Friday 30 July 2010

Soz, cuz , gr8 and things like that!


So you get this text message:

'Gd am!
Soz this is such short notice but just remembered it's the Rowcroft linen sale 2day!
Cud pick u up at 8.30 if u wud like 2 go... or meet in the queue'



(So...off you go to 'Google Translate'...LOL!)



And then you send a reply saying that you can't make it due to being on taxi duty for one's son... but....
'Please do grab me something'!!



'And do call for coffee afterwards, if you have time!'



And this is what she grabs you...a
lovely vintage embroidered tablecloth!
And you have coffee and a good old natter..vintage style, naturally!



It must have been a day for beautiful things as some scrummy vintage fabric arrived at your place too! So you get busy ironing and folding like crazy, to get ready for the Homespun Fair at Portscatho, next Sunday 8th August .

And you also put some of it here in your vintage fabrics blogshop.
(on the sidebar)




And then you try to 'educate' yourself...

but ur so soz about this cuz ur useless at this txt spk but it has 2b said...

OMG time 2 go!
hagw evry1
cu l8er!

Sal ;-)


Wednesday 28 July 2010

My town!



I live five minutes from the town centre of Newton Abbot.
In fact, I was born in a tiny terraced house in the town.
In fact... it's the house in the screenshot above!
(I did this on Google Street View yesterday and then got carried away and found all the other houses where I've lived!)

Middle house, red door, upstairs room...that's where I made
my entrance into the world! Way hay!! (Or Waaaahhhhhh!)




But look...what a hill to push an old fashioned, heavy pram up and down!
In those days there would have been few, if any, cars in the street.



Do you know, many people don't like Newton Abbot !
Perhaps they don't like what's on offer as far as shops go and I have to agree with that... somewhat! (Although we do have umpteen charity shops!)

Or maybe they remember it as it once was....a charming, market town which the planners
pulled to pieces in the 70s! Boy what a mess they made too!

Here it is,in the photo below, being flattened and I can assure you that it did not deserve this!!
What they then built was nothing short of a disgrace.
And you can't put back what you demolish.
They ripped the heart and the character out of Newton Abbot and I don't forgive them for that.



Go back even further than this and you'll find that it was once a town with class, full of fine things! As many towns were.
Afternoon tea dances and the like!
That's what my mum and dad tell me!
A very civilised town where people behaved.



And of course, there was (and still is) the railway.



My Grandad was a driver on the GWR and I have a special fondness for
Newton Abbot station...they used to sit me on the wall to watch the trains, when I was very young.
The station was bombed very badly in the war,
just as a train had arrived from Plymouth.
Sadly, there were many casualties that day, both inside the station and out.

My mum and dad often talk about that day and where they were at that moment in time.
Both are so lucky to be alive, as they were very close to the station when the bombing
occurred. My mum had just finished playing tennis in one of the parks and my dad was walking towards his house, which was yards from the station.

Historians say that the Germans mistook Newton Abbot for Exeter as they followed the wrong river. (They came up the Teign instead of the Exe)
But that's just one theory...noone really knows.

What I love really about my town is the history.
It is steeped in it.


I've taken classes of children around the town and we've done projects galore on 'Newton Abbot'....
The New Town of the Abbots!
I firmly believe that one should know a bit about the town in which one lives!

Newton Abbot has been important for many things.


Indeed before the railway came to the town, Newton Abbot had a thriving
woollen industry.
Devon was, in Medieval times , an important sheep rearing county.
Newton Abbot had woollen mills as well as fullers, dyers, spinners, weavers, tailors (you can see where people's surnames originate!!)
Apparently, fellmongering (where wool is removed from sheepskin) was well established in the town.
It is also said that Newton Abbot also had a thriving serge industry and sent goods to Holland via Exeter.
The annual cloth fair was the town's busiest fair at this time.

Associated with the woollen industry was the leather.Tanners, glovers, saddlers and boot and shoe makers were all in business and thriving.
These businesses flourished until after the second world war.



In present Newton Abbot, there's a lot going on to try and improve the surroundings and I think they've done a really good job.
They've even admitted that they've made huge mistakes in the past.
So credit where credit is due.



I'm not saying it's the prettiest town
around for miles...it isn't.
And of course, only just down the road, we have Totnes, which is like a magnet for me ! ;-)

But Newton Abbot is my home town and it's really not that bad!

It doesn't look run down; there are not loads of shops boarded up and there's a pleasant feel as one walks around.



All you really have to do is open your eyes.

I suppose that you are either a person who looks for the bad or you are the opposite and look for the good.
Half empty or half full etc!



At the Clock Tower end of the town, there's plenty of history for you to read and the rest is all around you.





The present...




The past...the ivy clad tower and the old library!
But take the ivy away and it does not look that different today.



The 'new' library....



My favourite building has to be the Newton Abbot Public Library.

John Passmore Edwards wanted to have a hospital built for the town, in memory of his mother but the town already had a hospital and so he decided to build a public library.
It was opened in 1904 by General Redvers Buller...(that very famous chap
who sits proudly on his horse, at the end of Queen Street, Exeter usually with a traffic cone on his head!!)



And this primary school is in one of the main streets in the town.
Opened in around 1858 , it was the result of an idea by Hannah Maria Bearne, many years earlier and thus named Bearnes School.
There are three primary schools in the town . I know a bit about them as I studied the log books of all of them some years ago, when I was a student working on the History of Education in Newton Abbot, for my thesis.
And if you've ever had the chance to read a school log book...go do it!
It makes absolutely fascinating reading!! Especially the bits about:
a) infectious diseases!!
b) school inspectors!!
(Not forgetting the dreaded cane! OUCH!)

I was never allowed to take the log books away but every school let me read them and make notes.
I recall that one school had nowhere for me to sit and so they shut me in a cupboard to do my studying (the best place for me Mr S would say!! ;-)



It appears that everyone is really doing their bit to try and 'pretty up' Newton Abbot.



Newton Abbot has a twin town but it's not an identical twin!

It's been twinned with Besigheim in Germany, for at least 30 years

Besigheim


Besigheim looks to be a very pretty place indeed...so no wonder Newton Abbot needs sprucin' up somewhat! ;-)

Actually, Newton Abbot is also twinned with Ay,in Champagne, France.
I need to research that one!



Ah ! The horseshoe fence in Union Street.
It's been there for quite a long time, longer than the bridal shop which now has the premises
behind it...but how apt?!
I bet that people walk by this every day and don't even notice it!



And next up...my love for rows of coloured terraced houses! Newton Abbot has plenty of those!
What is it about them? I just love them!




Below we have the very pleasant setting for council offices...Forde House.
Built in the shape of an 'E' .
Why?



Built in 1610 by Richard Reynell, it was built with an 'E' shaped floor plan, which is thought to have been in honour of Queen Elizabeth 1, who had recently died.
Originally, the grounds were very extensive and took in a deer park and the area of Decoy (so named because of the wildfowl decoyed there, to extend the house's larder.)

King Charles 1, Oliver Cromwell and William of Orange have all stayed here (but not at the same time!).

After a succession of owners, Teignbridge District Council bought the house in 1978 and it is now used for offices,conferences, weddings etc

Moving on...do you fancy....



.... a dip?

I can't work out why the photo is slanting...maybe the deep end is on the right!
I snitched it off a site who had previously snitched some of my photos!
At least mine were straight though!
Here we have not the town swimming pool, but the 1938 floods. There have been many floods in the town... all because of the River Lemon.
Floods are a thing of the past in the town nowadays, thanks
to a damn having been built at Holbeam, just outside Newton Abbot.



One of the best things about my town are the numerous parks!

This is Courtenay Park

This park is incredibly beautiful.

If you are wondering what to do with your children during the long summer holidays and live near Newton Abbot, then a walk around the town and a trip to the town museum, coupled with
a picnic in a park (Newton Abbot has five parks at least!) is not to be sneezed at, as we say!

Courtenay Park is my fave!
The parks department excel every year with this park. It's stunning displays wow me every time I walk out of the station and look across at it.
It also has a very special place in my heart too


I might well have mentioned this before...it's where I took my first steps at the age of well over 18 months...towards this band stand as the band started up (walked late, talked early! No surprise there eh?!)

And Courtenay Park has not really altered that much.



Alternatively, you can walk through the town to Baker's Park and take a gentle stroll through Bradley Woods, along the River Lemon.

When I was at Newton Abbot Grammar School, we were sent through
these woods on many a cross country run...until one particular day a 'flasher' jumped out at a group of girls
and that was the end of our pleasurable p.e. afternoons!

Sadly, I was not in that group of girls so could not go home and 'write about it' that evening!
I did, however, leave it to my very vivid imagination ...and you can to yours!!
;-) LOL!

I still reckon it was one of the boys in our year though...and I've a damn good idea who!



Nestled in the woods, is this lovely National Trust property, Bradley Manor.
It's only open on certain days though so check first if you are planning a visit.

That's it at the mo!

That's my town!
Well not all of it... but enough to give you a taster of what goes on here.

Newton Abbot gives you the gateway to the moors and the sea; river walks; parks; woodlands;
loads of history; good rail links upline and down and it's handy for
all those little towns and villages which often appear on this blog.
It's my town and I'm rather fond of it !

;-)