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Granny's House, Jacks Platt, Horney Common
A Memory of Uckfield.
My mum was born there but came to Wales when war broke out as she was in care at the time. She stayed with a couple who had lost their own child and who eventually 'adopted' her so she never returned, but always told us tales of where she lived. I remember there being a monkey puzzle corner somewhere in the directions to get to granny's. The first time I visited was when I was about 6 or 7. The 'house' was one storey with a tin roof, she had beds with the bottom legs on bricks 'to keep the blood flowing'. I went again when I was about 9, and at 17 with my future husband, but then lost touch with the english side of the family after Granny died. They had a small holding with a outside loo which we had to take a bucket to flush - great fun. There were freshly laid eggs for breakfast and we would go down to collect them. Pop (gran's second husband) kept goats and pigs as well as a productive vegetable plot where we swere allowed to pull out carrots for dinner. 'Poop rinsing' them in a bucket and we munched on them on the walk back to the kitchen. We went nut gathering down the lanes and visited a field where a plane had crashed in the war, sadly the airmen were killed. I think there was some sort of memorial but not really sure. I have tried to google Jacks Platt but nothing seems to come up -another piece of history lost?
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The airman's grave as we knew (and as it still is) is on Ashdown Forest, nearer to Fairwarp. When I first knew it, it was just a pile of remains from the plane with a wire netting fence round it, put together as I was told by the mother of one of the airmen - a Sgt Sutton I believe. It was said that she moved to the Fairwarp area to be able to look after her son's 'grave'. It was a local landmark with a simple wooden cross known simply as 'the airman's grave'. In the years since a substantial stone wall has been built round it, with a stone cross and flowers planted inside it.