
sun set avenue and not road ,do apologise
Geoff duff

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