Saturday, 17 January 2026

47. Those Were The Days My Friends . . . Malcolm G Hill's Memoirs of Lancing Life 1947-1963


Malcolm G Hill


Those Were The Days My Friends . .


Hear Malcolm's Story

Memoirs of Lancing Life 1947-1963


Introduction and Early Origins

Like many of the people whose reminiscences of Lancing life appear here, I too came across this fascinating website by pure chance whilst trawling references on the internet to the Lancing/Sompting/Worthing area. So I trust my few recollections of growing up there will prompt further reflections among those of us scattered around the globe, and of course, those of you still resident in the area, and also prompt others to write accounts of our early lives and even perhaps engage in mutual correspondence whilst we still have time before our all too soon inevitable demise.

My name is Malcolm Gerald Hill. I was born in 1940, not in Lancing actually but in Hayes, Middlesex, but within a few weeks of my birth was taken to live with my grandmother, Mrs Gertrude Perkins at her home in First Avenue, Lancing on account of my mother's premature death from that scourge of early 20th century Britain, tuberculosis of the lungs.

Within a year I had been adopted by the Hill family, Mr Malcolm Thomas William Hill and his wife Eva Mary, who at that time lived on Crabtree Lane in a house called White Gates, a lovely detached home now replaced by an apartment block, opposite The Crabtree Inn and on the other side of the road to a row of shops, among which I remember a greengrocer's with the memorably evocative name of Hibdidges. The Hills had a daughter, Barbara Jean, eleven years older than myself, who unfortunately died in 2014 in her eighty-third year and lived with her husband Peter, also deceased this year, 2015, just outside Norwich in Norfolk.


Coming Home to Lancing (1947)

My first actual memories of life in Lancing commenced in 1947 at the age of six, when, after a period of time being operated upon and recovering from a tubercular ankle at the Lord Mayor Treloar Orthopaedic Hospital for Children in Alton, Hampshire, I was discharged and came to live once more at the Hill home. By now, Mr Hill had died in 1946, and Mrs Hill and Barbara had moved to a semi-detached bungalow at 7 Cokeham Lane, where we lived until 1959.

Barbara by this time having married, my mother and I moved to the bottom end of Crabtree Lane, first above a tailor's shop between Grand and 1st Avenue, and then to the other side of 1st Avenue at the end of the row of shops by Orchard Avenue, above Maloney's the greengrocers, now a cafe, between the hairdressers and a cycle store, both as of writing possibly still there.

Those of you who know the area will remember the newsagent, The Magnet, which I think still retains the same name, and next door but one on the corner, Robertson's, the off-licence store.


Our Cokeham Lane Community

Our immediate neighbours on Cokeham Lane were the Williams sisters at No 5, noted for their garden's abundance of daffodils in the spring, and the Browns at No 9, an elderly couple with an unmarried daughter. We knew most of the neighbours nearby, but regrettably, I no longer have any memory of further names, although I do recall the Waddingtons who lived in the large attached house next door but one to the north, perhaps No 1 or 3 (in the 50s another detached house was built between it and the Williams' house). I believe they were associated with the well-known playing card manufacturers of the same name.

At the corner of Cokeham Road was Snellings the Butchers; next door was an ironmonger's, then a newsagent/post office and at the end of the row of shops known as The Parade, Gorringes, the grocers. About halfway down the, at that time curving, hill towards West Street and Busticle Lane was Bashfords, the greengrocers, set back off the road a little (Upper Western Road did not exist then).

On the east side of the Cokeham Lane/Cokeham Road corner, there existed in the forties and fifties a small Roman Catholic church, surrounded by its own little garden area, at one time presided over by a priest whose name was pronounced Father "Towi", but of whose correct spelling, unfortunately, I have no idea.


The Brooks - Our Childhood Wilderness

The area to the west of Cokeham Lane in the 1940s and early fifties was our childhood playground wilderness of fields, streams, apple orchards and scrubland known locally as The Brooks, wherein I and other local kids would roam endlessly and happily throughout the year. Now, like so many similar patches of infill land on this part of the West Sussex coast, it has been almost entirely covered over by characterless, identikit housing estates. 

    Like another correspondent to these memoirs, during the course of their building we youngsters would clamber all over the partially built houses of an evening when the workmen had departed, jumping off the scaffolding boards onto the sand piles used for cement mixing, purposelessly nicking whatever was imprudently left lying about by the builders. I remember once coming across a patrolling policeman who ordered me to turn my pockets out – fortunately, I had yet to commence my daily haul!


Market Gardens and Shire Horses

The land behind the houses on the east side of Cokeham Lane until the present housing estate was built around 1950 was a large nursery of greenhouses and cultivated fields, mainly given over to growing tomatoes, and at one time chrysanthemums. A siren would be sounded four times a day for the nursery employees to start or cease work that could be heard all over Cokeham; one could set one's watch by it.

I also particularly remember the farm implements, ploughs, rakes, harrows, etc, being hauled by a pair of enormous grey shire horses, who would loom up over our back fence on making their furrow turn, scaring the living daylights out of little 6-year-old me.


Storms and Infrastructure Changes

A public footpath, known locally as a twitten, running from Cokeham Lane a few houses down from ours through the nursery fields and between the greenhouses and a series of housing estates, still exists and exits on North Road in Lancing village just beyond the football ground. During a severe thunderstorm in the late 1950s, when many of you may remember a bus was blown off the wooden Adur toll bridge, several of the nursery greenhouses were flattened, and a couple of houses along the twitten were severely damaged, walls blown out and roofs were torn off.

I should also mention our local pub, the Ball Tree Inn on Busticle Lane, wherein I was inevitably initiated into the delights of the blessed hop and grape as an abnormally tall and grave-looking 16-year-old by my sister's husband. After having been all boarded up and seemingly ready for demolition for several years, it has now been adapted into a series of apartments. How regrettable, especially considering the next closest pub, The Crabtree, is a good half mile or more away. Rumour has that the building has been entirely demolished to be replaced by I know not what at the present time (2025).


The Great Drainage Revolution

My most notable memory of life on Cokeham Lane in the late forties was the laying of main drains. Prior to this, each house had a septic tank in its front garden, which was emptied by the local council every few months. Cokeham Lane, although tarred, at that time had no pavements, just grass verges sloping up to the house garden wall line. For about a month one year, all life was disrupted whilst the road was dug up, pipes were laid in the deep trenches and connected up to each house's sewage outlet, and all filled in again. What fun it was for us kids watching all the activity, despite being warned by anxious mothers to stay clear of the yawning, poorly guarded trenches meandering for weeks all around the local roads.

My sister Barbara fell off her bicycle into a trench one dark evening on her way home from work in Worthing. A robust girl, she was more shaken up than bodily injured – nowadays, she could have sued the local council for millions.

My particular delight was watching the coal-fired steam-roller puffing up and down the road, smoothing out the newly laid tar surface covering the refilled ditches, a raucous, clanking behemoth of a machine belching out what would today be condemned as the foulest of polluting fumes, whose few remaining cousins are now confined to appearances at heritage steam traction engine shows. The road gang had their headquarters just inside Cokeham Lane near our house, where the steam roller was kept overnight, so in the early morning, I was able to watch it being stoked up for its coming day's work.


Daily Life - Milk Rounds and Bread Deliveries

Milk was delivered daily at that time by horse-drawn milk floats belonging to Highfield and Oakland Dairies of Worthing. On Saturdays, when the milkman had the added duty of collecting his week's money from the householders, I would quite often ride around with him for an hour or so delivering milk bottles. I remember that whenever the horse did a pooh on the road, a man would instantaneously materialise from the nearest house with a bucket and spade to scoop it up to manure his vegetable garden.

In those days, bread was also delivered to households in our area twice weekly by an electric-powered van from Mitchells Bakeries in Lancing. I often used to cadge a lift from the driver to Lancing on a Friday evening to visit the public library housed in a concrete pre-fab hut behind the village hall on South Street.


Family Faith and Countryside Walks

Although not an especially religious family, my sister Barbara and I would usually attend Christmas, Easter and Harvest Festival services at Sompting parish church, the ancient Saxon Church on the fringe of the Downs just off the A27 trunk road, and where in 1950 she was married. We would go up West Street past the former Sompting Rectory House, at one time a Convent school where Barbara went for several terms and is now a nursing home, to Dankton Lane, then hike across the fields, cross the A27 and continue on further field paths to the church. I also remember crack-of-dawn mushroom-collecting trips in the late 1950s with Barbara's husband in the field adjacent to Lower Church Lane opposite the Marquis of Granby pub, now an equestrian practice ground.

Our mother, Mrs Hill, worked part-time until the late fifties at Sompting Junior School on Loose Lane, doing secretarial work and acting as a lunch-time playground supervisor.


Annual Pilgrimage to Alton Hospital

Although strictly speaking not entirely pertinent to a memoir on life in Lancing, nevertheless, another notable event in my memory of those days around 1950 was my annual trip to the Alton Treloars hospital for a check-up on my wobbly leg, on account of the enormous contrast between road travel then and the present day.

This day-long journey always took place at the height of summer, on a day which was invariably gloriously sunny and hot. A small boxy hospital car, probably a Ford Prefect, always driven every year by the same friendly female nurse, would pick my mother and myself up early in the morning, and we would set off on virtually traffic-free roads across the country to Alton.

Up Busticle Lane to the by-pass, then across the Downs to Washington via the Findon by-pass, through the sleepy towns of Storrington and Pulborough, over Stopham Bridge to Petworth and Midhurst and onto the Petersfield road where we would turn off at Rogate and amble down leafy further country lanes through Liss and Selborne, past Gilbert White's home, to eventually arrive at Alton for my appointment.

All being well, and thankfully it always was, we would return by the same sublime country route in the afternoon. I don't suppose we ever exceeded 50 mph on our little cross-country jaunt, on peaceful, lonely roads in sight of the unutterably beautiful South Downs for many miles, thence plunging through the deep Wealden forests around Selborne. No yellow lines were to be seen scarring the road edges in those days; virtually nothing in the way of street furniture, bollards, traffic islands, direction indicators, etc, which so despoil our country roads today; no monstrous, diesel fume-belching lorries, irritatingly tail-gating and endeavouring to overtake.


School Days Begin

North Lancing Primary - Early Years with an Iron Brace

Like many contributors to this website, I attended North Lancing Primary School on Mill Road, and then, having failed what I afterwards realised was the 11-plus exams, and after two terms boarding at Wedges Farm Camp School near Horsham, continued my schooling at Irene Avenue Secondary Modern School from 1951 until 1955.

A ginger-haired boy, for the first couple of years at North Lancing, I wore a rigid iron brace from foot to hip on my right leg as a consequence of my previously mentioned ankle operation. Although excused from sports and PT classes, I was in no measure inhibited from taking part in any rigorous activities children my age generally engaged in, either in school or out.

This included pedalling furiously up and down Cokeham Lane on a specially adapted tricycle with a single left-hand crank pedal and a footrest for my right leg, plus, as others have mentioned, after-school roaming on the adjacent downs, scrambling around the chalk pit, exploring the old Manor grounds, occasionally venturing as far as Lancing Clump, eventually getting the 7A Southdown double-decker bus home from The Corner House.

You may notice I have used the term Lancing Clump for the ring of trees atop the prominent downland hill to the back of Lancing. It may well be known as Lancing Ring in more formal academic and geographical circles, and for mapping definitions, but we local natives of the time, always referred to it as The Clump.


Teachers Remembered - The Good and the Challenging

Of the teachers at North Lancing, there was the redoubtable headmistress Miss Humphrys, Miss Tait, and Mrs Green, my last teacher, whom I shamefully admit having given rather an intolerable hard time and who used, quite deservedly but futilely, to cane my knuckles with the flat side of a ruler on a regular daily basis.

I think there was a Mr Evans, and a Miss Conway or Cornwall, whom I was also notedly disrespectful of. Our last year with Mrs Green was spent in the old school hall classroom on the lower level beside the Mill Road entrance, part of the building doubling as a Scout and Wolf Cubs meeting room; I was in the Cubs for maybe a year here at this time, the Cubmaster perhaps being the school's Mr Evans.


The School Choir and Lasting Melodies

My most notable recollection of North Lancing Primary was being a member of the school choir and of learning two songs in particular, the first lines of which may well prompt memories in some other readers of these reminiscences: "How beautiful they are, the lordly ones . . . "; and "Early one morning, just as the sun was rising . . . ".

After incessantly rehearsing these songs, and probably others which I do not recall, for weeks on end, we went off one day to join up with a mass choir giving a concert in a neighbouring town, possibly Chichester, to entertain the local bigwigs of the time. These two songs' poignant words and music have remained with me throughout my life, and it is only with the advent of the internet that I have at long last been able to download excellent recordings.


A Fleet-Footed Friend

The only fellow pupil I recall of any note was a lad of my own age by the name of Leslie Evans, a rather short but formidable, fleet-footed runner. He used to challenge all and sundry in races across the school playground, and in all the years I knew him was never bested. He lived just nearby the school on Manor Road.


Secondary School Years at Irene Avenue

Reconnecting through Friends Reunited

Moving on to my time at Irene Avenue Secondary, I would first like to say that I have found the Friends Reunited website very useful in recalling names of former school- and class-mates, as well as teachers, particularly the various entries by Brian Lisher. Not all names I remember are listed, and few, if any, I can now apply a face to, either – of course, all those surviving are pretty ancient by now, at least in our seventies or older. (At the time of updating these memories I am just approaching 85.) [Rumour has it that Friends Reunited was closed down on 26 February 2016.]


Lost Classmates - A Roll Call of Memory

Here are some names not listed: Janet Wood, Janice Hammer, Victor Nason, Sonia and Susan Bretherick, Angela Taylor, Christopher Stringer, Barbara Carpenter, Michael(?) Webb, Geoffrey Wagger, Brian Woodward, David(?) Bunn: does anyone out there, anyone reading these reminiscences, have any knowledge of these people, or the others on Brian Lisher's list? Are any of you he mentioned reading this right now? We are, after all, rapidly running out of years to renew acquaintances, if not by personally meeting, scattered in many lands as we are around the globe, then at least by the use of our modern technological correspondence marvels, e-mail.


School Structure and Academic Streams

Irene Avenue school's population was never particularly large, being conducive to a sociable, close communal spirit, roughly averaging 300 to 350 pupils, unlike many of today's schools of a thousand or more. We were divided into four years, four-stream classes, A, B, C and D, depending on how bright one was, elevation to a higher (or relegation to a lower) stream depending on year-end examination results. Not being of the brightest but neither the dimmest, I remained throughout my time in the B stream.


Mr J. J. Bonner - The Popular Teacher

This had the advantage, though, that my last two years at Irene Avenue were spent in Mr J. J. Bonner's form class, the school's most popular teacher, amiable and easy-going but strict when necessary, highly respected by us boys and doted upon for his handsome looks by our class's girls. Previous form teachers had been Miss Poole and Miss Street.


Educational Evolution

I believe the year following the one I left, 1951, still almost two months shy of my 15th birthday, the school instituted a single fifth-year class for the brightest of the bright (which excluded me), the objective being to sit for the General Certificate of Education (GCE) exam at the end.


Weekly Excursions to the Scout Hall

I remember that due to overcrowding in the school's main building, which several new prefabs built on the periphery had failed to entirely relieve, once a week our class had to troop down to the Scout Hall in Lancing South Street, which we all rather enjoyed partly because it enabled us to idle our way down through the village during our lunch period by ourselves (unless one went home for lunch one was forbidden to leave the school premises at lunchtime).


Classmates Gone Astray

One, or possibly two, members of our 4B class embarked on criminal careers; a pair of familiar names, forgotten now, popped up in a local newspaper report of a petrol station robbery on the Arundel Road west of Offington Corner sometime around 1960.


Library Duty - Making Enemies of Friends

Having become by the time I graduated from Miss Street's class a quiet, well-behaved and bookish, if not particularly scholarly, boy, she persuaded me to assist her, together with a fellow classmate, David Bunn, in running the school library during the lunchtime period, which she was in charge of, checking books in and out, keeping the place tidy, etc. Any popularity among fellow pupils I may ever have had diminished to zero at the end of each school term when my library duty required that I go around to each class with a list of people who had not returned their library books in the allotted time and/or paid the requisite overdue fines, and request the miscreants do so immediately, all humiliatingly in front of their classmates and teachers. How to make enemies . . .


A Narrow Escape from the Cane

Prior to becoming a good little boy, though, I was once sent to the headmaster to get the cane. Sitting next to the most troublesome boy in our class one day (actually, the boy who was eventually named in the aforementioned newspaper as being involved in the petrol station robbery), whilst the lady teacher was endeavouring to inspire in us the joyful delights to be gained by comprehension of English poetry, we got into a shoving match at our desks. Quite rightly losing patience at our disruptive antics, Miss Whoever (possibly Miss June Bradley), a generally mild-mannered young lady, ordered us both off to the headmaster's study to explain ourselves and to request the cane.

This was in the time of Mr Russell, a much-feared head with a reputation of relishing the application of the cane to the posteriors of errant pupils. I was petrified, but my companion in misdeed, a wily, cunning fellow, likely having been sent for caning on more than one occasion, seemed to take it all in his stride. After standing outside the absent Mr Russell's study for fifteen minutes or so, he suggested we should simply go back to the classroom and say we had been thoroughly caned and that no one would be any the wiser. I uneasily agreed, and as luck would have it, nothing was said by the poetry teacher. However, none of our classmates was convinced that we had actually been caned.


The Most Bewildering Lesson - Sex Education Gone Wrong

One particularly memorable lesson was the supposedly sex education one, not because it taught us anything about the birds and the bees, but that it left us barely pubescent teenagers utterly bewildered as to what the entire lesson had been about. Mr Holtham, the rural science teacher, entrusted with the dubious task of enlightening us children into the mysterious complexities of this thorny subject, was at that time in his first year at the school, having only recently been installed in the newly built biology pre-fab on the edge of the playing field.

As I remember, an amiable, helpful, friendly sort of man, inclined to the occasional quick outbursts of temper if riled, we had all got to like him for his zestful, enthusiastic teaching manner. This particular day though, he was far from his usual cheery norm – nervy, jumpy, seemingly overwrought and distracted, he shouted at us that no one was to as much as utter a word during the lesson; a snigger or a laugh would be instantly punishable by sending off to see the headmaster, i.e. the cane.

We kids grew numb with dread and apprehension, practically paralysed with alarm at this transformation in the demeanour of our usually affable teacher – whatever was he going to tell us today that was of such overwhelming, awe-inspiring importance? He drew several puzzling-looking sketches purporting to be rabbits on the blackboard, mumbling semi-coherently all the while about certain ill-defined peculiar activities they got up to from time to time, none of which made any sense to us. The lesson thankfully over, we filed out and looked at one another in utter bemusement, exclaiming: "What on earth was all that about?" None of us, not even the class smart-aleck know-it-alls, had the vaguest clue.


Educational Excursions

There was also an outing with the more typically congenial Mr Holtham one afternoon to a pig farm in the Old Salts Farm area south of the railway line in which, besides our class' fascination at the twenty or so little piglets suckling at each belly of several sows, both the boys and, giggling, girls were equally, if not for entirely different reasons, overawed at the boar's outstanding masculine attributes.

Other school visits were to Highfield and Oakland Dairies in Worthing, and to the Lancing Railway Carriage Works, where likely a fair number of the school's boys were destined to be employed, and indeed many of whose fathers worked at that time. Who can ever forget the extraordinary sight of the packed throng of the Carriage Works employees' bicycles amassed at the closed railway crossing gates at Lancing station upon finishing their shift every day?


The Great Cross-Country Race Fiasco

Brian's (Lisher’s?) description of the cross-country race on the Friends Reunited website reminds me of the inception of these races at Irene Avenue School and my own involvement in one of the first runs at the end of my last term. The race route was as Brian describes: along Crabtree Lane, up Boundstone Lane, then an awful lung-bursting climb up to the Clump, across the down to the woods, descending through the manor grounds to The Corner House, along West Lane, across the A27 road and thence returning to the school.

However, my part in the race was not as a runner, since I was still excused from participating in all sporting and athletic events on account of my wonky leg, albeit I must confess rather speciously by this time, but as a race monitor to ensure every person completed the full course distance.

I was issued with a bunch of coloured bands by Mr Walters, the PT instructor, and sent off on my recently acquired bicycle (a dubious swapsy from Denys Gould if memory serves me right) to the furthest extremity of the course on the north-west corner of the Clump, with orders to hand the bands out to each runner as they passed by. About halfway up Boundstone Lane, disaster struck; one of the bicycle tyres sustained a puncture, and I soon realised that there was no way I was ever going to reach my designated monitor's position before the first runners were due to come by.

So I stationed myself at the corner of Manor Road and the lane leading up onto the downs and naively pleaded with some early arrivals to take the bands to the Clump so that they might be picked up. To the vast majority of my schoolmates, whose unwilling participation in any kind of athletic exertion was an absolute anathema, let alone a brutal cross-country race in the heat of a summer's afternoon on the South Downs, this suggestion was regarded with utter astonishment.

"To hell with you" was the almost universal reaction: "You must be joking!" they chorused, barely able to restrain their collective glee at this unexpected opportunity of being released from their afternoon's torment. Maybe a handful of the more conscientious athletes took a band and set off up the steep hill to the Clump, but it is my distinct memory that the majority snatched one from me and cheerily sauntered off along Manor Road to rejoin the route back to school at their leisure, many nipping into the nearby confectioners for sweets and soft drinks.

Having disposed of the last band, I slunk off home wheeling my bike, leaving all thoughts of what might become known of my dereliction of duty in any subsequent post-mortem to the following day. I think it is entirely probable that as a result of this day's farce, Mr Walters decided it would be wiser to accompany the runners on subsequent runs, as mentioned by Brian.


Playground Culture and Games

I can't write of football and cricket because I was, as aforementioned, still excused from any participation, but other consummate trials of skill and dexterity were forever taking place at break periods in the playgrounds, in which virtually all of us took part. Such perennial child's games as marbles, conkers, five stones, etc, were commonly played, but we also held ferociously competitive lollipop stick contests, unique perhaps to our school due to its proximity to a confectionery shop which sold vast quantities of lollipops for a penny each to us parched children on hot summer days. The idea was to hold a bunch of these used, flat-sided, wooden sticks upright in the curve of one's thumb and fingers on the ground, let them fall so they fanned out and see how many one could retrieve without disturbing the other sticks in the pile when one's opponent would have his turn and so on until either of one's lollipop stick stash had been exhausted.


School-yard Justice and Brotherhood

Of course, as among all groups of sometimes boisterous and excitable school children, fisticuffs were resorted to on occasion to resolve disputes, which we all gathered round to view with vicarious glee. However, we took honourably principled exception on one occasion when two brothers, twins at that, I believe, started pounding the daylights out of each other and stepped in to separate them, considering it most unseemly that siblings should fight one another.


The Welsh Connection

Other memories were of our resident Welsh teachers, the diminutive Mr Powell and the hulking, bear-like Mr Jones, who, whenever they encountered one another, would completely baffle us all by chattering incomprehendingly away in their native tongue.


Cinema and Entertainment

An event we boys particularly enjoyed one day at school was the showing of two popular movies of the day, the Australian outback adventure dramas The Overlanders and Eureka Stockade, both starring the famous Australian film star idol, Chips Rafferty. I wonder how many of us emigrated to Australia as a result of seeing these films. And on the subject of movies, I must mention The Luxor Cinema, where I remember seeing the two most popular children's movies of that time, Treasure Island and The Wizard of Oz.


Journey's End and New Beginnings

Leaving School and Starting Work

To sum up, on leaving Irene Avenue school in 1951, I commenced a six-year apprenticeship as a compositor at The Grange Press in Southwick, attending day-release classes at Brighton College of Arts and Crafts, now incorporated into the University of Brighton. And in the autumn of 1963, shortly after my mother had died, I answered a small ad in one of the local newspapers seeking an extra crew member for an overland Land-Rover expedition to East Africa – and never returned to live in Lancing again.


Malcolm G Hill - Updated 4 August 2025

malcolmg16@yahoo.co.uk 













18. Memory from Jan Barwick (nee Stonley)



Jan Barwick (nee Stonley) writes:

Summary

Jan Barwick, a former resident of Lancing, shares her childhood memories of the village in the 1950s and 1960s. She describes the changes in the landscape, including the development of new housing, the demolition of Lancing Manor, and the transformation of the once-wild area behind her home. She also reminisces about local landmarks, such as McCurdy's shop and the dew pond, and recounts her experiences at Lancing Prep school. Her memories offer a glimpse into the life of a child growing up in a rural village during a time of significant change

I saw your site and had to put down these memories from my childhood in Lancing. I hope you can use them.


I lived in one of the semi-detached houses opposite Lancing Manor Park in Old Shoreham Road, just along from Manor Road. The other half of our house was occupied by the Weeburs, and the Grovers were in the house next door on the other side. Bart Grover was a nurseryman up in Manor Road and his children, Susan and Diana were in between my brother and me in age.
None of the bungalows in Old Shoreham Road or behind our houses had been built then. Instead, there was a wilderness rank with nettles in which we used to play, through which a stream passed. This had a downside. In winter, the water table rose and springs used to appear in our garden and flood our garage, sometimes up to a foot in depth.

Bonfire Night

One of my earliest memories is of bonfire night – probably about 1950. We had fireworks, and the families in the houses had built a huge bonfire on the rough ground behind the house, around which we all danced, singing ‘Guy Fawkes Guy, poke him in the eye’.
At the corner by the roundabout at the top of Grinstead Lane was McCurdy’s shop, a little wooden shack which sold all sorts of basic groceries, fruit and veg, sweets and paraffin. Mr McCurdy was a Scot, didn’t like children and was incredibly grumpy with us. He used to play a set of bagpipes under a chestnut tree by the sandpit in the park. He lived in a cottage next door to the shop, opposite which was a conker tree – one of many in the vicinity which we targeted at conker time, throwing sticks up to knock the conkers down. McCurdy always used to come out and shout at us if he saw us. Mrs Cane lived in the other cottage next door to the McCurdys, a pretty half-timbered building called Willow Cottage. Unsurprisingly, there was a huge willow tree in the garden.

Lancing Manor

Lancing Manor was still there then. It had a nursery school, and I remember walking past the windows and seeing the toddlers on mats on the floor having their afternoon nap. I have a vague memory of them pulling it down in the late 50s, and much stronger memories of the cricket pavilion going up in flames, which I guess was sometime in the early 60s. The flames lit up my bedroom one night.

Lancing Manor Park was a wonderful place to play, with masses of space for ball games and banks to roll down. There were swings in the northwest corner, a sandpit under trees in the middle and plenty of climbable trees, particularly beautiful big elms, which I guess are all no longer there. One of the biggest challenges was to walk the length of the flint wall at the back of the park. Memory suggests that it was about six feet tall, but when I went back and looked during a visit in the 90s, it was only about waist height.

Up the Chalk Pit

Behind the Manor, there was a narrow wood between the houses and the field, which led up onto the Downs, another location where we would disappear for hours at a time. The chalk pit at the top of Mill Road was a particularly favoured place to play hide and seek. Beyond here, Barton's had a riding stable where we used to go on a Saturday for a half-hour ride for 2/6d, 5s for an hour. Pat Barton, the owner, was Irish and had a metal hip. We were all quite frightened of him as he was very intimidating, and controlled the more wayward horses with a whip. His children, John and Jane, mainly used to take the rides out. They were both as feisty as their father, but Mrs Barton was a much more amenable soul. I remember falling off virtually every week, but it never seemed to put me off.

Housing growth

Housing development started in the 1950s. The first bungalows were built down Manor Way, then along Manor Close. These building sites were great places to play, and we used to purloin bits of old equipment – planks and tarpaulins and the like, to make camps. At the end of Manor Close was Mr Kirk’s farm. Mr Kirk kept pigs and chickens and showed me how he used to kill the chickens quickly by wringing their necks. We used to help him muck the pigs out – all except the boar, which was too dangerous to get in the pen with.

The banks of the stream that ran alongside his property were riddled with holes. If you sat quietly for long enough, you’d spot water voles coming out. They were very common then.


I went to primary school at Lancing Prep, which was behind the church in South Street.

View Larger Map

Lancing Prep School

The headmistress when I first went there was Mrs Rees, then Miss Kirk took over and was there until (I believe) the school closed in the 1960s. Mrs Pell was another teacher that I remember with great fondness. There were only two main classrooms and a small outside area where we could play. For the more vigorous activity, we used to be taken in a crocodile down to the Beach Green. The school was very small – probably no more than 20 or so pupils – and probably kept going in great part by the Johnson family, of which May, Pauline, Philip, Tony, Wendy and Ann were all there at one time together. I think the youngest one, Caroline, never got to the school because it had closed by then.


One thing I don’t remember, which is surprising as we used to ride up that way a lot, was the dew pond up by the clump. Is this a recent development, or is my memory here at fault?

Regards,

Jan Barwick (nee Stonley)



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My Reply..


Hello Jan

This was a lovely surprise to receive your memories. Thank you very much.

I will be very pleased to add them to the existing collection.

A small family coincidence is that my wife's mother lived at a bungalow opposite the park in the mid-1930s for a short time. Later she worked for the Weeburs at their glassworks.

My wife (her name is also Jan) asked about the church school you mention, is that the building on the north side of St Michaels Church.

(You probably know that you can view it on Google maps)

The Dewpond was relatively recently restored, the first time in 1991, and again around 2000, with occasional repairs and maintenance up to the present.

I have heard mentioned that the girl guides used to make campfires on the site when it was just a forgotten hollow in the ground.

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Jan replies..

The church was the one a few yards down from the Farmers’ Pub. I couldn’t remember its name (the school didn’t have anything to do with the church as far as I can remember, certainly never had services there – we just used the rooms behind) but I had a look on Google street view and it’s right next door to the Circle Garage. It’s an imposing building with a gabled frontage and a narrow spire on the left-hand side. Not to be confused with the Methodist church of St Michaels which is further down.

Funny your comments about the Weeburs. I had no idea he had a glassworks, but I guess when I was a child and they lived next door he was already retired. He was quite a grumpy old thing.

Was your wife’s mother in Manor Road – the one that runs up to the Sussex Potter? I remember we used to play with Keith and Robert Pudd who used to live there (in a bungalow in Manor Road, not at the Potter) and who also went to Lancing Prep. My brother Derek used to work in the Potter (then the Corner House) in his long vacations when he was at Cambridge University. After they’d converted it I also worked there behind the bar in the vacations. Other places I worked in on Saturdays and in the holidays were the laundry in (I think South Street) although I hated ironing handkerchiefs so much I only lasted a week and the Mermaid on the beach green. I was waitressing there in 1966 during the World Cup and remember rushing home on my bike and arriving home shortly before the ‘they think it’s all over.. it is now’ moment. In my childhood, a Mr and Mrs Booth ran the Mermaid for a while. Their daughter Janet invited me to her 7th birthday party and I fell over on the concrete strip that ran around the house and cut my knee to the extent that I needed six stitches. Still got the scar.


Glad my memories of the dew pond were correct. I was a fanatic natural historian and always made a beeline for anywhere wildlife-rich, so I’d certainly have been there with my net and jamjars. One place we used to love was a fantastically clear pond at the junction where the road to the old toll bridge split from the Coombes road, on the airport side. It was quite deep and full of waterweed. I had a look on Google Earth but it looks like it’s been filled in. The whole of the south side of the road between that junction and Mash Barn Lane was always very marshy. There used to be a lot of travellers that camped in a layby there.



I’d love to hear any more of your wife’s memories. I have such strong recollections of a very happy childhood in the village.

Friday, 16 January 2026

Part 2: Lancing At War: The Silent Partners of the Carriage Works

Lancing at War: The Silent Partners of the Carriage Works (1941–1945)

“While the veterans of the Great War, like Charles Meads, stood guard on the Fire Brigade and gun crews, a new and unexpected army was moving through the level crossing gates every morning. By 1941, the ‘Sheds’ were no longer just a man’s world. To keep the Southern Railway running, the Works turned to the village’s wives, daughters, and even its 14-year-old school-leavers.”

The Family Engine
The paybooks from 1941–1943 reveal that the Works was a true family affair. It wasn't uncommon for a single household in the Avenues or the Grover Estate to have three generations on the payroll:

  • The Youth: 14-year-old Messenger Lads like Briggs and Bond earned just 9 shillings a week scurrying between the 66 acres of workshops.
  • The Women: Skilled operators like Mrs Hawkins (Machinist Grade 2) and F. Prodger, who braved the heat of the foundry as a White Metal Worker.
  • The Apprentices: Young girls like Parker, who started as a 'Shop Girl' and earned a promotion to Carpenter’s Mate.

A short video clip shows how women took on all the work that was needed for the war effort:

Equal Grit, Unequal Pay
The ledgers tell a sobering story. While these women and youths were essential, their pay remained on a separate scale. A Woman Probationer might earn 25 shillings for a week’s work that would have paid a man nearly double. Yet, the sense of community was the real glue.

Name Role / Trade Weekly Wage The "Story"
Briggs (No. 2609) Messenger Lad 9/- (plus 1/6 bonus) Born July 1929; just 14 years old.
Bond (No. 3750) Messenger Lad 9/- Following in the footsteps of the adult Bond (Engine Driver).
Parker (No. 1045) Carpenter's Mate 18/3 A rare promotion for a "Shop Girl" into a technical trade.

Evelyn and Her Contemporaries

My Mum, Evelyn Steadman, is recorded as a Woman Carriage Cleaner. Working alongside her were several other local women sharing a break or a chat at the Railwaymen's Association in South Street.

Evelyn Steadman and her friend Ada
Evelyn Steadman & Work Mate Friend Ada
  • W. Stringer – A "Woman Acetylene Cutter", working on heavier metalwork.
  • The Painting Crew – Including M. Holt, G. Goodale, and V. Green.
  • H. Gravett – Listed as a "Holder Up" in the riveting teams.
The girls from the "Hush Hush" shop. Evelyn Steadman front centre left.

The Guardians of the Ledger
Administration was the quiet engine of the 'Steel Ring.' These heavy ledgers recorded every hour worked and every penny of the 'Railway Pound.' If you recognise a face in these office shots, please help us 'stitch' their name back into history.

Evelyn Thorne's Rule Book
The Southern Railway 'Bible' - The official Rule Book.

The Ford Family: A Life on the Lines
Evelyn Steadman married Horace Alfred (Henry) Ford in 1945. Horace was a railwayman through and through. Their 1951 membership card for the REPTA (Railway Employees' Privilege Ticket Association) shows that for many, the Works was where lives were built and legacies created.

The Scale of Service: A 1940s Rates of Pay book

Series Links: Lancing Village Memories

Part 1: The Guardians of the Works
Part 1b: Images from the Philip Fry Collection
Part 2: The Silent Partners: Women & Youth (You are here)
Part 2b: The Secret of the "Hush Hush" Shop
Part 3: The Guardians of the Works: Mr Warr and the Lancing Railway Fire Brigade
Part 4: The Lancing Bofors Crew: From the Shop Floor to the Front Line
Part 5: The Lancing Squad – Precision on the Front Line
Part 6.The day the FW-190s Came to Lancing
Part 7. The Invisible Colony
Part 8 : The Final Reveal – The Skeletons in the Garden
Part 9: From the 'Running Man' to the 'Rocket Dance'
Part 10: The Pegasus Bridge Hero: Denis Edwards

This project is a collaborative effort, combining local memories with historical records to keep Lancing's story alive.


Part 1: Lancing Carriage Works Firemen: Mapping the Memories of the Carriage Works


The Industrial Heart of Lancing: Mapping the Memories of the Carriage Works

The Lancing Carriage Works was more than just a factory; it was a 66-acre world that defined our village for generations. Following the wonderful 180th-anniversary display at the station, I’ve been digging into the "human side" of the Works—the faces, the families, and the stories that still echo through the Parish Hall and local history groups.

Mapping the Site

To understand the scale, we have to look at it from above. This aerial photograph (attributed to Brian Prevett) shows the sheer size of the Southern Railway Works.

  • The site spanned 66 acres, housing massive carriage and paint shops.
Courtesy Brian Prevett
  • At its peak, it employed over 1,500 people, many of whom arrived daily from Brighton on the famous "Lancing Belle" workers' train.
  • The "saw-tooth" rooflines were designed to flood the workshops with natural light for the skilled craftsmen below.

South Lancing Southern Railway Carriage Works : [Luftwaffe Target Folder] Image: IWM (LBY LUFT 114)


The Guardians: The Works Fire Brigade

Fire was a constant anxiety on a site filled with timber and flammable spirits. Thanks to Peter Matten, we have a glimpse of the men who kept the village safe.

  • The Early Days: An older photo shows the horse-drawn "Alliance" fire appliance, a reminder of the era when steam and horsepower worked side-by-side.
  • The Faces of the 1950s: In a later group shot, we find William Jack Warr (standing third from left, back row). For years, many in the village believed this was his son, John Warr, who was such a prominent Lancing character. While John is fondly remembered as a founding member of the Lancing Naval Club in Tower Road (where he helped re-erect a salvaged military Nissen Hut), it was his father, William, who carried on the family's dedicated service as a Carriage Works Fireman.
Courtesy Peter Matten

Can You Help Identify These Faces? Lancing Carriage Works Fire Brigade

I recently across this fantastic photograph of the Lancing Carriage Works Fire Brigade. These were the men responsible for protecting the massive site, which was a maze of timber, paint, and industrial machinery. We know that William Jack Warr is standing third from the left in the back row, but the other faces remain a mystery.

We are looking for your help:

  • Do you recognise a grandfather, father, or uncle in this line-up?
  • Do you have stories of the Fire Brigade’s drills or their role during the war years?
  • Was your relative one of the 1,500+ people employed at the Works during its peak?

The Lancing History Group did a magnificent job commemorating the 180th anniversary of the station last year. I would love to build on that local pride by putting names to these faces and recording the personal memories that go with them.

Please leave a comment below or get in touch if you have any information!


Observations on the Photographs

  • The Horse-Drawn Appliance: This image likely dates from the very early 20th century or late Victorian era. The firemen are wearing the classic brass-style helmets. You can see the word "ALLIANCE" on the side of the vehicle—likely referring to the insurance company.
  • The Crowds: The presence of onlookers in hats suggests this might have been a public demonstration or celebration.

From the Works to the Naval Club

Interestingly, the photos were shared by Peter Matten, who received them from John Warr himself. Beyond his service with the brigade, John was a key figure at the Lancing Naval Club. Did you know the original club building was a Nissen Hut salvaged from a Sussex military base and rebuilt on Tower Road by John and his committee in the 1950s?

Life in the Shadow of the Sheds

"For the families of Bessborough Terrace, the Carriage Works wasn't just a place of employment—it was the view from the front door. The terrace was the heart of a railway community, housing dynasties like the Warr family."

Security and safety were paramount. Thanks to Tina Russell, we know that her grandad William Jack Warr served in this elite crew; the family still treasures his original brass fireman’s helmet.


The Finishing Touch and the Secret Shop

While the rhythmic clanging of the smiths dominated the main sheds, a different kind of precision was at play in the Upholstery Shop. This was where the "luxury" of the Southern Railway was born.

Women like Angela Thorne’s mother were the guardians of this craft. Initially stitching plush interiors, their roles took a dramatic turn in the 1940s.

As the war intensified, the "Finishing Touch" was replaced by a "Secret Service." The skilled hands were repurposed for the "Hush-Hush Shop," manufacturing components for projects like the Airspeed Horsa gliders.


Stephen Hardy - Carriage works-clump in view
Courtesy Stephen Hardy

The Industrial Valley

In this remarkable photograph from the Stephen Hardy collection, we see the sheer scale of the Lancing 'canyon.' Stacks of wheel tyres dominate the foreground, but look up: the Lancing Clump stands watch on the hillside.

Stephen Hardy, - Sawtooth rooves - wheel yard

The Sawtooth Skyline

"A city within a village, where light poured through sawtooth glass onto master craftsmen. It was here that Stephen’s father and colleagues turned raw steel into the pride of the Southern Railway."

The Draughtsman’s Final View: On 16 July 1964, Alan Hardy stood at his window for the last time. These photographs were his final act of documentation.

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The Craftsman’s Rite of Passage

"One of the most enduring traditions of the Lancing Carriage Works was the 'Apprentice Chest.' When a young man started his training, his first real challenge was to build his own tool chest. It was a test of skill and a badge of honour; if your chest wasn't up to standard, you weren't up to the trade.

Stephen Hardy has shared these evocative photos of his father’s collection. You can see the heavy-duty apprenticeship chest, still sturdy decades later, alongside his wartime 'Railway Service' badge. Many of the tools inside were hand-finished or custom-made by his father to fit the specific needs of the carriage shop. It is a reminder that while the buildings were massive, the heart of the Works was found in the precision of the individual workman’s hands."




A life of service and solidarity: Steven Hardy’s father’s badges. On the left, the Southern Railway 'War Service' badge, signifying his essential role during WWII. On the right, his NUR union badge, a symbol of the camaraderie and collective spirit that defined the workforce at the Lancing Carriage Works. These were more than just pins; they were a workman's identity.



Voices from the Works

  • Open Day Magic: Bev Pettiford recalls her dad, Bill Jones, lifting her up to sound the engine horn.
  • A "Foamy" Souvenir: Trevor McInnes remembers the trimmers cutting scraps of foam for children in the 1960s.
  • The Eerie Silence: Graham Funnell describes visiting in 1965, feeling as though the workers had simply "gone to lunch" and never returned.

The Veterans who Built the Works

Long before the 1960s, the Works was staffed by men like Charles Thomas Meads. A veteran of the 1st Royal Sussex Regiment, Charles spent nearly two decades as a fireman at the Works.

Charles Thomas Meads Fireman
Courtesy Marilyn James

When Charles passed away in 1937, his funeral was a true railwayman's send-off. He lived at 47 Monks Close—just a stone's throw from where I write today.

Obituary - Charles Thomas Meads

Master Personnel List

Name Department / Role Historical Connection
Charles Thomas Meads Fire Brigade / Rolling Stock Repair Veteran of 1st Royal Sussex; lived at 47 Monks Close.
William Jack Warr Works Fire Brigade Father of John Warr; dedicated fireman at the site.
Dixy Dean Wartime Gunner / Charge Hand Defended works from air raids; mentor to apprentices.
Alfred William (Bill) Moppett Acetylene Cutter / Home Guard Specialist in "Steel Ring" repairs and wartime defence.
Bill (William) Jones Furnaceman (14 Years) Lifted daughter Bev to sound engine horns.

Correction & Family Update: Since publishing, Julie Bevan clarified that the Fireman pictured is William Jack Warr, not his son John. William was the fireman; John is remembered for running the Naval Club. My thanks for getting the family tree right!


Series Links: Lancing Village Memories

Part 1: The Guardians of the Works: Firemen & Veterans (you are here)
Part 1b: Images from the Philip Fry Collection
Part 2: The Silent Partners: Women & Youth (1941–1945)
Part 2b: The Secret of the "Hush, Hush" shop
Part 3: Mr Warr and the Lancing Railway Fire Brigade
Part 4: The Bofors Crew: From Shop Floor to Front Line
Part 4b: The Shingle Skeletons - A Prequel to the Front Line
Part 5: The Lancing Squad – Precision on the Front Line
Part 6: Bomb Alley - The day the FW-190s came to Lancing
Part 7: The Invisible Colony
Part 8: The Final Reveal – The Skeletons in the Garden
Part 9: From the 'Running Man' to the 'Rocket Dance'
Part 10: The Pegasus Bridge Hero: Denis Edwards

Author’s Note: History is often closer than we think. Let's keep the memory of the "factory in a garden" alive!