Chulla

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Posts posted by Chulla

  1. Katyjay, Thinking about it, Tom Bridges might have gone and lived on Broxtowe Lane after he retired. When he had his vegetable round he lived in a council house in the cul-de-sac on Ainsdale Crescent. I knew his son (but cannot remember his name). He married a girl who's father was the owner of the Beeston and Stapleford (B&S) driving school. Tom's son and his wife lived in a house/bungalow built on Jackson's field.

  2. Carni,

    The ink was contained in a can, about four inches in diameter, half open at the top with a long, thin spout - tubing, really, not like a teapot spout. We always used black ink. Pens were wood with nib in one end. There were two kinds of nib - one that had a fine point, and one that had a wide spade end. We only used black ink. You could use a fountain pen, if you had one, ink didn't have to be black.

    We were taught to write in the Marion Richardson style, a very bland style that had all the ascenders upright - italic writing was strictly taboo. The crossbar of a letter t had to be on the right side only. I once saw a lad in my class get the strap because he crossed the t on both sides.

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  3. T G Hepburn was Nottingham's finest railway photographer - I met him once and he sold me some prints. Authors Ian Brown and Brian Stevenson put a nice selection of his pictures in their publication T. G. Hepburn, Railway Photographer, published by Nottinghamshire County Council in association with RAS Publishing in 1998. The railway gave him trackside passes, resulting in the best local 'action' scenes in the steam days.

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  4. #35 Mick2me. Regarding the uses of the word nigger, it should be remembered that when some of us were young just about every brown-coloured dog had this name. Are you saying that someone cannot post a message that says, for instance, 'we had a dog named nigger when I was young'. Similarly, many women had nigger-brown-coloured coats. How far is Nottstalgia political correctness prepared to go?

  5. Yes, I remember Gordon Clay (I think it was, not Cley) when I was in the ABC in the early 1950s. His office was above the headmaster's (Thomas Gunn). Last I heard of him was a few years ago, and he had reached a ripe old age - in his nineties, I think. A nice man and one you couldn't fall out with.

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  6. During the war I lived with my grandparents in Cheltenham Street, Old Basford. In 1944 I went to the infants at Southwark Street School. I remember November 1945 like it was yesterday, sitting on the floor with the other kids, playing with toys, when the headmistress walked and told me that my dad had come to collect me. He was just back from India and I hadn't seen him for three years. I walked up the street holding the hand of what seemed a stranger. How's that for a memory.

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  7. #44. I did not start using the MGO buses (never went on their trolleys) until the late 1950s - on my way the Gate Inn in Awsworth to play darts. Actually, I cannot remember the doors, but the interiors were always nice and warm from the heater, suggesting that the heat couldn't escape. The trolley buses were sold to Sheffield Corporation, who, I believe, were the last council to have them.

    Another internal bus sign, not seen nowadays was No Spitting.

  8. #34 katyjay. This is remarkable. I too was in the school play The Pied Piper Of Hamlin - in the infant boys at Crane. And I too wore a brown paper rats head, scurrying on to the stage at the appropriate moment. Brother and sister taking the same role some years apart, talk about co-incidence! Needless to say I never trod the boards again.

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  9. #38 The Pianoman. The old Bells Lane mini island. The turn to go back to Nottingham really was tight, sometimes causing the poles to disengage from the wires and flail around. The conductor would then retrieve a very long pole from what looked like the exhaust pipe (it wasn't, of course) and hook them back on.

    A pole at the side of the island had a pull-down handle that changed the wires' points so that the Midland General trolleybuses could continue on to the Kimberley direction. The Midland General trolleys and buses were luxury compared with NCT transport, having cloth-covered seats, heaters and closed doors.

    Nice meeting you at the get-together.

  10. Very good, Katyjay. Mrs Chulla liked it too.

    What's happening? I posted this but it did not transmit. Did it a second time and the first one is there!

    Similar thing happened to another posting today. That one did transmit, but then disappeared. Subsequent attempts have all failed. There's summat up a summat.

  11. This thread reminds me of a question I have thought of asking for some time. If a soldier dies in a foreign country, or, if someone goes down in a ship, who makes out the death certificate. Are the person's details sent to their local Registry Office, or is it done some other way.